Big Oil and Climate Regulation: Business as Usual or a Changing Business?

Author:

Vormedal Irja1,Gulbrandsen Lars H.2,Skjærseth Jon Birger3

Affiliation:

1. Irja Vormedal is a senior research fellow at the Fridtjof Nansen Institute in Norway. Her research interests include the politics of low-carbon transitions, business preference formation, environmental policy and innovation, and the political economy of sustainable seafood. Recent articles include “The Good, the Bad, or the Ugly? Corporate Strategies, Size, and Environmental Regulation in the Fis

2. Lars H. Gulbrandsen is a research professor and research director at the Fridtjof Nansen Institute in Norway. He has published widely in the field of global environmental governance and is the author of Transnational Environmental Governance: The Emergence and Effects of the Certification of Forests and Fisheries (2010). His most recent book is The Evolution of Carbon Markets: Design and Diffusio

3. Jon Birger Skjærseth is a research professor at the Fridtjof Nansen Institute in Norway. His research interests include international environmental cooperation, European climate and energy policies, and corporate strategies. He has published numerous articles and books, including Corporate Responses to EU Emissions Trading (2013) and Linking EU Climate and Energy Policies (2017).

Abstract

Abstract There is a long and continuing debate in the literature on corporate political power about whether businesses that advocate public-interest regulation do so for strategic political reasons or because they anticipate economic gains. Previous research on Big Oil’s strategies in climate politics has largely converged on the first view, arguing that global majors feign support for moderate carbon pricing largely to prevent the adoption of more drastic and costly policies. In contrast, this article argues that Big Oil’s growing stake in natural gas expansion is its economic motive for supporting favorably designed carbon pricing. The article finds that policy, technology, and energy market changes have paved the way for a shift toward natural gas and that a moderate carbon price, by triggering coal-to-gas switching, supports the realization of a gray transition in which “Big Gas” can expand its market share at the expense of coal and become a major bridge fuel next to renewables. Our findings underscore the importance of studying the competitive rivalry that underpins evolving industry demands for climate policy and regulation.

Publisher

MIT Press - Journals

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Political Science and International Relations,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment,Global and Planetary Change

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