Skip to content
Oil Change International | Data Driven, People Powered. Oil Change International | Data Driven, People Powered.
  • About
    • Our Work
    • Values
    • Team
    • Jobs at OCI
    • Ways to Give
  • Program Areas
    • Africa
    • Asia
    • North Sea
    • United States
    • Global Industry
    • Global Public Finance
    • Global Policy
  • Blog
  • Press Releases
  • Publications
Donate
  • Get Updates
    • Share on Bluesky Share on Bluesky Bluesky (opens in a new window)
    • Share on Twitter Share on Twitter Twitter (opens in a new window)
    • Share on Instagram Share on Instagram Instagram (opens in a new window)
    • Share on LinkedIn Share on LinkedIn LinkedIn (opens in a new window)
    • Share on Facebook Share on Facebook Facebook (opens in a new window)
Donate
  • About
    • Our Work
    • Values
    • Team
    • Jobs at OCI
    • Ways to Give
  • Program Areas
    • Africa
    • Asia
    • North Sea
    • United States
    • Global Industry
    • Global Public Finance
    • Global Policy
  • Blog
  • Press Releases
  • Publications
    • Get Updates
    • Share on Bluesky Bluesky
    • Share on Twitter Twitter
    • Share on Instagram Instagram
    • Share on LinkedIn LinkedIn
    • Share on Facebook Facebook
Go to OCI Homepage
Current Affairs
Published: July 13, 2011

What if the Carbon Bubble Bursts?

  • Latest from OCI
  • Blogs listing
  • What if the Carbon Bubble Bursts?
    • Blog Post Carbon emissions Climate change Current Affairs Featured oil industry outlook
Andy Rowell

When not blogging for OCI, Andy is a freelance writer and journalist specializing in environmental issues.

[email protected]

For many years now, a number of activists and analysts have argued that if we are serious about tackling climate change then the reserves of oil and gas in the ground need to be seen as liabilities and not assets.

At the moment an oil company is judged by investors by the strength and size of its reserves. Oil, gas and coal companies are still seeking reserves of fossil fuels, despite the fact that we  know we have to burn far less of the stuff.

In a rational world, that would not make sense, but who said anything about the financial markets being rational.

For example in a carbon-constrained world what worth are large reserves of carbon? Surely they go from an asset to a liability?

A great report published earlier this week by the Carbon Tracker Initiative, reveals the scale of the crazy imbalance.

Take the global carbon budget. Research by the Potsdam Institute calculates that to reduce the chance of exceeding 2°C warming to 20%, the global carbon budget for 2000-2050 is 886 Gigatonnes of CO2.

However, from this total we have to take off the emissions that we have already emitted, leaving a total budget of 565 GtCO2 for the remaining 40 years to 2050.

The known fossil fuel reserves declared by energy and mining companies is equivalent to 2,795 gigatonnes of CO2.

Which means – and here comes the staggering truth – if the world wants to keep climate change to below 2 degrees, 80% of those reserves can never be burned. They are useless assets.

As the report states: “this means that governments and global markets are currently treating as assets, reserves equivalent to nearly 5 times the carbon budget for the next 40 years. The investment consequences of using only 20% of these reserves have not yet been assessed.”

One way to assess this is that these reserves are toxic debt, and just like in the financial crisis, they are assets that have to be got rid of.

If that happens many of the world’s leading companies would be effectively bankrupt.  For example, the top 100 coal and top 100 oil & gas companies have a combined value of $7.42 trillion. But this worth is built on the bedrock of their reserves.

The strength of financial centres like London are based on fossil fuels. Companies listed in London currently have 105.5 GtCO2 of fossil fuel reserves on its exchange which is ten times the UK’s carbon budget for 2011 to 2050, of around 10 GtCO2.

Just one of the largest companies listed in London, such as Shell or BP has enough reserves to use up the UK’s carbon budget to 2050.

The reports argues that “with approximately one third of the total value of the FTSE 100 being represented by resource and mining companies, London’s role as a global financial centre is at stake if these assets become unburnable en route to a low carbon economy.”

Recently London has seen the huge listing of Glencore on its exchange “with no consideration by the regulators of potential systemic risks to financial markets of the increased exposure to climate change risk.”

Investors carry on investing in oil, gas and coal as if the carbon emissions locked in these investments have no downside.

The report argues that “We believe investors need to respond to this systemic risk to their portfolios and the threat it poses of a carbon bubble bursting.”

Because if the carbon bubble bursts, then the recent financial crisis will look like a tea-party.

Oil Change International | Data Driven, People Powered.
Donate Get Updates
Back to the top
  • Keep in touch

  • Oil Change International
    714 G St. SE, #202
    Washington, DC 20003
    United States

    +1.202.518.9029

    [email protected]

    • Share on Bluesky Bluesky (opens in a new window)
    • Share on Twitter Twitter (opens in a new window)
    • Share on Instagram Instagram (opens in a new window)
    • Share on LinkedIn LinkedIn (opens in a new window)
    • Share on Facebook Facebook (opens in a new window)
  • Quick links

  • About OCI
  • Our Values
  • Jobs at OCI
  • Ways to Give
  • Media Centre

  • Publications
  • Press
  • Associated websites

  • Big Oil Reality Check
  • Energy Finance Database
  • Permian Climate Bomb
  • Site map
  • Privacy policy

Copyright © 2025 Oil Change International. Web design by Fat Beehive