Climate target walk-backs highlight ‘overzealous’ policy pledges,


Haitham al-Ghais, secretary-general of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), speaking at the Energy Asia Summit on June 26, 2023.

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LONDON — The recent spate of countries postponing or adjusting their climate targets shows that some of the initial pledges were “overzealous,” the head of the OPEC group of oil producers said Monday.

“I hope they are not U-turns, as much as they are a recognition and the realization that some of the policies may have been a bit overzealous: the timelines, the deadlines, the time constraints,” Haitham al-Ghais, head of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, said.

Speaking to CNBC’s Dan Murphy on the first day of the Abu Dhabi International Progressive Energy Congress, he added that an efficient energy transition away from fossil fuels needs “the right infrastructure in place,” such as electrical grids, sufficient charging stations for electric vehicles and the availability of critical minerals.

Among such climate policy walk-backs, al-Ghais cited Poland’s move to appeal against European Union policies to ban the sale of fossil fuel cars from 2035; the recent EU agreement on a diluted version of the bloc’s “Euro 7” emissions rules; and the U.K.’s shift to delay a prohibition on the sale of new gasoline and diesel cars from 2030 to 2035.

“I think when it comes to consumers feeling a pinch in their pockets, that’s when politicians become aware that it is difficult to implement policies that [are] maybe too aggressive, or a bit overzealous without having the right systems in place, to make sure that whatever new policies are advocated for do not affect the consumers,” al-Ghais said.

Some traders and analysts say a confluence of voluntary and coordinated supply cuts implemented by OPEC and its non-OPEC allies, collectively known as OPEC+, contributed — alongside demand recoveries — to a surge in oil prices that is fueling global inflation. This is a particular risk in Europe, where sanctions in the wake of Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine have cut off buyers from Russia’s crude and oil products. ICE Brent crude futures with December expiry were trading at $92.67 per barrel at 13:10 London time, up by 47 cents per barrel from the Friday settlement.

Asked about the impact of high oil prices on consumers, al-Ghais said this “depends on the state of the global economy” and noted increases in oil demand.

“I think this in itself answers the points about, are these price levels affecting demand? We’re seeing historically high, phenomenally high growth figures for oil demand,” he said.

Despite this, several European traders and refiners have said that crude prices above $100 per barrel raise the possibility of demand destruction, where — in the case of the oil market — consumers respond to higher prices at the pump with fewer purchases. The Paris-based International Energy Agency has, meanwhile, projected that demand for fossil fuels like oil, gas and…



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