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Some climate activists accuse the industry of simply investing in carbon capture as way to extend the use of oil and gas. The technology typically uses chemical absorption to capture carbon dioxide emitted from the chimney of an industrial plant. "The economic viability of carbon capture and sequestration is a challenge today because the cost of building most plants in order to capture carbon dioxide are very significant," the executive said. About two-thirds of the industry's carbon dioxide emissions come from chemical reactions that occur when breaking down limestone. SLB this month announced a nearly $400 million investment in Aker Carbon Capture, a pure-play carbon capture company based in Norway, in an effort to accelerate deployment of the technology at commercial scale.
Persons: Chin Lee, Biden, SLB, Fred Majkut, Majkut, Adam Miklos, Miklos, Baker Hughes, Olivier Le Peuch, Alessandro Bresciani, Jeff Gustavson, Gustavson, steelmaker Nucor, Linde, Dan Ammann, Ammann, Fatih Birol, We're, SLB's Majkut Organizations: Chevron, Houston Chronicle, Hearst Newspapers, Department of Energy, RTI International, International Energy Agency, Exxon, Rystad Energy, Clean Investment Monitor, United Nations ., Gulf Coast, CF Industries, Talos Energy, Carbonvert, IEA Locations: Winnie, Mississippi, Vicksburg, Schlumberger, United States, Paris, Chevron, United Kingdom, U.S, Aker, Norway, Houston, Port Arthur , Texas, Gulf, Louisiana, Beaumont , Texas, Mississippi , Louisiana, Texas, Bayou, Port Arthur
In this article GM Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNTMary Barra, CEO of General Motors, at the New York Stock Exchange, Nov. 17, 2022. GM's EV sales last year totaled 75,883 units, or 2.9% of the company's overall sales. However, a vast majority of GM's EV sales were from its now-discontinued Chevrolet Bolt models. Mary Barra, GM chair and CEO, speaks during the unveiling of the Cadillac Celestiq electric sedan in Los Angeles, Oct. 17, 2022. General Motors CEO Mary Barra testifies during a House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, April 1, 2014.
Persons: Mary Barra, Mary Barra's, Barra, She's, Tesla, Michelle Krebs, Warren Buffett's Berkshire, EVs hasn't, Frederic J, Brown, there's, Cruise, Cruise's, Jeff Kowalsky, Darryll Harrison Jr, Mary, Barra's, Dan Akerson, Dan Ammann, Mark Reuss, Steve Fecht, Stephanie Brinley, they've, Lyft, David Einhorn's, Einhorn Organizations: General Motors, New York Stock Exchange, NYSE DETROIT, Detroit, GM, Wall, U.S, EV, Cox Automotive, Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway, , Hyundai, Kia, Bolt, EVs, Cadillac, AFP, Getty, Honda Motor, Automotive Press Association, Bloomberg, Cruise, CNBC, GM Renaissance Center Global Headquarters, P Global Mobility, Apple, Google, Energy, Commerce, Capitol Locations: Los Angeles, North America, Barra, San Francisco, Detroit, Washington
So far, Woods' plans have turned investors demanding an energy transition strategy into believers - at least on climate. At the same time, the company plans to have a leading role in the vehicle electrification business. Reuters GraphicsMORE OIL VS GREEN AMBITIONExxon's ambitious agenda includes starting up the world's largest hydrogen power plant by 2027. RISKY BUSINESSThe $17 billion budget for low carbon technologies as the company's total revenue grows next year "will continue to rise", the CEO said. Spending in low carbon currently is constrained by scarcity of customers willing to sign up for contracts and insufficient regulations, Woods said.
Persons: Darren Woods, Carlos Barria, Woods, , Paul Sankey, Sankey, Chris James, Dan Ammann, Goldman Sachs, Neil Mehta, Ammann, Brian Weeks, Chris Bohn, Sabrina Valle, Richard Valdmanis, Gary McWilliams, Anna Driver Organizations: ExxonMobil, Economic Cooperation, REUTERS, Exxon Mobil, Natural Resources, Chevron, Reuters, Exxon, Sankey Research, Carbon Solutions, Thomson Locations: Asia, San Francisco , California, U.S, United States, Sankey, Americas, Brazil, Guyana, Texas, Gulf of Mexico, Houston, Dubai
[1/2] Exxon Mobil logo and stock graph are seen through a magnifier displayed in this illustration taken September 4, 2022. Ammann did not disclose how much Exxon intends to invest in the lithium business, or when it might become profitable. Exxon plans to begin production with partner Tetra Technologies, Reuters exclusively reported on Saturday. It will produce the metal onsite and sell it under the brand name Mobil Lithium, the company said on Monday. Exxon is focusing on lithium production to be used not only in EVs but also consumer electronics and energy storage systems that can hold electricity generated from intermittent solar and wind power.
Persons: Dado Ruvic, Dan Ammann, Ammann, Sabrina Valle, Sourasis Bose, Maju Samuel, Bernadette Baum Organizations: Exxon Mobil, REUTERS, Companies, Exxon, Tetra Technologies HOUSTON, Exxon's, Imperial, Tetra Technologies, Reuters, Mobil, BP, Shell, Deloitte, Thomson Locations: China, United States, Europe, Arkansas, U.S, Alberta, Canada, Houston, Bengaluru
Watch CNBC's full interview with Exxon Mobil's Dan Ammann
  + stars: | 2023-11-13 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWatch CNBC's full interview with Exxon Mobil's Dan AmmannDan Ammann, president of Exxon’s low carbon solutions business, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss their company's plans to produce lithium for electric vehicle batteries and more.
Persons: Exxon Mobil's Dan Ammann Dan Ammann Organizations: Exxon Mobil's
Exxon Mobil aims to become a leading producer of lithium for electric vehicle batteries through a drilling operation the oil giant is launching in Arkansas, the company announced Monday. Discussions with potential customers such as electric vehicle and battery manufacturers are ongoing, Exxon said in a statement. The lithium operation comes as the major oil companies are under pressure to address climate change. Exxon views lithium as a decadeslong investment with high growth potential as the U.S. shifts to electric vehicles, Ammann said. The U.S currently has just one commercial-scale lithium production operation, in Nevada.
Persons: Dan Ammann, Ammann, " Ammann, CNBC's Organizations: Exxon Mobil, Exxon, Shell, BP, CNBC, . Geological Survey, U.S, Li, Department of Energy, Electric, Cox Automotive Locations: Arkansas, U.S, Argentina, Chile, Nevada
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailExxon Mobil plans to produce lithium for electric vehicle batteriesDan Ammann, president of Exxon’s low carbon solutions business, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss their company's plans to produce lithium for electric vehicle batteries and more.
Persons: Dan Ammann Organizations: Exxon Mobil
Exxon Mobil said on Monday that it planned to set up a facility in Arkansas to produce lithium, a critical raw material for electric vehicles, which pose one of the biggest challenges to the company’s oil business. It could also open the door for southern Arkansas to emerge as a major source of lithium. Most of the metal today comes from Australia and South America and much of it is processed in China. “Electrification is going to be a major component of the energy transition and we bring highly relevant experience to the production of lithium,” Dan Ammann, president of Exxon Mobil Low Carbon Solutions and a former top executive at General Motors, said in an interview. “We see an opportunity to deploy that will be highly profitable.”
Persons: Dan Ammann, Organizations: Exxon Mobil, Exxon, Natural Resources, Carbon Solutions, General Motors Locations: Arkansas, Australia, South America, China,
That's a business Exxon, the biggest oil company in the US, is looking to expand. The largest US oil major said Thursday it would acquire Denbury, which has the largest network of carbon dioxide pipelines in the country, for $4.9 billion. Denbury is also in the business of what's called enhanced oil recovery, which involves using carbon dioxide to collect more oil from wells. Most of the captured carbon dioxide will likely be stored underground, however. Transporting CO2 requires pipelines, and Denbury has 1,300 miles of carbon dioxide pipelines; much of its network spans Louisiana, Texas, and Mississippi.
Persons: Denbury, what's, Joe Biden, Dan Ammann, there's, Organizations: Exxon Mobil, Exxon, Service, Privacy, International Energy Agency, IEA, Exxon's, Carbon Solutions, Bloomberg, Denbury, United Nations Locations: Wall, Silicon, Louisiana , Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, CCUS, US, Qatar, Australia
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailExxonMobil's low carbon president: Decarbonization is building 'compelling' new business for usDan Ammann, ExxonMobil low carbon solutions unit president, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss what the low carbon solutions unit does, the company's partnerships and more.
Exxon is tackling what should be a multi-trillion market in 10 years or more, Woods said. The result will be an Exxon less prone to commodity price swings through predictable, long-term contracts with customers striving to reduce their own carbon footprint. "This business is going to look quite a bit different than the base business of Exxon Mobil," vowed Dan Ammann, president of Exxon's two-year-old Low Carbon Business Solutions unit. Exxon is tackling carbon capture, hydrogen, biofuels, which it estimates have a combined potential of $6.5 trillion by 2050, equivalent to the traditional oil and gas business. The business can achieve "robust double-digit returns" off these long-term contracts, Ammann said.
The law may help oil companies like ExxonMobil build profitable businesses to replace some of the revenue and profit they'll lose as EVs proliferate. Maybe, if carbon capture and storage is indeed as big a deal as ExxonMobil's first-of-its-kind deal to extract, transport and store carbon from other companies' factories implies. Could it be that Big Oil's next big thing got a big assist from Joe Biden? An industrial facility on the Houston Ship Channel where Exxon Mobil is proposing a carbon capture and sequestration network. And big oil and gas companies are where the expertise is."
Exxon Mobil Corp. hopes an outsider who most recently headed General Motors Co.’s driverless-car unit can shake up its efforts to build a climate-friendly business unit. The oil giant recently tapped Dan Ammann , a former investment banker and longtime GM executive, to lead its fledgling low-carbon business. Mr. Ammann’s task is daunting: turn a new unit intended to reduce carbon emissions into a profit center.
Exxon Mobil signs first carbon capture deal with CF Industries
  + stars: | 2022-10-13 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailExxon Mobil signs first carbon capture deal with CF IndustriesExxon Mobil's Dan Ammann joins CNBC's David Faber to discuss the company's first carbon capture deal with CF Industries Holdings.
Exxon says it will transport and store underground 2 million metric tons of CO2 per year produced starting in 2025, when CF Industries opens a $200 million CO2 compression facility in Louisiana to process emissions from its ammonia production. He declined to comment on financial terms of the deal with CF Industries. Exxon signed a parallel agreement to use Enlink Midstream's network to transport the CO2 to the storage site. While critics view carbon sequestration as greenwashing by polluters, Exxon says the business can achieve double-digit percentage returns while limiting planet-warming gases. The Louisiana initiative is part of the company's planned $15 billion investment by 2027 in low carbon operations.
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