OCCIDENTAL Petroleum CEO Vicki Hollub has said she wants the international oil firm to become carbon neutral.

In an interview with the Financial Times, Hollub said she wants the firm to capture greenhouse gases equivalent to those produced throughout its operations, its supply chain, and through the use of the oil and gas it pumps from the earth.

“We believe if you’re not addressing these [climate] issues today, you’re going to be behind the game,” she told the FT. The company has not set a date for when it would achieve this highly ambitious target but it follows commitments to projects and initiatives aimed at reducing emissions from the oil and gas sector. The company currently injects more than 950bn ft3/y of CO 2 into its Permian fields, making it the largest user of the technique in the booming oil region. It says the technique can increase production levels by 10–25%.

Hollub revealed that it has successfully piloted the use of enhanced oil recovery in its horizontal wells in its US shale plays. She told the FT it could apply the technique at full-field scale in 2021. The ambition is to use CO 2 captured from industry to produce more oil from its fields, permanently storing the CO 2 and offsetting emissions from the use of the hydrocarbons produced.