Title: Environmental Risk Management at Chevron
1Environmental Risk Management at Chevron
- Professor Doug Cerf
- Donald Bren Graduate School of Environmental
Science and Management - Environmental Risk Management (ESM 286)
- Winter 2008
2Management Decision
- Simulate the environment where a recommendation
is made to management regarding the
implementation of DEMA - Quantitative environmental risk analysis decision
making model (DEMA) - Should Chevron move to a more systematic system
to manage environmental risk? - From a decision framework to assess risk through
a qualitative and judgmental evaluation to
quantitative system - A superior system is where a quantitative
analysis informs experienced judgment - DEMA is used on a test basis in the refinery in
Richmond, California, and Chevron Overseas
Petroleum Inc. (COPI), should it be implemented
company wide?
3The Process
- Teams physically organize in their groups.
- A team (volunteer) states their case
- Other teams should
- Support other teams specific statements with
explanations - Debate other teams specific statements with
explanations - Add related considerations to specific topic
being discussed - A second/third team should state their case
4Discuss the following to conclude the discussion
5Case questions
- What risks is Chevron management worried about?
- If you are the CEO at Chevron, are you more
worried that line managers in the field will
spend too much money on environmental risk
management, or are you worried that they wont
spend enough? - Is Chevron using the right tools for managing
environmental business risk? Why do the tools
differ from those used to manage other types of
business risk? - Should Chevron make company wide use of
quantitative risk management tools like DEMA?
6What risks is Chevron management worried about?
- Risk of damage to the natural environment, human
health, and corporate profitability or all of the
above - Environmental externalities and impact on public
goods at every stage of their value chain - Public good, non rival (ones consumption does
not impact others) and non excludable
(consumption can not be restricted) - A cake is not a public good
- Their value chain --from raw material extraction
to the pump - Contingent environmental costs (cleanup costs,
example superfund, RCRA) from past operations - Cleanup in the future related to current
operations
7What risks is Chevron management worried about?
- Cost of business interruption
- Loss of goodwill and reputation
- How sensitive is Chevron to goodwill and
reputation? - Is Chevron concerned about protecting firm value
or are they concerned about the environment? - Are these the same things?
- How does a firm executive think of environmental
risk compared to an executive of an environmental
NGO?
8Specific risks
- Transportation of crude oil and refined products
- Leaking underground tanks at service stations
contaminate ground water - Emissions from the tail pipe
- Smog
- Particulate matter
- Greenhouse gasses
- Other businesses
- Coal mining
- Chemical manufacture
9Factors that impact environmental business risk
- The probabilities of different adverse events
- Example marine oil spill
- mitigate by investing in double-hulled tankers to
reduce the probability of a spill - The total social burden if an event occurs
- Invest in rapid response cleanup teams to reduce
the social burden - The fraction of those burdens for which the firm
is responsible - Buy insurance against a spill reducing the
fraction of the burden for which the firm is
responsible in exchange for a premium - The quality of the information that is available
to the firm for each of the above items - Conduct research on the causes and consequences
of spills
10Tools to manage environmental risk
- Tool 1 Internal command and control regulation
- Policy 530
- Tool 2 Employee education and training programs
to reduce the probability and severity of
environmental damage - Tool 3 Corporate wide emergency response
programs reduce expected losses - Tool 4 Insure against environmental liability
risk with external contracts - Tool 5 Management evaluation and promotion as
tool for creating incentives - Environmental performance does not play a large
role in determining managers bonuses - Tool 6 Implicit threat of consequences
11If you are the CEO at Chevron, are you more
worried that line managers in the field will
spend too much, or not enough money on
environmental risk management?
- Tools 1 and 2 lead to increased investment in
environmental risk management - Tools 3 and 4 lead to decreased investment in
environmental risk management because they are
partially protected from the consequences of an
accident - Mitigated by the size of the deductible
- Tool 5 may increase investment in environmental
risk management unless they belie short term
profits are a more important determinant of
bonuses. - Tool 6 will increase managers investment in risk
reduction
12Should Chevron be more systematic and analytical
in managing environmental risk?
- Understand true costs of environmental incidents
- Effect of different investments on the
probability and magnitude of those incidents - Will this effort make environmental risk
management more efficient? - Is this possible given the incomplete information
available to make these decisions?
13Possible answers
- Answer 1 Yes because the system will clarify
the true costs and benefits of different risk
reduction proposals and enable the company to
reduce more risk for a smaller outlay. - Experience with DEMA at the Richmond refinery and
internal operations - DEMA saved several millions at the Richmond
refinery. - Richmond is 5 of Chevrons total income
- An attempt at an estimate Several million is 3
million times 20 equals a company wide savings of
60 million
14Possible answers
- Answer 2 Yes because it forces long-term
consequences of current behavior - Without some analytical system like DEMA long
term consequences of current practices could be
ignored. - This would transfer risks to future shareholders
- In an efficient market with full understanding of
risks long term consequences should impact
current stock price - The increased managerial attention from a system
brings about greater creativity with respect to
risk management and greater efficiency
15Possible answers
- Answer 3 No, because although the improved
analytical capability is valuable, it is
outweighed by the additional risk of bad
publicity that a firm creates by generating and
using explicit valuations of different risk
endpoints. - Environmental groups, communities where the
company does business and government regulators
will not react favorably to company tradeoffs
between environmental quality or community safety
against dollar opportunity costs of different
risk reduction proposals.
16Possible answers
- Answer 4 No, because the improved analytical
capability is not very valuable. - The conversion factors are bound to be so
arbitrary that they will not provide any useful
information. - Arbitrary conversion factors will undermine line
managers and external stakeholders confidence in
the companys environmental management system as
a whole.
17Possible answers
- Answer 5 No, because DEMA is intended to
maximize net benefits and this may not be the
appropriate goal for corporate risk management. - DEMA compares projects expected values
- Does not include intangibles, biases and high
level experience - Example two projects that cost 500,000 with
expected values of 1 million - Project A reduces from 50 to 40 the probability
of an event that will cost 10 million if it
occurs - Project B reduces from .01 to 0 the probability
of an event that will cost 10 Billion if it
occurs
18Where on the value chain does Chevrons
environmental risk start and stop?
- Environmental risk for the value chain --from raw
material extraction to the pump - Does chevron need to manage environmental risk
past the pump?
19Connection between environmental risk and
economic risk?
- Is Chevrons goal to manage environmental risk or
are they really managing both short and long term
economic risk? - Is management of any type of business risk
(interest rate risk, foreign exchange risk etc.)
a subset of management of economic risk? - Insurance is the hedge for managing environmental
risk - More difficult to manage than financial risk
(e.g. currency risk) where instruments exist to
hedge risk