Shell targets power trading and hydrogen in climate drive
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[February 01, 2021] By
Ron Bousso
LONDON (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell is
betting on its expertise in power trading and rapid growth in hydrogen
and biofuels markets as it shifts away from oil, rather than joining
rivals in a scramble for renewable power assets, company sources said.
Shell and its European rivals are seeking new business models to reduce
their dependency on fossil fuels and appeal to investors concerned about
the long-term outlook for an industry under intense pressure to slash
greenhouse gas emissions.
Shell will present its strategy on Feb. 11 and unlike Total and BP the
company will focus more on becoming an intermediary between clean power
producers and customers than investing billions in renewable projects,
the sources said, giving previously unreported details of the plan.
Shell announced in October it would increase its spending on low-carbon
energy to 25% of overall capital expenditure by 2025 and the sources
said that would translate into more than $5 billion a year, up from $1.5
billion to $2 billion now.
The Anglo-Dutch company will, however, keep its overall oil and gas
output largely stable for the next decade to help fund its energy
transition, though gas is set to become a bigger part of the mix, the
sources told Reuters.
A Shell spokeswoman declined to comment on the details of the company's
new strategy ahead of its February announcements. BP, meanwhile, plans
to slash its oil output by 40% by 2030 and has swept aside its core oil
and gas exploration team to focus on renewables, with spending on
low-carbon energy set to rise 10-fold to $5 billion over the coming
decade.
While Europe's big oil firms are all rolling out strategies to survive
in a low-carbon world, investors and analysts remain sceptical about
their ability to transform centuries-old business models and triumph in
already crowded power markets.
(Graphic: Increase in low-carbon spending - https://graphics.reuters.com/SHELL-STRATEGY/xklpylookvg/chart.png)
POWER TRADING
Central to Shell's plans are its experience in trading all types of
energy from oil to natural gas to electricity and its vast retail
network, which has more outlets than either of the world's two biggest
food chains, Subway and McDonald's.
Shell is already the world's leading energy trader, an activity it calls
"marketing". It trades about 13 million barrels of oil a day, or 13% of
global demand before the pandemic, using one of the biggest fleets of
tankers.
It is the top trader of liquefied natural gas (LNG), buys and sells
power, biofuels, chemicals and carbon credits, and now aims to use its
pole position to snare a large chunk of the fast-growing low-carbon
power market.
"The future of energy is particularly bright for our marketing and our
customer-facing businesses where we already have scale. So we will
accelerate a growth plan which is already underway," Chief Executive Ben
van Beurden said in October.
Trading has been key for oil majors for decades, allowing them to use
their global operations to quickly take advantage of changes in supply
and demand. Shell's trading helped it avoid its first-ever quarterly
loss in the second quarter of 2020 even as consumption plummeted due to
the coronavirus epidemic.
Nevertheless, analysts say Shell's trading division will face a
challenge because it is heavily reliant at the moment on sales of
refined fossil fuel products, which also account for a large proportion
of its carbon emissions.
"Shell faces difficult choices on how to balance its trading cash flow
that leverages oil products while still having carbon-intensive
operations," JP Morgan analyst Christyan Malek said. "But because of
their scale, customer base and distribution, they can be much more
flexible."
HYDROGEN HUBS
At the same time, Shell plans to boost its consumer base by expanding
its electricity supply business for homes and its network of electric
vehicle charging points, as well as signing long-term corporate power
purchase agreements (PPA).
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Ben van Beurden, chief executive officer of Royal Dutch Shell,
speaks during the 26th World Gas Conference in Paris, France, June
2, 2015. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier/File Photo
Shell already has 45,000 retail outlets worldwide, far more than its European
rivals, and it is planning to add another 10,000 by 2025.
As a major biofuel producer, Shell wants to ramp up its production of fuel made
from plants and waste as an alternative source of energy for transportation, the
sources said.
Shell's is also betting on future growth in hydrogen, the sources said. While
still a niche market, hydrogen has attracted huge interest in recent months as a
clean alternative to natural gas for heavy industry and transportation.
Hydrogen, and so-called green hydrogen which is made solely with renewable
power, comes with high costs and infrastructure challenges though Shell is
already investing.
Its push will centre initially on Europe, where it is developing a hydrogen hub
in Hamburg, Germany, and it is one of several firms developing a hub in
Rotterdam in the Netherlands. It is also looking to expand into the United
States and Asia.
The U.S. state of California, for example, is backing the rollout of hydrogen
fuel cell vehicles to help achieve its climate goals while countries such South
Korea and Japan are betting heavily on hydrogen as an alternative fuel.
The sources did not give any targets for increases in Shell's production of
either hydrogen or biofuels.
Like Shell, rivals including BP, Total, Italy's Eni and Spain's Repsol also plan
to expand in hydrogen and biofuels markets, as well as add electric vehicle
charging points to generate new revenue away from oil.
COMPETITIVE EDGE?
However, Shell won't chase the same ambitious targets some of its European
rivals have for adding wind and solar generation capacity and will prioritise
trading and selling electricity instead, the sources said.
Shell is wary about investing heavily in renewable projects where it won't have
any particular competitive edge over other oil companies or utilities, such as
Spain's Iberdrola and Denmark's Orsted that are already becoming significant
green energy producers.
Shell will still expand its renewable capacity, especially in offshore wind
farms where it believes it has an advantage after years of operating offshore
oilfields, but the business will centre on profitability rather than size, the
sources said.
"Shell will have some volumetric targets but that is not the focus," a senior
company official told Reuters. "A single focus on the volume of renewable energy
generating capacity could be dangerous and lead us to some bad deals."
BP wants to boost its renewable generation capacity 20 fold by 2030 while Total
is aiming to have 100 gigawatts (GW) of gross renewable energy generation
capacity by 2030.
Investors are concerned, however, that they may struggle to hit their profit
projections by investing in costly renewable projects which typically have lower
rates of return than oil.
Shell provided some details on its new strategy on Oct. 29, including a plan to
narrow its oil and gas production to nine hubs, cut the number of refineries to
six from 14 and boost its marketing business.
The company also announced plans to cut its workforce by up to 9,000 employees,
or about 10%, by August this year as part of a broad cost-cutting review known
as Project Reshape.
(Reporting by Ron Bousso; Editing by Simon Webb, Veronica Brown and David
Clarke)
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