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Carbon implications of marginal oils from market-derived demand shocks.

Mohammad S MasnadiGiacomo BeniniHassan M El-HoujeiriAlice MilivintiJames E AndersonTimothy J WallingtonRobert De KleineValerio DottiPatrick JochemAdam R Brandt
Published in: Nature (2021)
Expanded use of novel oil extraction technologies has increased the variability of petroleum resources and diversified the carbon footprint of the global oil supply1. Past life-cycle assessment (LCA) studies overlooked upstream emission heterogeneity by assuming that a decline in oil demand will displace average crude oil2. We explore the life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions impacts of marginal crude sources, identifying the upstream carbon intensity (CI) of the producers most sensitive to an oil demand decline (for example, due to a shift to alternative vehicles). We link econometric models of production profitability of 1,933 oilfields (~90% of the 2015 world supply) with their production CI. Then, we examine their response to a decline in demand under three oil market structures. According to our estimates, small demand shocks have different upstream CI implications than large shocks. Irrespective of the market structure, small shocks (-2.5% demand) displace mostly heavy crudes with ~25-54% higher CI than that of the global average. However, this imbalance diminishes as the shocks become bigger and if producers with market power coordinate their response to a demand decline. The carbon emissions benefits of reduction in oil demand are systematically dependent on the magnitude of demand drop and the global oil market structure.
Keyphrases
  • life cycle
  • fatty acid
  • health insurance
  • single cell
  • risk assessment
  • heavy metals
  • high intensity