Insurer
Chubb Demands Energy Producers Cut Methane Emissions for Coverage
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Restrictions
fall short of demands by climate activists
Global insurer Chubb Ltd. is tightening its requirements
on insurance policies for oil-and- gas producers, demanding that they reduce emissions
of methane, a potent greenhouse gas.
Chubb, which is a top-10 insurer in
the worldwide oil-and-gas market by premium volume, will also stop underwriting
projects in areas designated as protected by state, provincial or national governments,
effective immediately.
The company has been under pressure
from climate activists, who have targeted banks and insurers to cut off funding
and insurance coverage for fossil-fuel companies. Chubb’s actions fall short of
their demands to quit sales to oil and gas producers.
Chubb Chief Executive Evan Greenberg
said in an interview that the carrier’s move wasn’t motivated by activists’ pressure.
The insurer’s plan is a “science-based and technical way” to help with carbon reduction,
he said. As an underwriter, Chubb will be able to verify that clients are taking
the required steps. “If not, then we won’t underwrite them,” he said.
A wholesale quitting of sales
to producers, he said, puts at risk the nation’s energy security, because renewable
energy isn’t ready to pick up the slack. “We’re trying to balance between society’s
two competing interests,” he said.
He said many of the company’s
oil-and-gas clients already have technology in place for reducing methane emissions,
“and those that don’t, we’re giving them a grace period to put a plan in place.”
Methane is about 85 times more
potent than carbon dioxide at trapping heat over two decades. Consequently, it accounts
for about 30% of the rise
in global temperatures observed since industrialization began,
according to the International Energy Agency.
President Biden pledged to cut U.S. methane emissions by 30%
by 2030. The Inflation Reduction
Act
signed into law in August includes provisions for a new $900-per-metric-ton tax
on methane emissions from oil and gas producers. The tax goes into effect in 2024.
Some insurers and reinsurers have halted coverage
for new oil- and gas-fields projects or in sensitive locations, environment groups
say. Chubb’s action is different in that it aims to reduce emissions by developing
best practices for existing operations of its clients, not to mandate blanket underwriting
exclusions on most or all new fossil-fuel activity.
Chubb will require clients to
provide “evidence-based plans” for managing their methane emissions, including at
a minimum programs for leak detection and elimination of
nonemergency venting. This is something producers sometimes do when prices are low.
Clients must also adopt one or
more technologies that have been demonstrated to reduce emissions from flaring,
which turns methane gas into carbon dioxide and water vapor. Chubb will help clients
to identify the technologies.
Chubb is one of the world’s largest
publicly traded property-casualty insurers, so activists have long had it in their
sights, while other insurers watch its moves for competitive reasons.
In October, about 50 protesters
gathered outside Mr. Greenberg’s New York City home with a mock oil derrick. The
year before, they hauled an inflatable of his likeness to just outside the U.S.
Open tennis tournament, where Chubb is a sponsor.
In interviews earlier this week,
environmental groups said they wouldn’t cheer measures short of their endgame. Peter
Bosshard, a director with Sunrise Project, which advocates
globally for a rapid shift of capital from fossil fuels to renewable energy, said
climate science “calls for a blanket stop to all new fossil fuel expansion projects—and
a phase out of existing production over time.”
In 2019, Chubb was one of the
first major insurers to limit coal-related underwriting and investment, a policy
subsequently extended to oil-sands projects. In January, it announced a climate-specific
business unit that will provide an array of insurance products and services “to
businesses engaged in developing or employing new technologies and processes that
support the transition to a low-carbon economy,” Chubb said.
Reinsurers, which back up insurers,
have been more aggressive than primary insurers like Chubb in limiting coverage
of fossil-fuel companies, activists say. More than a third of reinsurers have some
sort of oil-and-gas exclusions, including Swiss Re, compared with 62% having coal-exit
policies by late 2022, according to Insure Our Future, a coalition of activist groups.
That compared with 15% of primary insurers that had such oil-and-gas exclusions,
including big German insurer Allianz SE, the
coalition said.