It is the latest company to report the worst year on record during the Covid-19 pandemic.
“The past year has been the most challenging market conditions ExxonMobil has ever experienced,” said CEO Darren Woods at a conference call.
The company has taken cost-cutting and reorganization steps that will help Exxon be in better shape going forward, Woods said. Those measures are expected to save the oil giant $ 6 billion a year by 2023, compared to before the pandemic. It also cut capital outlays to $ 21.4 billion, which is 35% lower than initially planned for the year.
Exxon said it should be able to pay dividends to investors just as it did in 2020 – a time when other companies are halting dividends due to mounting losses.
Digging into the results – and the effect of depreciation
Excluding special items, the company reported a fourth quarter net loss of $ 20.1 billion. But that was largely due to the write-offs.
Exxon reported adjusted income of $ 110 million excluding special items, a fraction of the $ 1.8 billion it made a year earlier, but still its first profitable quarter of that year.
Exxon also announced it would appoint a new board member – Tan Sri Wan Zulkiflee Wan Ariffin, the former CEO of Malaysian oil company Petronas. It said it is also in talks with other potential new board members.
The industry faces global challenges to reduce CO2 emissions to combat climate change. The United States rejoined the Paris climate agreement on President Joe Biden’s first day. He has also canceled new oil and gas leases on federal grounds.
In response to push to cut carbon, ExxonMobil announced on Monday that it had formed a new company to commercialize its technology to extract carbon from the atmosphere, and that it would invest $ 3 billion in lower-emission energy solutions through 2025 .
“Carbon capture storage is a critical element to achieving the ambitions of the Paris Agreement,” said Woods.
ExxonMobil captured 120 million tons of carbon last year, which Woods says is equivalent to taking more than 25 million passenger cars off the road. But Engine No. 1 said relying on carbon capture is the wrong approach to the company’s long-term outlook, and that it should instead invest more in clean energy to diversify profitably.
“It is … poor long-term planning to rely almost exclusively on the idea that carbon capture will become scalable and affordable soon enough to allow for the continued growth of oil and gas production over decades under a Paris-compliant trajectory . ” said group.