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Tuesday 19 July 2022 12:09 pm  |  Updated:  Wednesday 28 September 2022 2:45 pm

Scenario planning on the ‘net zero’ energy transition

By: CFA Institute Contributor

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For investment managers, prioritising one scenario over all others can have far-reaching consequences. This is especially true when it comes to the energy transition to ‘net zero’ greenhouse gas emissions – achieving a balance between carbon emitted into the atmosphere and carbon removed from it – quite literally a hot topic at present as a heatwave sweeps across Europe, triggering warnings of ‘extreme heat’ in the UK.

While we do not know what the 2050s will bring, we can envision pathways that provide reasonable variations of what that future may look like.
There are multiple, equally valid trajectories through the transition, all with different technology mixes and varied time horizons. Hence, a simple discounting of cash flows in a somewhat predictable ‘economic’ scenario – with rational actors reacting to techno-economic considerations and the policies that are likely to be enacted – is not necessarily viable. Energy investors must consider various outcomes since the outcomes are, well, so various.

Staying alert to specialists’ backgrounds

Research providers, think-tanks, sell-side analysts and industry groups all compete for investors’ attention. Their goal is to either influence our decision-making or win our business.

Their base case often depends on their background. Those with histories in oil price assessment or renewable energy modelling could be prone to availability or anchoring bias. Many big energy players with high exposure to an abrupt net-zero transition construct their own scenarios, often guided by their own agendas.

Gas transmission system operators (TSOs) and their industry groups envision a bright future for their stakeholders, whether through extended use of natural gas or rapid shifts to hydrogen. For example, Shell’s ‘Energy Transformation Scenarios’ — Sky 1.5, Waves and Islands (published last year) — attracted a lot of attention: its Sky 1.5 pathway assumes a larger role for oil and gas than forecasts issued by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and other such bodies. The role of hydrogen is also increasingly discussed, for example in Germany’s target of climate neutrality by 2045, but there is no consensus on how large a role it will play or from where it will be sourced.

Three steps to assessing scenarios

Given the abundance of organisations promoting their own scenarios, investors need to approach them cautiously.
We recommend a three-step assessment process:

  1. Apply some filters and screen out obviously conflicted forecasters.
  2. Review the target forecasters’ scenarios and decide which are most applicable to your investment philosophies.
  3. Consider the investment target’s performance and how plausible pathways could diverge from their presumed base case, which is often the ‘economic’ scenario. This is where careful evaluation of environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors and the resulting risks can help assess how the future may stray from the anticipated path.

There are other things to keep in mind. Social factors may drive higher emissions scenarios. Rising energy costs could impact spending on heating, transport and food. By increasing the cost burden on the low- to middle-income population, such ‘greenflation’ could lead to widespread political and social unrest. Policymakers might be pressured to subsidise fossil-fuel consumption. This has already occurred in Latin America, Africa and Southeast Asia and constitutes a potential headwind that could delay the world’s eventual exit from fossil fuels.

Of course, the tailwinds driving us away from traditional fuel sources may be even more powerful. Shock events have strained supply chains, and volatile fuel prices encourage calls for a renewable path to energy independence. Climate change-related risks are top of mind for much of the population, and as climate-related crises grow ever more severe, popular support for sustainability should translate into public policies that help propel the world towards a 2050 net-zero scenario.
In addition to policy developments, transformative technological innovations are also possible. Indeed, small modular nuclear reactors may deploy faster than expected or the costs of hydrogen from electrolysis could fall below $2/kg earlier than anticipated.

Picking your investment path

Some investors might be tempted to allocate based on their economic case and assume no significant technological or policy shifts. But they have to consider the possibility that these investments could become stranded and prepare accordingly — to either take the hit or extract sufficient value beforehand.

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Alternatively, some investments may transition themselves. Carbon assets have transition potential, provided they have a future in a hydrogen-based fuel scenario or can be retrofitted for carbon capture and storage (CCS). Both paths could contribute to achieving net zero by 2050. But will they? We don’t know. There is too much uncertainty around the ultimate cost and effectiveness of transitioning such assets, especially when they could be displaced by lower-cost technology.

The most prudent approach, then, may be to focus on no-regret assets. These will likely perform across all the most viable pathways of the energy transition: more renewables, more short-term and long-term storage, a stronger grid, heat pumps and district heating should all be central to a carbon-free future.

When faced with such critical decisions, we need to explore scenarios beyond our economic base case. We cannot assume rationality among all actors: the transition to net zero won’t be smooth. There will be periods of slow progress, potentially followed by abrupt changes in the face of extreme weather events, technological advancements, political upheaval, pandemics or other developments.
It is important to plan for the future, so we need to be smart, careful and deliberate about which future we choose.


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By Florian Forster, CFA, has his background in energy and finance, having worked as a chemical engineer, in LNG shipping, renewables structuring, portfolio management and origination, and management consulting in energy and private equity practices.

And by Olivia Fatkin-Kane, holds the certificate in Sustainability and Climate Risk (SCR) offered by the Global Association of Risk Professionals (GARP) and a certificate in green and sustainable finance from the Chartered Banker Institute.

All posts are the opinion of the author. As such, they should not be construed as investment advice, nor do the opinions expressed necessarily reflect the views of CFA Institute or the author’s employer.


Image credit: ©Getty Images / precinbe

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