Saudi Arabia Commits to Net-Zero Emissions by 2060

image is BloomburgMedia_R1BSYOT0AFB601_23-10-2021_09-00-02_637705440000000000.png

The world’s largest oil exporter will join the Global Methane Pledge to reduce emissions of the super-warming gas by 30% by 2030

Saudi Arabia has pledged to eliminate planet-warming emissions within its borders by 2060.

The decision is a marked turnaround for the world’s biggest oil exporter, whose government has consistently argued against cutting investments in fossil fuels and blamed climate activists for this year’s surge in energy prices.

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the kingdom’s de facto ruler, made the announcement in Riyadh on Saturday at the opening of a climate conference.

  

 

The U.S. and European nations have put pressure on Saudi Arabia, one of the world’s highest emitters per person, to accelerate efforts to curbs emissions and invest more in renewable energy. U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson told Prince Mohammed in a call on Oct. 11 that he “hoped to see a net-zero commitment” from the kingdom.

The decision will provide a boost to Britain ahead of the crucial COP26 climate talks starting this month in Glasgow.

“We announce today the kingdom is aiming to reach net zero by 2060 through a circular carbon economy approach, in a way that’s compatible with the kingdom’s development plans and enables its economy to diversify,” Prince Mohammed said in a recorded message at the opening of the conference.

Still Pumping Oil

The net-zero goal doesn’t necessarily mean Saudi Arabia has to reduce oil output, since it only applies to territorial emissions. Those generated when the kingdom’s oil is burned in cars, factories and power plants abroad won’t count, according to United Nations accounting rules.

The government is instead in the process of increasing its crude-production capacity even more -- to 13 million barrels a day from 12 million. The project’s expected to take six years and cost billions of dollars.

“There’s going to be a lot of skepticism,” said Ben Cahill, senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “The world’s largest oil exporter becoming a net-zero economy is pretty strange.”

Saudi Arabia is the 10th largest emitter of carbon dioxide globally, and the highest on a per capita basis among G-20 countries. Reaching net zero will mean sharply reversing a trend of increasing emissions in the past two decades.

  

Still, the new target comes amid a shift among major petrostates. The United Arab Emirates this month became the first Persian Gulf nation to say it would neutralize its emissions by 2050. Russia followed less than a week later, though President Vladimir Putin set a later deadline of 2060.

U.S. Ties

Saudi Arabia is now aligned with most major economies and the changes scientists say is essential if the world is to avoid the worst effects of global warming.

The decision is likely to play well with U.S. President Joe Biden, said Karen Young, fellow of the Middle East Institute in Washington D.C. Ties between Washington and Riyadh have been strained since Saudi agents killed journalist Jamal Khashoggi in 2018.

“The net-zero goal firmly establishes Saudi Arabia in the G-20 economies that are pushing on this agenda,” she said. “It also is probably a conciliatory gesture toward the Biden administration.”

The country also committed to joining the Global Methane Pledge that aims to cut emissions of the super-potent warming gas by 30% by 2030. Scientists consider reducing methane emissions among the cheapest and quickest ways to slow down climate change.

Saudi negotiators at climate forums may still try to water down proposals from other countries to reduce oil and gas investments, according to Jim Krane, fellow at Rice University in Houston and author of ‘Energy Kingdoms: Oil and Political Survival in the Persian Gulf’.

“Net zero for humanity, especially a quick one, is going to be devastating for the kingdom,” he said. “So they might remain somewhat obstructionist in global forums.”

(Adds comment from crown prince in sixth paragraph.)

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

By Matthew Martin , Akshat Rathi

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