Shell accelerates drive for net-zero emissions with customer-first strategy
|
Shell today set out its strategy to accelerate its transformation
into a provider of net-zero emissions energy products and services,
powered by growth in its customer-facing businesses. A disciplined
cash allocation framework and rigorous approach to driving down
carbon emissions will deliver value for shareholders, customers and
wider society. Shell also confirmed its expectation that total
carbon emissions for the company peaked in 2018, and oil production
peaked in 2019. “Our...Request free
trial
Shell today set out its strategy to accelerate its
transformation into a provider of net-zero emissions energy
products and services, powered by growth in its customer-facing
businesses. A disciplined cash allocation framework and rigorous
approach to driving down carbon emissions will deliver value for
shareholders, customers and wider society. Shell also confirmed its
expectation that total carbon emissions for the company peaked in
2018, and oil production peaked in 2019.
“Our accelerated strategy will drive down carbon emissions and will deliver value for our shareholders, our customers and wider society,” said Royal Dutch Shell Chief Executive Officer, Ben van Beurden. “We must give our customers the products and services they want and need – products that have the lowest environmental impact. At the same time, we will use our established strengths to build on our competitive portfolio as we make the transition to be a net-zero emissions business in step with society. “Whether our customers are motorists, households or businesses, we will use our global scale and trusted brand to grow in markets where demand for cleaner products and services is strongest, delivering more predictable cash flows and generating higher returns.” From today, Shell is integrating its strategy, portfolio, environmental and social ambitions under the goals of Powering Progress: generating shareholder value, achieving net-zero emissions, powering lives and respecting nature. Shell’s reshaped organisation will deliver on these goals through the three business pillars of Growth, Transition and Upstream. FINANCIAL RESILIENCE AND PROFITABLE GROWTH THROUGH DISCIPLINED CAPITAL ALLOCATION
Shell reiterated its cash priorities to deliver value for
shareholders today while growing value for tomorrow,
including:
In the near term we expect to maintain underlying operating
expenses of no higher than $35 billion, and pursue divestments
averaging $4 billion a year. Over time the balance of capital
spending will shift towards the businesses in the Growth pillar,
attracting around half of the additional capital spend. Cash flow
will follow the same trend and in the long term will become less
exposed to oil and gas prices, with a stronger link to broader
economic growth.
THE ROAD TO NET-ZERO EMISSIONS: A COMPREHENSIVE CARBON MANAGEMENT APPROACH
Shell set out details of how it will achieve its target to
be a net-zero emissions energy business by 2050, in step with
society’s progress towards achieving net zero. This target covers
the emissions from our operations and the emissions from the use
of all the energy products we sell. And crucially, it includes
emissions from the oil and gas that others produce and Shell then
sells as products to customers, making the target
comprehensive.
Powering Progress supports the most ambitious goal of the
Paris Agreement on climate change to limit the global temperature
rise to 1.5° Celsius. To achieve net zero, Shell:
DELIVERING WITH A PORTFOLIO FOR THE ENERGY TRANSITION
Shell is a customer-focused organisation, serving more than
1 million commercial and industrial customers, and 30 million
customers at 46,000 retail service stations daily. Shell uses its
world-leading brand, global reach and expertise to be a one-stop
shop for both consumer and business customers. A presence across
the entire energy system means we can optimise, scale up, and
trade products in a way that develops markets, drives down costs,
and will help accelerate the energy transition.
Shell’s aim is to build material low-carbon businesses of
significant scale by the early 2030s. Upstream will continue to
deliver vital energy supplies, which will help to generate the
cash and returns needed to fund shareholder distributions while
accelerating investment in the growth businesses to capture new
market opportunities.
In the near term, Shell’s strategy will rebalance its
portfolio, investing annually $5-6 billion in its Growth pillar
(around $3 billion in Marketing; $2-3 billion in Renewables and
Energy Solutions), $8-9 billion in its Transition pillar (around
$4 billion Integrated Gas; $4-5 billion Chemicals and Products)
and around $8 billion in Upstream. Plans include:
Growth:Marketing
Target to increase Adjusted Earnings to around $6 billion
by 2025 (from $4.5 billion in 2020), achieved by improving the
already market-leading position of the lubricants business, an
increase to 40 million customers at 55,000 retail sites (from 30
million at 46,000 sites today) and growth of global electric
vehicle (EV) network from more than 60,000 charge points today to
around 500,000 by 2025.
Low-carbon fuels – extend our leading biofuels production
and distribution business, which in 2019 sold more than 10
billion litres of biofuels. Our joint venture Raízen, which
produces low-carbon fuels from sugar cane in Brazil, recently
announced the acquisition of Biosev. This is set to increase
Raízen’s bioethanol production capacity by 50%, to 3.75 billion
litres a year, around 3% of global production.
Renewables and Energy Solutions
Integrated Power – aim to sell some 560
terawatt hours a year by 2030 which is twice as much electricity
as we sell today. We expect to serve more than 15 million retail
and business customers worldwide. We aim to be a leading provider
of clean Power-as-a-Service. We will make our investments go
further by partnering with others with the emphasis for Shell
being on managing clean electrons.
Nature-based solutions – expect to invest
around $100 million a year in high-quality, independently
verified projects on the ground to build a significant and
profitable business to help customers meet their net-zero
emissions targets.
Hydrogen – build on Shell’s leading position
in hydrogen by developing integrated hydrogen hubs to serve
industry and heavy-duty transport, aim to achieve double-digit
share of global clean hydrogen sales.
Transition:Integrated Gas
Extend leadership in liquefied natural gas (LNG) volumes
and markets, with selective investment in competitive LNG assets
to deliver more than 7 million tonnes per annum of new capacity
on-stream by middle of the decade. Continue to support customers
with their own net-zero ambitions, with leading offers such as
carbon-neutral LNG.
Chemicals and Products
Transform our refinery footprint from 13 sites today to six
high-value Chemicals and Energy Parks and reduce production of
traditional fuels by 55% by 2030. Intention to grow volumes of
the chemicals portfolio and increase cash generation from
Chemicals by $1-2 billion a year by 2030 compared with the medium
term. Will produce chemicals from recycled waste, known as
circular chemicals, and by 2025 aim to annually process 1 million
tonnes a year of plastic waste.
Upstream:
Focus on value over volume, being simpler and more
resilient, continuing to provide material cash flow into the
2030s. An expected gradual reduction in oil production of around
1-2% each year, including divestments and natural decline.
|
