Incoming Shell Boss Aims Fire up Renewables Drive

By Ron Bousso and Sarah McFarlane
Thursday, September 22, 2022

Shell's incoming Chief Executive Wael Sawan is set to accelerate the group's drive to build its renewable energy business, including through a possible "transformative" clean power acquisition, company and industry sources said.

Sawan will from January take on a firm with a strong balance sheet after a surge in oil and gas prices, but whose renewables capacity has lagged peers like TotalEnergies and BP as green issues come increasingly into vogue. Shell aims to halve its greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 and to become a net-zero emitter by 2050, and is already moving to achieve that, shifting hundreds of experienced oil and gas staff into the business and hiring hundreds more this year.

A spokesperson for the group said the strategy that Sawan helped build in his current role will remain, "and delivery of the strategy will be as dynamic under the new CEO as it has been under the current CEO."

But the sources said Lebanese-Canadian Sawan, 48, who is currently head of Shell's natural gas and renewables business, is likely to further accelerate the build-up of the group's renewables portfolio. When outgoing CEO Ben van Beurden took office in 2014, he quickly cemented Shell's position as the world's top liquefied natural gas (LNG) trader with the $53 billion acquisition of smaller rival BG Group.

The company remains hugely reliant on oil and gas, with its renewables and energy solutions division accounting for just 6% of Shell's earnings in the second quarter of this year. Sawan and van Beurden have in recent months overseen a review of their renewables strategy, focusing on rapidly growing its wind and solar power generation, four industry and company sources said.

The group in August closed the $1.55 billion acquisition of Indian renewables firm Sprng, which holds a portfolio of over 10 gigwatts (GW) of operating and yet-to-be-constructed projects that tripled Shell's capacity, bringing it ahead of rival BP. That contrasts with its previous "asset-light" strategy which centred around buying low-carbon electricity from renewable power producers to sell on, the sources said.

"That's a big change for us, to say now we have to go in and build up renewable generation," one company source said. "Going long in renewables generation is needed for our trading capabilities and for supplying our customers' needs."

Given the group's strong balance sheet, Sawan can now consider a large-scale acquisition in the coming years, industry sources said.

"Shell will be in a strong position to do a transformative deal in renewables in 2023 and onwards," one source close to the company said.

ASSETS RICH

Shell and its European rivals all aim to rapidly grow their renewables business in the coming years to slash greenhouse emissions, meaning that competition for high-quality assets will likely be fierce, driving the cost of assets up. While Shell has stuck to a cautious approach towards owning renewable assets in recent years, rivals have been building large portfolios.

TotalEnergies had net renewable generation capacity of more than 9.5 GW in operation or under construction and BP 6.4 GW of installed capacity or projects under development by mid 2022. Prior to the Sprng acquisition, Shell held 1.1 GW of renewables in operation and 4.6 GW under construction. So far no major renewables company has met Shell's internal criteria for acquisitions, in large part due to the sector's high valuation, the sources said.

One acquisition option reviewed over the past year was German utility RWE, which has a market capitalization of around $27.64 billion, the sources said. But Shell is unlikely to pull the trigger on such a deal because RWE currently combines a large renewables business with a nuclear and coal power generation division which Shell would not be interested in, they said. RWE declined to comment.

A company source said Sawan will set out his strategy for the company, focusing on the energy transition, at an investor day in the middle of next year.  Shell's highly profitable oil and gas business will continue to drive the company's earnings and receive the lion share of its budget in the coming years, even if Shell's oil output is planned to gradually taper off from its 2019 peak.

Sawan is likely to maintain Shell's strong natural gas and LNG position, which the company believes will remain in high demand for decades. He will also likely face decisions to develop new, large oil and gas resources in Namibia, Tanzania. But internally, Shell is diverting growing resources towards the renewables and energy solutions business, with a focus on finding and developing new resources.

(Reporting by Ron Bousso and Sarah McFarlane; Editing by Jan Harvey)

Categories: Energy Renewable Energy Oil and Gas

Related Stories

Petronas Enlists MISC for FPU Job at Gas Field Offshore Brunei

Mubadala Energy, PLN Energy Primer Team Up for Andaman Sea Gas Supply

Greater Sunrise Moves to Next Phase with Timor-Leste, Woodside Deal

Aramco Expands US Partnerships with $30B in New Deals

Pakistan Greenlights TPOC-Led Offshore Exploration in Block-C

TechnipFMC to Supply Subsea Systems for Eni’s Maha Deepwater Project

SED Energy’s GHTH Rig Kicks Off Ops for PTTEP

Sponsored: Energy and Finance Chiefs Call for Sound Policy, Stable Frameworks at ADIPEC

Sponsored: Policy, AI, and Capital Take Center Stage at ADIPEC 2025

Sapura Energy Rebrands to Vantris Energy

Current News

Eni Makes Significant Gas Discovery Offshore Indonesia

Petronas Enlists MISC for FPU Job at Gas Field Offshore Brunei

Japan’s JERA Signs First Long-Term LNG Deal with India’s Torrent Power

India's ONGC Set to Retain 20% stake in Russia's Sakhalin-1 Project

Harbour Energy to Sell Stakes in Indonesian Assets to Prime Group for $215M

Eni Expands Asian Footprint with Long-Term LNG Contract in Thailand

Finder Energy Buys Petrojarl I FPSO for Timor-Leste Oil and Gas Projects

CNOOC Puts New South China Sea Development Into Production Mode

ADES Nets $63M Contract for Compact Driller Jack-Up off Brunei

Mubadala Energy, PLN Energy Primer Team Up for Andaman Sea Gas Supply

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com