Anger as Shell makes ‘obscene’ $40bn in profits
Calls for larger windfall tax after surge in gas
prices fuels ‘outrageous’ doubling of profits at Anglo-Dutch group
Shell’s spending on renewables ‘a fraction of what it
claims’
Analysts had expected Shell to report adjusted
earnings of $7.97bn for the fourth quarter and $38.17bn for the year. It made
$9.8bn.
Alex Lawson
Energy correpondent
Thu 2 Feb
2023 08.25 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/feb/02/shell-profits-2022-surging-oil-prices-gas-ukraine
Shell has
prompted anger after annual profits more than doubled to a record of nearly
$40bn, boosted by a surge in wholesale gas prices linked to the war in Ukraine
and as households struggle to pay huge energy bills.
The oil and
gas company posted profits of $9.81bn in the final quarter of last year,
compared with $6.4bn a year earlier. That took annual adjusted profits to
$39.87bn (£32.2bn) in 2022, far outstripping the $19.3bn notched up in 2021.
Paul Nowak,
general secretary of the TUC, said the profits were “obscene” and “an insult to
working families”.
The step up
in Shell and its competitors’ profits during 2022 prompted the government to
introduce a windfall tax on North Sea operators, which was later toughened by
the chancellor, Jeremy Hunt.
Shell was
criticised in October when it said it had paid no UK windfall tax up to that point.
Last month, the company said it expected to take a hit of about $2bn to its
earnings for the final quarter of 2022 as a result of windfall taxes in the UK
and EU.
Shell on
Thursday confirmed it had taken a $1.9bn charge related to windfall taxes in the
EU and UK but did not break down how much it had paid for each one.
Nowak said
windfall taxes should be increased. “As households up and down Britain struggle
to pay their bills and make ends meet, Shell are enjoying a cash bonanza. The
time for excuses is over. The government must impose a larger windfall tax on
energy companies. Billions are being left on the table,” he said.
“Instead of
holding down the pay of paramedics, teachers, firefighters and millions of
other hard-pressed public servants, ministers should be making Big Oil and Gas
pay their fair share.”
Analysts
had expected Shell’s chief executive, Wael Sawan, to report adjusted earnings
of $7.97bn for the fourth quarter and $38.17bn for the year, in his City debut.
It represented an increase on the $9.45bn registered in the third quarter,
aided by a bounceback in earnings from its liquefied natural gas trading arm.
The company
said total shareholder distributions in the quarter were $6.3bn after hiking
the dividend by 15%. It also announced $4bn of share buybacks over the next
three months. In total, Shell distributed $26bn to shareholders in 2022.
The company
has benefited from the squeeze on international gas supplies, which began in
2021 and was exacerbated by Russia’s full invasion of Ukraine last year.
Sawan said:
“Our results in Q4 and across the full year demonstrate the strength of Shell’s
differentiated portfolio, as well as our capacity to deliver vital energy to
our customers in a volatile world.”
Howeber,
the Liberal Democrat leader, Ed Davey, said: “No company should be making these
kind of outrageous profits out of Putin’s illegal invasion of Ukraine.
“Rishi
Sunak was warned as chancellor and now as prime minister that we need a proper
windfall tax on companies like Shell and he has failed to take action.”
Shell has
also been accused of overstating how much it is spending on renewable energy,
and faced calls this week to be investigated and potentially fined by the US
financial regulator.
Shell
invested $24.83bn during 2022, up from $19.69bn in 2021. The firm spent $12.3bn
on oil and gas projects, compared with $3.46bn on its renewable energy
division. It expects to spend $23bn to $27bn over the next year.
Greenpeace
UK senior climate justice campaigner Elena Polisano said: “World leaders have
just set up a new fund to pay for the loss and damage caused by the climate
crisis. Now they should force historical mega-polluters like Shell to pay into
it.
“It’s time
to make polluters pay. If they had pivoted their business and transitioned away
from fossil fuels sooner, we wouldn’t be in such a deep crisis. It’s time for
them to stop drilling and start paying.”
Jonathan
Noronha-Gant, senior campaigner at Global Witness, said: “People have every
right to be outraged at the enormous profits that Shell has made in the midst
of an energy affordability crisis that has pushed millions of families into
poverty … Shell’s profits are an insult. Shell is richer because we’re poorer.”
The
company, which is worth $165bn, last week embarked on a review of its division
supplying energy and broadband to homes in Europe, putting 2,000 UK jobs at
risk.
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