6533b838fe1ef96bd12a3bb7

RESEARCH PRODUCT

More planet and less profit? The ethical dilemma of an oil producing nation

John A. Hunnes

subject

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementHF5001-6182Strategy and Managementethical dilemmaManagement Science and Operations ResearchoilProfit (economics)Market economyVDP::Social science: 200::Political science and organizational theory: 240::Public and private administration: 242Accountingddc:6500502 economics and businessManagement. Industrial managementBusinessBusiness and International ManagementpetroleumMarketingsovereign wealth fund05 social sciencessustainabilityHD28-70Sovereign wealth fundEthical dilemmaSustainabilityBusiness Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)050211 marketingBusiness050203 business & management

description

Every oil producing nation is confronted with a complex and fundamental ethical dilemma. On the one hand, there are moral arguments for the nation to use the petroleum resource for the benefit of society and make it available for countries who do not have this natural resource endowment. On the other hand, there are moral arguments for not extracting and using fossil fuels because of CO2 emissions. In short, this creates tension between the need for government revenues to finance welfare benefits and the objective of preserving the environment. A complicating factor is that a nation's domestic oil and gas activities are in its nature global because the activities have a direct impact on the global climate. In this paper, I address a question that to my knowledge is rarely discussed in the business ethics literature: how does an oil producing nation try to resolve this fundamental ethical dilemma? Using Norway as a case, I argue that the nation is well aware of this ethical dilemma, but that there are few signals from the government that it wants to reduce the petroleum activities. Instead, Norway tries to seek redemption by (1) using the financial power of the Oil Fund to promote sustainability issues abroad and (2) building an international brand as an 'Environmentally Conscious Energy Nation.'

https://doi.org/10.1080/23311975.2019.1648363