SHELL expects as much as US$2 billion of impairments in its second-quarter earnings related to a delayed biofuels plant under construction in the Netherlands and its chemicals facility in Singapore.
Since taking the job in January last year, Shell chief executive officer Wael Sawan has pledged to be “ruthless” in improving the company’s performance and boosting investor returns.
That process has included eliminating jobs, selling assets and changing the pace at which it seeks to cut its carbon emissions.
Earlier this week, the company said it will pause construction of a biofuels plant in Rotterdam to figure out the best way forward with the project. That will result in a non-cash post-tax impairment of US$600 million to US$1 billion, Shell said in a statement on Friday (Jul 5).
When completed, the Dutch facility will produce sustainable aviation fuel and renewable diesel in anticipation of rising demand for low-carbon energy. The plant was projected to have an annual capacity of 820,000 tonnes and commence operations next year.
Yet the pace of the developed world’s shift towards net zero emissions has come into question lately, with right-wing populists who challenge the cost of the transition in the political ascendancy.
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Oil and gas company BP recently scaled back plans for biofuels production at its Cherry Point refinery in the US and its Lingen plant in Germany.
Shell has said it remains committed to achieving net zero emissions by 2050, while using shareholder capital in a “measured and disciplined way”.
Shell expects a further writedown of US$600 million to US$800 million in relation to the Singapore chemicals and products facility, which the company has agreed to sell to a joint venture between commodity trader Glencore and Indonesia’s Chandra Asri Pacific.
The British energy company announced the sale of its Singapore assets on Pulau Bukom and Jurong Island in May.
This comes amid the Singapore’s Green Plan 2030, which includes revamping petrochemical base Jurong Island into a sustainable energy and chemicals park.
The company’s gas trading results are set to be lower in the second quarter due to seasonal shifts in the market, while remaining in line with the division’s performance a year earlier.
The unit has been a big driver of profits for the company in recent years, with “exceptional” earnings at the end of 2023 and a strong performance in the first three months of this year. BLOOMBERG, REUTERS