Sustainability, Clean Energy, Recycling & ESG

Shortages: Ammonia, Affordable Ethanol, & Renewable Power In The Right Places

May 12, 2022 2:01:48 PM / by Graham Copley posted in Polyethylene, Ethylene, Renewable Power, Ammonia, ethanol, blue ammonia, Braskem, fertilizer, reshoring, green ammonia, sugar, green polyethelyne

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There is the potential for the ammonia thirst (please don’t drink it) to surpass opportunities to build cost-effective capacity for the medium term. Consequently, the shortages we see today could extend and become more severe. Co-firing coal-based power facilities in Asia is one of the more obvious ways to start decarbonizing a predominantly coal-based power region. The experiments in Japan, if successful, will drive a step-change in demand for blue or green ammonia, and this should drive much more new capacity than we have seen announced to date. The power-based demand comes on top of expected growth in fertilizer-driven demand and a possible rise as a shipping fuel. The issue for investors is that green ammonia at scale is economically challenging, especially with the recent shortfalls in renewable power generating plans and what now looks like rising power costs for a while. Blue ammonia is much easier to think about at scale, but we are still hamstrung by expensive carbon capture costs and a lack of incentives – either in terms of tax breaks or taxes or in terms of a customer willing to pay more, to get most ideas and plans past the “wouldn’t it be nice” phase. In the meantime, as indicated above, installed ammonia capacity is making abnormal returns.

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The Cost Of Reshoring May Push Energy Transition Investments Offshore

Apr 1, 2022 3:29:55 PM / by Graham Copley posted in ESG, Climate Change, Sustainability, LNG, Energy, Dow, energy transition, Canada, Mexico, reshoring, Sempra

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Looking at the Sempra chart below, we reflect on some research that we wrote several months ago that talked about a lost opportunity in the US because of the lack of cooperation and coordination in Washington. Energy demand is growing, the demand for materials is growing and the demand for re-shoring is growing, and if the US political and permitting system is either too hostile towards new investment or too cumbersome companies will look for workarounds. The Dow investment in Canada was partly justified by the easier regulatory environment as well as the proposed carbon price. Sempra is looking at Mexico because the ease of permitting for LNG is advantageous and we note Mattel's “near-shoring” in Mexico rather than reshoring. The opportunities for both Mexico and Canada are very significant if we remain mostly directionless in the US. For more see today's daily report.

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Renewable Power Urgency Complicated By Material Availability

Mar 8, 2022 1:49:00 PM / by Graham Copley posted in ESG, Climate Change, Sustainability, Coal, Energy, natural gas, solar, renewable energy, power demand, manufacturing, wind, EIA, reshoring, offshore wind, raw material, battery

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We include a couple of headlines and charts in today's daily report that step into the central theme of this week’s ESG and climate report, which will be published tomorrow (see here). The offshore wind ambitions and the EIA solar and battery projections both assume that the materials are available to build the capacity. In the case of the offshore wind leases, the winning bidders do not need to be in the market for all of the projects today and while the opportunities will lead to a step-change in demand for turbines in the US, the timing is less clear today that it will be in a few months and that timing may be adjusted to reflects equipment timing and costs, etc.

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No Carbon Price In The US: A Competitive Disadvantage!

Jan 26, 2022 2:11:28 PM / by Graham Copley posted in Climate Change, Methane, CCS, Energy, Carbon, Emissions, Carbon Price, carbon value, natural gas, carbon values, low carbon, methane leakage, carbon pricing, fuels, reshoring, oil and gas, pipeline emissions, low carbon materials

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The linked Canada headline supports one of the themes that we have been highlighting for a while, which is that certainty around carbon pricing is likely to drive investment rather than discourage it. Canada, and specifically Alberta, has seen several new investments announced over the last few months because manufacturers can now add some certainty around carbon values to other advantages offered by the province, including cheap natural gas and what appears to be low-cost CCS opportunities. We are also seeing investments shape up in Europe – also to produce low carbon materials and fuels – and this is also driven by greater certainty around carbon value. The lack of a carbon price in the US is becoming a competitive disadvantage for the country and those opposing it in government are, in our view, very misguided. If China can develop a credible and broad carbon pricing mechanism, it will also likely gain investment dollars, possibly at the expense of the US. Not having a sound climate change and carbon value framework in the US is a major threat to many of the reshoring initiatives that US retailers and manufacturers would like to see.

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