Free Standard AU & NZ Shipping For All Book Orders Over $80!
Register      Login
Australian Energy Producers Journal Australian Energy Producers Journal Society
Journal of Australian Energy Producers
RESEARCH ARTICLE (Non peer reviewed)

Managing climate change adaptation in oil and gas production

Paul van der Beeke
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

Golder Associates.

The APPEA Journal 55(2) 456-456 https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ14091
Published: 2015

Abstract

Oil and gas production operations occur in widely diverse onshore and offshore contexts. The global industry has a long history of coping with climate variability, extreme climatic conditions and extreme weather events. Climate change, however, is projected to take the new climate beyond the range of historical variability in many places where oil and gas production facilities are located.

Oil and gas infrastructure often has an expected operational life of 50 years or more, which would take new operations to 2064 and beyond. This is well inside the timeframe predicted for substantial climate change with consequent risks to longer term operational continuity and supply chain security.

In recent years, the realities of climate change beyond pre-industrial age historical variability, and the associated business risks, have become accepted by the major global oil and gas industry players. Other stakeholders, including corporate, institutional and private investors and corporate regulators, are also becoming more assertive in their demands for corporate disclosure of climate change risks, adaptation management plans and evidence of effective implementation of adaptive measures.

Industry decision-makers need scientifically sound and robust data applied to their specific operations and business conditions to support business case-based investment decisions for new project feasibility, capital and operational expenditure, and the management of long-term strategic liabilities.

This extended abstract provides an overview of the complex and interconnected web of climate change effects that should be considered. It also outlines approaches that could be employed to manage the risks and meet stakeholder expectations.

Paul van der Beeke is a principal environmental scientist with Golder Associates in Perth. He completed his PhD in chemistry at the University of Waikato, New Zealand. After post-doctoral work in the UK, Paul returned to New Zealand to take up an industrial position. He has been an environmental consultant in Perth since 1990 with multinational firms and has run his own company for 11 years.

Paul has 25 years of consulting experience with upstream and downstream oil and gas operations. His interest in climate change led to his presentation at the National Climate Change Adaptation Conference in 2013 about potential consequences of sea level rise and contaminated sites.


References

Ekström, M., Abbs, D., Bhend, J., Chiew, F., Kirono, D., Lucas, C., Mcinnes, K., Moise, A., Mpelasoka, F., Webb, L., and Whetton, P., 2015—Climate Change in Australia, Projections for Australia’s NRM Regions. Central Slopes Cluster Report. Canberra: CSIRO and the Bureau of Meteorology.

Institutional Investors Group on Climate Change (IIGCC), Investor Network on Climate Risk (INCR), Investor Group on Climate Change (IGCC) and Asia Investor Group on Climate Change (AIGCC), 2014—Investor expectations: oil and gas company strategy, supporting investor engagement on carbon asset risk. London: IICSS, INCR, IGCC and AIGCC.

IPIECA, 2013—Addressing adaptation in the oil and gas industry. Climate Change 2013. London: IPIECA.