Exxon Mobil chief executive Rex Tillerson, it seems, has not joined the Boone Pickens army.

Exxon Mobil chief executive Rex Tillerson, it seems, has not joined the Boone Pickens army.

Tillerson doubts natural gas will become a popular transportation fuel, while oilman and hedge-fund billionaire Pickens has staked his reputation on promoting the use of natural gas in vehicles.

And Tillerson isn't just promoting his own petroleum products -- he's investing billions of dollars to boost Exxon's natural gas production. He just thinks we'll need more natural gas for power generation, not for cars and trucks.

"Natural gas as a transportation fuel will probably never be particularly attractive and it's due to basic physics," Tillerson said Thursday at Exxon's annual analyst conference in New York. "To get more comparable energy on board means you've got to either pump it up to higher pressures or you've got to put larger storage tanks."

Pickens has been stumping for the past two years for Americans to shift to natural gas as a vehicle fuel, particularly for heavy duty trucks. He is working to convince the City of Dallas to invest in more natural gas vehicles.

Pickens says the move would help wean the U.S. off of foreign oil, support domestic natural gas, cut energy costs and reduce pollution.

Tillerson said he doubts natural gas cars would accomplish all of that.

Refueling stations are costly, as much as $1 million, he said.

"If you're a mom-and-pop retailer, that's almost impossible to do without a lot of help," Tillerson said.

For long-haul trucks, "I can't make the math work on why anybody would do that," he said, since the trucking industry relies on a service stations across the country.

He conceded that vehicle fleets that use one central refueling station might make sense.

Still, Tillerson said, converting an existing vehicle to natural gas is costly.

And while a conversion can cut a vehicle's carbon dioxide emissions by as much as 20 percent, Tillerson said the internal combustion gasoline engine has a lot of room to improve on greenhouse gas emissions.

Tillerson shares Pickens' view that natural gas will become more important for Americans. Exxon predicts the U.S. will shift more power generation to natural gas in coming decades.

That's why Exxon has offered to buy Fort Worth natural gas producer XTO Energy for $41 billion, including debt assumption. The deal gives Exxon a large stake in natural gas production in North Texas' Barnett Shale and similar shale fields around the country.

Tillerson said again on Thursday he plans to use XTO as a global unit to produce natural gas from so-called unconventional formations, such as shale. But he has said Exxon isn't shifting away from oil or changing its strategy.

Exxon executives said Thursday they plan to invest $28 billion in capital spending this year, and to continue investing between $25 billion and $30 billion each year through 2014. Exxon invested $27.1 billion in 2009.

Tillerson also said at an analyst meeting that he expects Exxon's investment in Iraq to yield double-digit returns, if the company manages the project properly.

The company recently signed an agreement to drill for oil in Iraq, and has begun holding planning meeting with its Iraqi counterparts.

"They have been more enthusiastic about our joint work than perhaps we even anticipated," Tillerson said, adding that even though security is improving, it will continue to be a challenge.

 

Buck

Views: 8

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Exxon's major holdings are in oil, so they will continue to push it. Their move to get into natural gas says more than their words in my opinion. Converting vehicles to gas is not that expensive, and the payoff to get off foreign oil would be tremendous. What is good for Exxon is not necessarily what is good for the United States.

RSS

© 2024   Created by Keith Mauck (Site Publisher).   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service