Barron's Streetwise - CEO Chat: Chevron's Mike Wirth
Episode Date: July 2, 2021The oil and gas chief talks with Jack about the production outlook, and turning dairy farms into gas plants. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...
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We're all dealing with this dual challenge of how do you meet the world's need for energy
to keep the lights on, keep the trains running, and keep the economy going
at the same time as we deal with the challenges of climate change.
Welcome to the Barron Streetwise podcast. I'm Jack Howe.
The voice you just heard, that's Mike Wirth. He's the CEO of Chevron. I spoke with Mike recently
about the outlook for oil production and about how an oil company handles the growing shareholder
push to take action on climate change. This episode is the third in a series of six quick
chats I had in connection with the top CEO's issue of Barron's Magazine. These episodes will
be short, but we're doing two a week instead of our usual one. On to Chevron.
It's been a little more than a year since we did an episode of this podcast called
the weak oil got weird how weird did it get the price of texas crude went negative by 37 dollars
a barrel in futures trading because early in the pandemic roads had emptied and in a small
oklahoma trading hub the storage tanks had filled and no one wanted to
take delivery of the stuff. That was a short-lived pricing fluke. Oil prices quickly went positive
again, and now they're higher than they were before the pandemic. That's where I started
the conversation with Mike. So we're all watching the oil price rise. And, you know, on the one hand, maybe a good sign for recovering demand across the economy.
And on the other hand, everyone's wondering, will oil companies be able to produce enough?
How much higher is it going to go?
What can you tell us about the ability across your industry to produce right now and meet demand?
Well, I think there's still plenty of supply that's available.
You know, OPEC Plus is holding back several million barrels a day of production that is expected to gradually return to markets, and they've been
returning production to markets. Inventories have been at very high levels globally. Those are
coming down. And so we're seeing things move back into a more normal state of equilibrium.
Still some uncertainties out there in terms of how the pandemic response plan happens in other big economies.
And I think at this point, the industry is in a good position to continue to meet demand over balance of the year.
There's a meaningful cohort of investors out there that are taking aim at kind of the main thing that you do, right?
And they want decarbonization and they've got some good momentum and they've got some investor fund
flows and things like that behind them. So how do you balance that with your business?
Are the demands that you're hearing reasonable in the context of how much oil and gas we might need
going forward? And how do you strike that balance between what you have to do to meet societal
demand and what these investors are demanding from you? Our investors have been very clear.
meet societal demand and what these investors are demanding from you?
Our investors have been very clear. Most of our meetings now begin with a discussion of ESG,
and that wasn't the case just a few years ago. So our big long-only investors care about these things and we care about them. Our challenge is to deliver higher returns and lower carbon.
Our industry has been a tough one for a number of years here. And so we've got to improve returns
on invested capital and we've got to reduce the carbon
intensity of our operations.
So every credible projection out there says the demand for oil and gas will be robust
into the future, even as at the same time, we see renewables and other forms of energy
continuing to grow very rapidly.
And we're investing in reducing the carbon intensity of our own operations. We're bringing renewables and offsets into our business
with renewable natural gas, renewable diesel fuel, sustainable aviation fuel,
and helping customers decarbonize their business. Longer term, we're investing in things like
hydrogen and carbon capture to further help address these challenges. And then finally,
we're investing in the future through a number of different technologies, which may not be ready today, but maybe a big part of the
energy system down the road. So advanced geothermal, we've invested in everything from mobility and
autonomy and vehicles to advanced nuclear technologies. So this is what investors are
focused on, and it's what we're focused on. Can you tell me a little more about one or two of these technologies? Usually, whenever I hear the word renewable, it's in
connection with solar or wind and you use it in connection with some different fossil fuels.
What technologies are you looking at to make those things more renewable and satisfy the
demands of your investors? Well, I'll give you a couple of examples. Renewable natural gas
is a product
that we're now providing to the market where we work with non-traditional partners, in this case,
dairy farmers, who have unabated methane emissions that go into the atmosphere from their farming
operations. And we help... I used to live in a cow town. I'm pretty sure I know what you mean.
You know the aroma. We help to capture those emissions. Methane's a very potent greenhouse gas, much more potent than CO2.
And so if we can come in and help capture the methane that currently goes into the atmosphere,
we can then treat it and clean it so that it meets a pipeline specification and then
transport it to customers that can displace fossil fuels.
Another one is renewable diesel and sustainable aviation fuel, both of which we're
investing to manufacture in our own facilities now using agricultural-based oils, seed oils,
as the feedstock. So these are things that are small today, but they're growing,
and they help us reduce the carbon intensity of our operation in markets today where the policies
encourage these things. I think in the future, we'll see that grow even more broadly in terms of market demand.
And have you focused on these areas because you feel like you have some expertise there where
if you were going into solar and wind, those are more crowded or why those areas?
We are working on things that fit with our skills and capabilities and lines of business today.
We've not gone into merchant solar and wind. We do use
solar and wind to help support our own operations where that makes sense. But if you're talking
about generating electricity to sell into the grid, there are really good developers out there
that can do that. The technology is good and getting better. There's plenty of capital available
for that. And so our company has looked at it and said, do we really add value here or can investors invest in them directly because we don't necessarily bring unique
capability that would create value. And so we've not gone into those businesses, but I talked about
hydrogen. We generate a lot of hydrogen today. I have a lot of experience in hydrogen and looking
for ways to reduce the carbon intensity of that. Same thing with carbon capture and storage,
which is about managing those emissions, capturing them, and then sequestering them in geologic formations,
which really plays to the strengths that we have in subsurface reservoir management, for instance.
Tell me about the competitive strengths that differentiate you from your peers. For an
investor out there who's saying, hey, look, I think that there's better value in oil and gas than people realize right now. I want to lock in an investment for
the long term. What is it that sets your company apart? Well, we've got a portfolio that is unique
and very powerful. We have assets that have scale so that we can be competitive through the inevitable
commodity price cycles for our business. The carbon intensity of our operations today
is in the best quartile, the lowest carbon emitting quartile in the industry. And we've
got positions that are very long lived that will support our business long into the future,
as opposed to being on a treadmill. And we've got attributes of how our company has been run
with capital discipline, with cost discipline, with a focus on operational excellence,
which means safety, environmental health, protection of our workforce, of our communities.
That is an absolute foundational value of our company. And we have to look out the window and
serve markets as they exist today, even as we look down the road to help markets evolve to the future.
And I think our company is uniquely positioned to do both of those.
help markets evolve to the future. And I think our company is uniquely positioned to do both of those.
The decisions that your peers make can affect you. What's your view right now on the industry as a whole in terms of where everyone's producing, the responsibility that your
different peers have shown? What do you think of the backdrop right now?
Well, amongst the major companies that do what we do, the investor-owned companies,
I think everybody is searching for their strategy for the future.
The strategies are quite different, probably more different than I've ever seen.
All trying to meet the needs of their shareholders and respond to society's expectations that
we be part of addressing climate change.
It's too big for any one company, any one country, or any one industry to solve alone. But I see our
competitors all taking what they believe is the right path for their company. Some are going into
wind and solar. And as I mentioned, that's really not the strategy that we've laid out. But we're
all dealing with this dual challenge of how do you meet the world's need for energy to keep the
lights on, keep the trains running, and keep the economy going at the same time as
we deal with the challenges of climate change. And so I think investors will have choices as
companies head on these pathways that are less similar than they have been in the past, but
underlying it, the big competitors that we have in our sector of the economy are all trying to do
the right thing. We can do it. We must do it. It's what our investors expect out of us. It starts with financial strength, which was clearly tested last year
as oil prices collapsed and even went negative at one point. And ever cleaner energy is what
we've always done. From the beginning of time, we've met growing demand and we've
reduced the environmental impact of the consumption of energy in the economy.
You're going to change what I think about when I drive through those cow towns from now on. I'm
going to say that smells like profitability in the air.
Smells like renewable natural gas, Jack.
Thank you for listening. Jackson Cantrell is our producer. Jackson, go ahead and sing us out.
Don't make me sing, Jack.
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episodes you can follow me on twitter that's at jack how h-o-u-g-h see you next week