Last month, both BP and Shell produced statements in support of a carbon-pricing scheme, which in principle raises costs for the oil giants.
Many remain skeptical of these oil companies’ commitment to addressing climate change, and their previous attempts to green up their image don’t inspire further confidence.
Ten years ago, many major oil companies had visionary leaders that pledged to transform their companies from fossil fuels to “energy” companies. Today they have committed themselves “back to basics”—in other words back to oil and gas drilling only.
Oil companies have no reason to transition their business to renewable energy. Renewable energy is simply a feel-good ad tactic. As Ben Elgin in BusinessWeek pointed out, “[Chevron’s] slogan, ‘Finding newer, cleaner ways to power the world,’ is splashed across its website. And ads launched in 2010 as part of Chevron’s ‘We Agree’ campaign declare, ‘It’s time oil companies get behind the development of renewable energy.’”
Instead of trying to convince oil companies to develop renewable energy, it is time to make oil companies obsolete and get behind renewable energy companies—companies that are solely focused on renewable energy.
Oil companies will never create a solution to end our dependence on oil. According to Oppenheimer & Co. analyst Fadel Gheit, quoted in Elgin’s article, “It’s not that oil companies dislike renewables, it’s just not their core business or where they have expertise. They just don’t know what to do with it.”
The companies successfully deploying renewable energy on a billion-dollar scale are not incumbent players in the energy industry, but entrepreneurs focusing only on renewables. The further development of the renewable energy industry will continue to depend on new entrepreneurs driving innovation.
History shows that energy companies are incapable of transitioning out of their core business into a new market. Wood companies, which dominated the US energy market for a century, never transitioned to coal. Coal companies never transitioned to oil, and the super major companies of today’s oil industry seem uncommitted to truly diversify into renewables.
That leaves the opportunities in renewable energy open for aspiring entrepreneurs. SunEdison, the company I started, is an example of a scrappy startup that grew into the largest solar service company in the world. We were able to help build a multi-billion dollar solar industry by creating a new business model for solar. By developing the pay-as-you-go model for solar energy, the consumer won, and the solar industry took off. The point is that we got up every single day with a 100 percent commitment to solar. We were not distracted by incumbent businesses, and we refused to fail.
Oil companies have no incentive to innovate or lead in renewable energy; they are only focused on maintaining the status quo. This principle holds true in other parts of the clean energy sector. Breakthroughs in electric vehicles are not coming from incumbent car companies like Ford and GM, but from new entrants like Tesla Motors.
Even within stationary storage, where batteries are used to store electrical energy from renewables and the grid, innovations are not coming from solar companies, but from startups like Stem that are focuses solely on deploying battery storage.
Innovation comes from entrepreneurs at the cutting edge of technology. Companies stuck in the status quo will never be leaders regardless of their countless campaigns to convince us otherwise.
Oil companies will continue to make grand statements, but they are last century’s energy source. With a majority of new energy generation coming from renewables, this century’s energy sources will be led by entrepreneurs with their eyes to the future.
http://unreasonable.is/
Ten years ago, many major oil companies had visionary leaders that pledged to transform their companies from fossil fuels to “energy” companies. Today they have committed themselves “back to basics”—in other words back to oil and gas drilling only.
Oil companies have no reason to transition their business to renewable energy. Renewable energy is simply a feel-good ad tactic. As Ben Elgin in BusinessWeek pointed out, “[Chevron’s] slogan, ‘Finding newer, cleaner ways to power the world,’ is splashed across its website. And ads launched in 2010 as part of Chevron’s ‘We Agree’ campaign declare, ‘It’s time oil companies get behind the development of renewable energy.’”
Instead of trying to convince oil companies to develop renewable energy, it is time to make oil companies obsolete and get behind renewable energy companies—companies that are solely focused on renewable energy.
Oil companies will never create a solution to end our dependence on oil. According to Oppenheimer & Co. analyst Fadel Gheit, quoted in Elgin’s article, “It’s not that oil companies dislike renewables, it’s just not their core business or where they have expertise. They just don’t know what to do with it.”
The companies successfully deploying renewable energy on a billion-dollar scale are not incumbent players in the energy industry, but entrepreneurs focusing only on renewables. The further development of the renewable energy industry will continue to depend on new entrepreneurs driving innovation.
History shows that energy companies are incapable of transitioning out of their core business into a new market. Wood companies, which dominated the US energy market for a century, never transitioned to coal. Coal companies never transitioned to oil, and the super major companies of today’s oil industry seem uncommitted to truly diversify into renewables.
That leaves the opportunities in renewable energy open for aspiring entrepreneurs. SunEdison, the company I started, is an example of a scrappy startup that grew into the largest solar service company in the world. We were able to help build a multi-billion dollar solar industry by creating a new business model for solar. By developing the pay-as-you-go model for solar energy, the consumer won, and the solar industry took off. The point is that we got up every single day with a 100 percent commitment to solar. We were not distracted by incumbent businesses, and we refused to fail.
Oil companies have no incentive to innovate or lead in renewable energy; they are only focused on maintaining the status quo. This principle holds true in other parts of the clean energy sector. Breakthroughs in electric vehicles are not coming from incumbent car companies like Ford and GM, but from new entrants like Tesla Motors.
Even within stationary storage, where batteries are used to store electrical energy from renewables and the grid, innovations are not coming from solar companies, but from startups like Stem that are focuses solely on deploying battery storage.
Innovation comes from entrepreneurs at the cutting edge of technology. Companies stuck in the status quo will never be leaders regardless of their countless campaigns to convince us otherwise.
Oil companies will continue to make grand statements, but they are last century’s energy source. With a majority of new energy generation coming from renewables, this century’s energy sources will be led by entrepreneurs with their eyes to the future.
http://unreasonable.is/
No comments:
Post a Comment