Pratima Rangarajan C-Suite Chat: Energy, Climate and Taking Initiative

Presented by:

Oil and Gas Investor
Oil and Gas Investor

A group of the world’s largest member companies of the Oil and Gas Climate Initiative teamed up in October 2016, pooled together $1-plus billion to launch an investment fund designed specifically to catalyze a low-carbon industry chain and put a woman with a doctorate in chemical engineering from Princeton University in charge.

Under the leadership of Pratima Rangarajan, OGCI Climate Investments has backed some of North America’s largest carbon capture and sequestration projects, jump-started the U.K.’s carbon capture, utilization and storage hub project in the northeast of the country and supported cross-sector emerging technologies, including artificial intelligence (AI) technology that increases efficiency, sustainability and productivity at industrial sites.

Five years in, Rangarajan highlights a “trilemma” of energy concerns and their impacts. This summer, she discussed energy’s climate problems and OGCI Climate Investments’ work to resolve them with Oil and Gas Investor editor-in-chief Deon Daugherty.

Deon Daugherty: Let’s begin with the energy security issues that are coming to the fore with Russia's invasion of Ukraine. How do the increasing security issues around energy impact your work to finance the acceleration of the energy transition? 

Pratima Rangarajan: The world is faced with an energy trilemma—a combination of energy security, energy equity and climate issues.

These three factors are very interconnected. Let’s take India in April 2022—in 45-degrees C weather, the climate was not cooperating—so everybody turned up their air conditioning and suddenly there wasn’t enough power generation in the country and energy security became a problem.

We’re seeing this cycle play out, not just in India but in many parts of the world right now. This cycle needs to be broken, which means that we need to think not just about whether we have enough energy, but are we using our resources wisely and where can we stop the waste in the system?

DD: When you mention waste of energy resources, the flaring of natural gas comes to mind. What can OGCI Climate Investments do to address that sort of waste? 

PR: Natural gas is a great source of energy but only if we can keep it in the pipes and avoid leaks. The oil and gas industry needs to be taking a leadership role here, and the OGCI members are.

The first thing to do when you want to solve a problem is measure it. Five years ago, when we started OGCI Climate Investments’ current fund, there weren’t good technologies to measure methane emissions. Today we have investments in satellites, aircraft, drones and artificial intelligence.