Royal Dutch Shell Group .com
SEPTEMBER
2004 SHELL NEWS
Wednesday 1 September, 2004
AllAfrica.com: $1.5bn Compensation: Shell to Sue
Senate: "SHELL Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) Nigeria Limited may take the
National Assembly to court if the Senate forces it to pay $1.5 billion
compensation to Ijaw communities for alleged environmental degradation."
TELLSHELL: Comment by former
Shell geologist Dr John Huong on the Financial Times article: Governance:
Managers look for the moral dimension: "Post-Enron, post-Shell, post-WorldCom,
post-Parmalat" (ShellNews.net)
THE
WALL STREET JOURNAL: Chile Enap Not In Running For Local Shell Assets-Minister:
“Shell's local business, meanwhile, has been the object of intense media
speculation in the past weeks, as the company has retreated from several markets
in the region and the rest of the world.
Washington
Times: Pemex negotiates alliance with Shell
MercoPress: Mexico
finds massive oil deposits but…
AFX Europe
(Focus): Galp to complete purchase of Shell petrol stations in Spain tomorrow -
report
AFX Europe
(Focus): Malaysia's Petra Perdana unit wins 11 mln rgt contract from Sarawak
Shell
Financial Times: We will run short of oil for all the wrong reasons: market
failure and short-termism
columbus.bizjournals.com: Scott & Scott LLC of Colchester, Conn. has filed to
become lead plaintiff in the various lawsuits against Cardinal Health Inc.:
“The firm is currently lead counsel
litigating major shareholder cases including the employee benefits case against
Royal Dutch/ Shell Petroleum”
RELATED PRESS RELEASE
BY SCOT + SCOT, LLC CONCERNING SHELL RETIREMENT PENSION FUNDS CLASS ACTION
LAWSUIT AGAINST THE ROYAL DUTCH SHELL GROUP (WITH LINK TO VIEW THE COMPLAINT)
TELLSHELL: Oil
companies must be made to follow UN on human rights (re letter from former Shell
director Sir Geoffrey Chandler)
Houston
Chronicle: Bonus program at Shell revised: Company alters reward system after
scandal over reserves
Friends
of the Earth: Anger as Shell Rejects Nigerian $1.5 Billion Compensation Order:
"Shell's behaviour in Nigeria is disgraceful. This vast company claims to be a
leader in corporate responsibility but its legacy in Nigeria will scar the
country for decades to come.”
Thursday 2 September, 2004
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: Shell's Dunlin
Alpha Oil Platform Reducing Gas Build-Up: "Shell experienced problems with gas
build-up in the utility leg of another one of its platforms, Brent Bravo, last
year. Two men were killed in that incident."
Business Report: Shell rejects Nigeria's
$1.5bn damages claim: ‘According to the senate document, the legal panel
reported "uncontradicted evidence" of massive oil spills at Shell facilities in
Bayelsa state.’ (ShellNews.net)
Financial Times: Observer: Shell
looks at its dashboard: ‘Observer thought the most notable thing about Shell's
"dashboard" was that the fuel gauge was too low.’
The Times: Watchdog’s rules 'depress
investment in smaller companies': “Many recent City scandals have centred on
large blue chip companies, such as Shell, traditionally regarded as “safe”.
The Times: Precipice bonds ban just the
start, says FSA: “The tough talk from the City’s main regulator comes just a
week after it hit Shell with a £17 million fine for misleading investors over
its oil and gas reserves.”
Daily Telegraph: City briefs:
Shell fine
Daily Telegraph: Price of petrol 'to
fall' as US goes back to work: A spokesman for Shell said: "We have started
bringing down prices in some areas as a reaction to a fall in the cost of the
product."
Philippine Daily Inquirer: More
oil companies raise pump prices: “The energy chief likewise appealed to oil
firms not to implement another increase in the next two weeks”
Arizona Republic: Honeywell division gets
$5.3 million contract
Reuters: Shell weighs mega sale of power
venture: “SULLIED REPUTATION”: “Shell's reputation as a blue chip multinational
was dragged through the mud this year after it revealed a 20 percent overbooking
of its oil and gas reserves.”
London Evening Standard: Shell
mulls £2.2bn power stake sale: “TROUBLED oil major Shell is said to be
considering selling its share of global power venture InterGen for an estimated
$4bn (£2.23bn).”
Friday 3 September, 2004
Financial Times:
Nigeria MPs seek Halliburton's exclusion from business: “Nigerian, French and US
investigators are probing the TSKJ case, which concerns illicit payments
allegedly made in relation to a $12bn gas project jointly owned by the Nigerian
government and the oil companies Royal Dutch/Shell, Total and Eni.”: “Shell
denied it had colluded with either consortium and said its work as technical
adviser had been "rigorous and well-documented".
The Times: Need to Know: Global Business Briefing:
“Royal Dutch/Shell, the embattled oil company…”
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: Shell
Transport. Buyback 1.9M Shares At 414.73P Each
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: Athabasca Oil
Sands Project Sets Monthly Production Record
Daily Mail: Yukos freeze sends oil prices
surging: “The pace of disposals at Shell is accelerating. In what would be a
radical move, it may put Intergen, its global power venture with 20 plants, on
sale.”: “Shell... is unloading petrol stations and refineries to focus on
finding oil and gas.”
AllAfrica.com: Group Flays Shell On $1.5bn
Compensation: "This stance of Shell is not surprising. They never accept
liability until they are truly boxed into a corner": "As long as there is room
for argument, they will kick, scream and resist any form of settlement".
Business Times (Malaysia): CSR schemes can
help raise shareholder value: “forum, sponsored by The Coca-Cola Co, Shell and
Genting group”
Jamaica Gleaner: Shell to spend $400m on
operational facilities here
Times of India: Seven Indians win Shell
scholarships
The New York Times: California Regulators OK
Gas Flows From Mexico: “The PUC decided to allow Sempra Energy and Shell to
create a border point where LNG would move from Mexican to U.S. pipelines.”
Sify.com: National Thermal Power Corp plans to import
LNG
Business World: Shell to sell power arm for
USD6 bn? “World number three oil firm Shell is expected to put its worldwide
power venture InterGen up for sale with a multi-billion dollar price tag as part
of a drive to put its house in order.”
El Pais – Spain: Galp finalises purchase of
Shell's Spanish petrol station network
Die Welt – Germany: BASF warns of
research transfer abroad if GMO law amendment goes ahead: “BASF, the German
chemicals giant, is hoping to sell off Basell, its joint venture with the
Anglo-Dutch oil group Shell, and to complete the transaction in the first half
of 2005.”
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: Sulfur-removal
Units Blamed For Tainted Gasoline In La.: “Shell now says the tainted fuel also
contained hydrogen sulfide, an extremely corrosive compound that occurs
naturally in unrefined crude oil.”
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: Nigerian
Senate Reiterates Demand Shell JV Pay $1.5B: “Nigeria's senate Friday repeated a
demand that an oil partnership led by Royal Dutch/Shell Group (RD, SC) pay $1.5
billion in compensation”
Saturday 4 September, 2004
The Times: Thinking big: “edu-tainment”:
“when activists stage a protest at the home of the Royal Dutch Shell chairman
Sir Mark Moody-Stuart, they end up staying for tea.”
TELLSHELL: The unpalatable truth about Shell Management: "While the Ogoni people
sit on top of oil fields, but remain abysmally poor, Sir Philip Watts sits on an
$18 million (US dollar) pension pot. It is in my humble opinion simply obscene
and indefensible."
The Guardian: The firefighter: “Calpers has
emerged as corporate America's self-styled moral compass.”: Shell is on Calpers'
annual "focus list", which identifies the biggest problem companies.”
Daily
Telegraph: The week that was: “Shell… latest bid to restore its tarnished
reputation”
The Times: Need to
Know: Global Business Briefing
The Times:
Hollick to step down as UBM chief: “Shell Transport & Trading, the troubled oil
giant, is also looking for a chairman to replace Lord Oxburgh…”
Toronto Star: Couche buys 22 U.S. sites from
Shell
Sunday 5 September, 2004
Sunday
Telegraph: Big Four 'will not audit banks' unless liability is limited: "KPMG
and PwC are facing a multi-billion dollar class action in the US over their
audit of Shell"
Sunday
Telegraph: Cairn's Indian oil find comes in at the top end of City forecasts:
“Investors have become concerned about reserves bookings in the wake of the
debacle at Royal Dutch/Shell. The Anglo-Dutch oil giant shocked the market in
January by revealing it had overbooked its reserves by 25 per cent.”
Pakistan
Times: Shell Card introduced, Investment in Pakistan nearly US$ 300Mln
The Observer: The acceptable face of Russian
capitalism?
The Business: Kremlin vows to underwrite China’s
huge Yukos contract: "The state-owned gas company PertoChina struck out at
Moscow in retaliation at the start of August by cancelling a $5.6bn
(£3bn,€4.6bn) contract with Russia's natural gas giant Gazprom, Shell and
Exxon-Mobil to build the longest gas pipeline in the country from newly
discovered gas fields in western China to Shanghai."
Monday 6 September, 2004
Financial Times: TMT boom behind step up to
respectability: “But the recent history of some corporations - think Shell,
Marks and Spencer and Hollinger - shows only how things should not be done.”
(this article is the first time that the Shell scandal has
been bracketed with Hollinger - for background information on Hollinger, see
"The Hollinger Chronicles" below)
Financial Times: The Hollinger
Chronicles: the dramatic story of a press baron's downfall
The Times: Discoveries push £2.4bn Cairn into FTSE
100: “…it will also seal the humiliation of an already shamed Shell”
TimesOnline: Scotland: Cairn to make FTSE 100
debut: “Cairn is poised to join the FTSE 100 index at the quarterly reshuffle,
putting it in the same league as giants BP and Royal Dutch/Shell Group.”
TellShell: A debate contribution posted on "TellShell"
by Dr John Huong: "Basic moral standards whether learnt from the Sacred
Scriptures or even enshrined in a corporate code of conduct, provide an ethical
framework from which we depart at our peril. Honesty, integrity, transparency
and respect for each other - our family members, work colleagues, friends,
business investors and fellow citizens of this crowded planet, are all
absolutely vital ingredients if the human species is to survive in a civilised
form."
Business Standard (India): Shell, Caltex
move govt on LPG subsidy
TheEdgeDaily.com: Shell Malaysia’s Jintan gas
field comes onstream
Tuesday 7 September, 2004
Financial
Times: French jealous of powers in US and UK: “However, the French were
sceptical about a system that allowed companies to escape admission of guilt in
return for paying a fine. Shell, for instance, did not admit or deny the FSA's
findings that it breached UK rules on market abuse and listings.”
Financial
Times: FSA considers further criminal actions: “Last month, the FSA agreed a
£17m (9.6m) penalty with Shell for market abuse associated with its
mis-statement of oil and gas reserves.”
The
Independent: Market Report: “Cairn bought control of an oilfield in Rajasthan,
India, from Shell in 2002. The amazing success of this asset forms the basis of
Cairn's £2.4bn market capitalisation. The group paid Shell just £4m for control
of the field.”
The Guardian: BG
snatches up Shell's Nile delta cast-off: “The reserves downgrade - which
triggered the departure of its chairman of managing directors, Sir Philip Watts,
and others - has turned the spotlight on Shell's poor record for replacing
reserves.”
BBC News: BG expands
Egyptian gas interest: BG Group, the UK gas exploration and production firm, has
expanded its interest in Egypt, buying Shell's stake in a joint venture project.
Financial Times: Oil majors put the
future on hold: “Even Royal Dutch/ Shell, the Anglo/Dutch energy group
struggling to build its oil and natural gas reserves base…”
AFX Europe (Focus):
Malaysia's Petronas-Shell jv makes new gas discovery
Financial Times: BG lifts Egyptian
offshore gas stake: “The Reading-based company pre-empted the sale by Royal
Dutch/Shell, the Anglo/Dutch energy group, of its interest on the Nile Delta's
Rosetta venture…”
The Guardian: How to pick a winner
Persian Journal: Shell Bids for New Oil
Field Development Contracts in Iran
LONDON FREE PRESS (CANADA): Gas wells in
ocean out of favour: “After Shell Canada paid $28 million after-tax dollars for
its 30-per-cent stake in the Weymouth disappointment, it let all three of its
deep water licences expire.”
BG PRESS RELEASE: BG pre-empts Shell’s
sale of Rosetta stake offshore Egypt: “BG Group has today announced that it has
finalised an agreement for the purchase of Shell Egypt N.V. and Shell Austria
G.m.b.H’s (collectively Shell’s) interest in the Rosetta concession”
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: Shell
Gabon, Partner Make Light Oil Discovery
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: Nippon
Oil To Start LNG Production in Sarawak, Malaysia: “Shell Malaysia, a unit of
Royal Dutch/Shell Group (RD) is the main project operator.”
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: Shell
Transport Buys Back 1.3M Shares At 417.35P/Shr
Bloomberg: Cairn May Boost Oil Reserves When
Giving Results, Analysts Say: “Royal
Dutch/Shell Group, whose stock is the worst performer of Europe's biggest oil
companies this year and has said it overstated reserves, sold its stake in the
Indian prospect to Cairn in 2002.”
Wednesday 8 September, 2004
Financial
Times: Shell faces challenge of where to pump its sell-off proceeds: “While
Royal/Dutch Shell has been engaged in its high-profile battles over the
international investigations and lawsuits following its oil reserves scandal, it
has been quietly conducting a huge sale of assets.”
Financial
Times: Oil consortium faces anxious wait as Russia weighs cost overruns: "Shell
recently raised its estimate for this year's capital spending from $13bn to
between $14.5bn and $15bn, largely because of budget overruns in Sakhalin and a
Nigerian project."
Financial Times: Engineers:
Industry striving to restore its ‘sex appeal’: “In Britain, for instance, the
number of people studying chemical engineering is estimated to have fallen by 32
per cent and those studying chemistry fell by 12 per cent in the past five
years, according to a study by Royal/Dutch Shell”
Business Times
(Malaysia): Petronas-Shell joint venture strikes gas again
The Guardian: Notebook: Are big fines fine?:
“Ever since the Financial Services Authority clouted Shell with a £17m fine, a
debate has been raging about whether it is right that regulators levy hefty
penalties on companies guilty of wrongdoing.”
The Guardian: Why the Big Four do not deserve our
sympathy: “PwC, KPMG, Ernst & Young, and Deloitte”: “Lawyers crawling all over
them; billion-pound legal suits.”: “…she has turned down the pleas of auditors
who want protection from legal actions that might put them out of business.”
The Guardian:
Notebook: Time to grow up: This is the firm that snatched an exploration
licence for the Indian state of Rajasthan from Shell for the comical price of
£10m - just before Shell owned up to its serial over-statement of its reserves.
Cairn proceeded to make a string of discoveries…”
The Guardian:
Rajasthan oil takes Cairn into FTSE 100: “Cairn was also able to announce
another drilling success in Rajasthan, with a fifth oil discovery near Mangala,
which it bought for a song from Shell.”
Daily
Telegraph: Modest Scot who has hit the jackpot: “Seven years ago he invested in
an overlooked Rajasthan field, buying the last 50pc from Shell for $7.5m in
2002. By last December, Cairn had spent $100m on drilling. Then in January, it
struck black gold.”
Daily
Telegraph: Cairn joins the big time and pledges to go it alone: “Mr Gammell was
generous to Shell, the crisis-hit major that sold its 50pc in the concession for
just $7.5m three years ago.”: “Cairn also admitted that it had sold some gas
assets in Bangladesh for $180m in 1996 to Shell, only to buy them back this year
for $50m, netting Cairn a profit of $130m at Shell's expense.”
Daily Telegraph: City comment: Too
dangerous for us, say auditors: “KPMG is the auditor to Shell, where the
American class-action lawyers are just getting going.”
Daily
Telegraph: City diary: The S word: “Cairn bosses were doing their best not to
mention the "S" word during their presentations (Cairn bought half of its
oil-rich Indian concession from Shell for just $7.25m two years ago).”
The Times: Cairn waits for
green light on Mangala: “Approval by the Government would enable Cairn to start
developing Mangala to extract up to 100,000 barrels of oil a day from the
Rajasthan desert bloc it bought off Shell two years ago.”
ChannelNewsAsia.com: Shell to sell
stakes in Belgian gas firms to France's Suez: “(460 million dollars).”: "The
agreement is the result of commercial discussions that had been initiated
several months ago," Shell said in a statement to the London Stock Exchange
after the close of trading.
Forbes: Shell's Belgian Unit Sells Utilities
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: Shell
Sells Distrigas, Fluxys Stake: “Shell Transport reported Tuesday that Belgian
Shell has agreed to the sale of its 16.67% interest in each Distrigas SA, the
Belgian gas wholesale company, and Fluxys SA, the Belgian gas transmission
company…”
NewRatings.com: Shell Canada "buy": "analysts
mention that Shell Canada has declared impressive operational results from its
oilsands so far in the current year."
The New York Times: Asia's Elite Jet in
for 'Subdued' Brunei Wedding: “new mood of thrift in a palace once tainted by
financial scandal.”: “Now, corporate sponsors are funding a big part of the
total cost of celebrations, estimated at around $5 million.”: “Oil and gas firms
Brunei Shell and Brunei LNG…”
ChannelNewsAsia:
Total dismisses idea of takeover bid for Royal Dutch/Shell: “Total dismissed
prospects for a takeover bid aimed at Anglo-Dutch rival Royal Dutch/Shell, which
is struggling to recover from a reserves scandal, signalling that such a move
would prove too complex.”
Oil & Gas
Journal: Shell, PanOcean announce oil discovery AWOKOU-1 on Awoun permit in
Gabon
Scotsman.com: Cairn
Energy Powers into FTSE 100: “Cairn has seen its shares more than triple since
January when it announced the first of 10 finds in India on an oil field
purchased from Shell for £4 million in 2002. The company is now valued at more
than £2 billion.”
The Independent:
Cairn caps FTSE 100 entry with oil find: “Mr Gammell refused to comment on
Shell's decision to sell the exploration block to Cairn for a pittance,…”
AFX Europe (Focus):
Royal Dutch/Shell sells 338 petrol stations in Spain, other Spanish ops
Thursday 9 September, 2004
Financial
Times: Total chief quashes Shell speculation: "Thierry Desmarest, chief
executive of Total, the French oil group, yesterday poured cold water on
speculation he was interested in bidding for Anglo-Dutch rival Shell.”
Financial
Post – Canada: Not interested in Shell bid, Total CEO says
THE
WALL STREET JOURNAL: Total Chairman: Pricey Oil Rivals Not A Good Buy Bargain:
"I won't even mention Shell," Desmarest said at a strategy briefing.: "Total was
not at the origin of the merger (speculation)," he said.
Financial Times: Suez thanks lucky
star: “Gérard Mestrallet could not have picked a better moment to buy Shell's
interests in two Belgian gas companies.”
Business Times (Malaysia): Shell shares rise
on gas discovery news: “SHARES of Shell Refining Co (Federation of Malaya) Bhd
rose briefly yesterday following reports that its joint venture with Petronas
had made another gas discovery offshore Kelantan.”
Daily Mail, London, business briefs column:
“SHELL agreed to sell 338 petrol stations to Canary Islands group Disa.”
The Times: Need to Know: Global Business
Briefing: “Royal Dutch/Shell will sell 338 petrol stations in Spain”
SolarAccess.com: Shell Solar, GEOSOL and
WestFonds open World's largest solar park - Leipzig, Germany
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL:
Portugal's Galp Eyes Spain Expansion Despite Shell Blow: “Earlier Wednesday,
Shell said it had sold its 338 gasoline stations and other assets in Spain to
Disa Corporacion Petrolifera…”
The New York Times: Oil Explorers Searching
Ever More Remote Areas: “Exxon Mobil, BP and Shell will have to find a total of
4.4 billion new barrels of oil each year just to replace their current
production.”
Business Day (South Africa): Shell, US in
liquefied natural gas talks: “A consortium led by oil giant Royal Dutch/Shell is
in the final stages of negotiating the first-ever contract to sell Russian
liquefied natural gas (LNG) to North America”
Friday 10 September, 2004
East
Texas Review: Fired Shell CEO gets big severance: “Shell had been cooking its
books Enron-style, claiming to own way more oil reserves than it actually has.":
“Thieves In High Places”
ThisIsMoney.com:
Special report: King at Cairn: It's the tale of David and Goliath, the
fleet-footed, smart Cairn against the lumbering, floundering Shell…”: “…he has
to say only one word to his critics who want him to play this more cautious,
stay-at-home, game. The word is Shell.”
AFX Europe (Focus): Australia to sign energy
agreement with Mexico – report: “…one of its Gorgon partners, Shell, have signed
letters of intent covering 20-year contracts from Gorgon which could be used to
supply the US west coast.”
The Independent:
The $5m royal wedding: “…sponsored by local companies, including the oil and gas
firms Brunei Shell…”: “the royal family itself was hit by a major financial
scandal surrounding the Sultan's brother, Prince Jefri…”
(Shell's contribution/gift/sweetener
was reportedly $500,000!)
The Times: Need to Know: “A group led by Royal
Dutch/Shell…”
Business Times (Malaysia): MOU to increase
trade ties with Aussie state
Saturday 11 September, 2004
Financial Times: R Dutch/ Shell to
give no update of review: “Six weeks ago, Shell, the world's third largest
energy group, revealed that its production was declining and that it was unable
to find sufficient new sources of oil and natural gas to replace old fields.”
Financial Times: Lombard: The art of
inflicting pain: “A lively debate on the subject has ensued since the Financial
Services Authority, the City policeman, fined Royal Dutch/Shell a record £17m
for market abuse”
The Scotsman: FSA
chief hits right note on investor responsibility: “In the wake of a splurge of
recent fines, particularly the record £17 million penalty on Shell for the oil
giant’s reserves shortfall and cover-up, there have been those who have argued
that it is the culpable directors who should bear the penalty, not the companies
and investors.”
The Independent: btw: “The
royal wedding in Brunei was quite a spectacle”:
“The Asian wing of Royal Dutch Shell
allegedly bunged in 500,000 Brunei dollars (about pounds 160,000)”
Daily Telegraph: Honest John's Agony
column extra: “fill up with Shell Optimax”
The Guardian: Russian island oil spill
Financial Times: Opec barely registers
on Beaufort scale
The Telegraph (India): HPCL eyes stake in
Shell LNG project: “Shell’s $700-million project, with a capacity of 2.5 million
tonnes, will be commissioned by 2004.”
Sunday 12 September, 2004
The Business: Total feels no need to deal:
“tipped to merge Royal Dutch/Shell out
of its misery.”: “But since merger heat began to build around the company,
Total's executives have worked hard to dampen it.”
The Business:
Buccaneer who struck black gold: “Two years ago, Cairn bought out Shell
completely for £4m and kept drilling.”: “Cairn kept going where the mighty Shell
gave up”: “Cairn has a market capitalisation of £2bn, compared with £6m when
Gammell founded the company in 1980.”
PRWeek.com: News Analysis: Can Shell
survive reserves affair? Last week, the FSA imposed the largest fine in its
history on Shell for market abuse over the oil reserves scandal. A Shell PR
veteran traces the firm's reputational demise.: “the reputation of Shell has
been destroyed by hypocrisy, mendacity and deceit. Whether we will ever be able
to be 'sure of Shell' again is very doubtful indeed.”
The Independent
Shell sale poised to set record: “Analysts say that Shell would use the proceeds
to invest in its upstream operations, in particular to boost its flagging oil
and gas reserves.”
The Observer:
Environmentalist fury over oil spill at Shell pipeline site: “Shell's £6
billion Sakhalin oil pipeline has not even been built yet, but it has already
caused a damaging oil slick that has enraged environmentalists and could force
potential lenders to pull funds.”: “Refusal to support the project would be a
severe embarrassment for Shell.”
The Observer:
Opec's new price shock: “BP is one of four oil and energy companies looking to
sell off part of its chemicals operations - others include Royal Dutch/Shell,
Total and BASF.”
Canberra Times – Australasia: Petrol deals push sales - Woolworths versus Coles:
the battle of the supermarket giants: “Coles Myer acknowledged the strength of
this strategy by forming an alliance with Shell to provide a similar offer in
late 2003.”
TellShell: Should
Shell sue The Independent newspaper for libel?
Times of Oman: Shell Oman cares for its
customers
Monday 13 September, 2004
New York
Times: Oil Up as Ivan Threatens Oil Patch: “Ivan, a rare category 5 hurricane,
is expected to cross the western edge of Cuba on Monday and enter the Gulf of
Mexico on Tuesday having veered west from its previous path toward Florida.:
“The Gulf is home to about a quarter of U.S. oil and gas output. Shell closed
270,000 bpd and ChevronTexaco and Total said they had also shut some output.”
The Lawyer.com: Shell
doubles up on advisers for class action: “The ambit of the claim against Shell
is likely to be extended today (13 September) when Stanley Bernstein, senior
partner of Bernstein Liebhard & Lifshitz, who is acting as the claimants’ lead
counsel in the lawsuit, files an amended complaint against the oil company.”
Financial Times: KPMG chairman lobbies for limits to liability in lawsuits:
“following a wave of business scandals: “Mr Rake declines to comment on KPMG's
audit of Hollinger International, the US publishing company allegedly looted by
Conrad Black, its former chairman. But he defends KPMG's audit of Royal
Dutch/Shell, the energy company found overstating its oil and gas reserves.”:
“…insists auditors cannot "take responsibility for everything".
Financial Times: FSA fights shy of
interventionism: “The FSA was criticised by some commentators for its decision
to fine Shell £17m for misreporting reserves. This penalised shareholders who
had already seen the value of their holdings suffer.”:
"However, it does seem reasonable to
deliver a message to shareholders that they have the responsibility to ensure
senior [managers] manage their company well and they should share in the
consequences of management not behaving well."
The Guardian: Davis exit likely to cost
Sainsbury's £4m: “He joins the growing list of chief executives such as Sir
Philip Watts of Shell who have left companies with large pay-offs in spite of
poor performance, sparking shareholder protests.”
Moscow Times: Shell Under Fire After
Sakhalin-2 Spill: “Environmental activists renewed criticism of Royal
Dutch-Shell's Sakhalin venture Friday…”
THE WASHINGTON TIMES: Oil, gas ease an
old enmity: “Sakhalin II, led by Royal Dutch Shell and with 45 percent Japanese
ownership, has broken ground for the world's biggest liquefied natural gas plant
at Prigorodnye, southern Sakhalin.”
Financial Times: Interview with Tony
Trahar (CEO, Anglo American plc): “We have an English chairman, Mark
Moody-Stuart”: “Financial Times: What lessons for Anglo American can be learned
from the Royal Dutch/Shell issue?”: “Trahar: I think our board as a result of
the Shell issues has taken a very detailed look at our policies valuing
reserves.”
Financial Times: Call for Opec to let
in oil majors to boost output: “Total, together with Royal Dutch/Shell, the
Anglo/Dutch energy group, last year became the first western oil companies to
sign a natural gas investment deal with Saudi Arabia.”
Financial Times: KPMG head predicts
global partnership: “KPMG's Dutch partnership certified the accounts of the
Royal Dutch/Shell group, but lawyers seeking damages over its reserves scandal
are preparing actions against the firm's US partnership.”
AFX Europe
(Focus): Shell to give no governance review at Sept strategy update – FT: “…at a
meeting with about 10 UK institutional investors last week, van der Veer said
that all decisions regarding future structural changes would be announced in
November.”
TellShell.com: Moral, Ethics and
Engineered Torture in the Corporate Environment: “It is courageous of Mr Briggs
to openly state his professional assessment that the “Reputation of ***** has
been destroyed by hypocrisy, mendacity and deceit”.
Tuesday 14 September, 2004
The New York Times: Oil Rises as Hurricane
Heads Toward U.S.
Financial Times: Shell faces new dilemma
in south Nigeria: “Almost 10 years after execution of the Ogoni author Ken
Saro-Wiwa and eight fellow rights activists caused international outrage, Shell
is involved in another deepening dispute in the Ogoni region.”: “Shell does want
to do essential maintenance in the region on the trans-Niger pipeline, which
carries 185,000 barrels a day of production. It has just stationed members of
Nigeria's paramilitary mobile police - whose public notoriety is such that they
are nicknamed "kill and go" - to guard its facilities after it experienced
problems with tampering.”
The Guardian: Shell's pounds 17m will be
used to reduce fees levied by regulator:
“The reduction is almost entirely due to the penalty paid by Shell for
"unprecedented misconduct" in misleading the markets over the reporting of its
oil and gas reserves.”
Oil & Gas Journal: Total denies rumors of
courtship with Shell, ConocoPhillips
AUSTRALIA PRESS: Shell Considers
Queensland Power Exit
AFX Europe (Focus): Shell may undertake 1 bln
usd Singapore petrochem project on its own - report
Asia Pulse: CHINA'S CNOOC PREPARES FOR OIL
REFINERY PROJECT
The Guardian: BP upbeat on Russian prospects:
“The early promise of the venture has also put pressure on BP rival Shell, which
was hit this year after it overstated its reserves.”
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: Hurricane
Ivan Drenches Western Cuba; Headed Toward US: “…oil prices shot up nearly $1.50
a barrel Monday as oil and natural gas producers evacuated rigs in the Gulf of
Mexico. Shell Oil said it was evacuating 750 workers.”
The Guardian: Ivan intensifies terrible
hurricane year for insurers: “Shell was shutting down productions in the gulf as
a precaution yesterday and oil prices were rising on fears that damage could
lead to sustained reduced production.”
Financial Times: Oil futures up on
Hurricane Ivan fears: “Shell Oil, the US subsidiary of Royal Dutch/Shell, said
it was shutting production of 272,000 barrels a day in the eastern Gulf.
Lloyds List: Sovcomflot in breakthrough
Sakhalin II LNG contract: “Shell-led Sakhalin Energy Investment will time
charter the 147,200 cu m vessel for 20 years.”
Wednesday 15 September, 2004
AFX Europe (Focus)
Shell reserve inquiry widens as attention turns to executives – report: “Sources
told The Times that the investigation was at the earliest of stages and that no
arrests or indictments were foreseen at present.”
The Times: Shell
inquiry widens as attention turns to executives: “THE US Attorney’s office in
New York has demanded boxes of documents related to the alleged oil reserve
fraud at Royal Dutch/Shell, signalling an escalation of a federal investigation
into the scandal.”: “disgruntled American investors amended their lawsuit to
include Sir Mark Moody Stuart…”: “The lawsuit also names PriceWaterhouseCoopers
UK and KPMG”
EMAIL FROM BERNSTEIN LIEBHARD & LIFSHITZ LLP: LEAD PLAINTIFF LAWYERS IN ABOVE
MULTIBILLION DOLLAR CLASS ACTION LAW SUIT ON BEHALF OF THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE
PENSION FUND AGAINST THE ROYAL DUTCH SHELL GROUP, NAMED CURRENT AND FORMER SHELL
DIRECTORS AND SHELL AUDITORS: CIVIL ACTION 04431 IN THE US DISTRICT COURT OF NEW
JERSEY
The Oregonian:
Freedom gap, credibility gap near-cousins: “Royal Dutch/Shell agreed three weeks
ago to pay the SEC $120 million to settle an inquiry into the company's vast
overstatement of its oil and gas reserves. The fraud inflated profits. No
admissions or denials of wrongdoing here, either, but the company nobly vowed
not to violate securities laws in the future.”: “You've got to be awed by the
corporate stealth operators. Even when they're conspicuously guilty, most of
them prove themselves rich enough or influential enough to buy their way out of
cell time.”
Oil & Gas Journal: FACTS Inc.: Iran
needs to move off high center on LNG exports: “With Shell putting Persian LNG as
its top priority, we consider Persian LNG ahead of the pack," said analysts.”
Oil & Gas Journal: Consultant: US
pressure disrupts development of Iran's South Azadegan field: “Royal Dutch/Shell
Group declined an offer from the third partner, Inpex Corp., to join that
consortium.”
Home of F1
News: Ferrari could lose Shell: “It's also suggested that oil company 'Total'
CEO Thierry Desmarest may be looking to buy the 'Royal Dutch/Shell' Group.”
Financial Times: Straight-talker ready to take risks: “It was a move so daring
that five years later Mr Desmarest was seen - until last week when he ruled it
out - as one of the only men capable of considering a bid for Royal/Dutch Shell,
Total's far bigger, yet distressed, rival.”
The Australian: Power stations to change hands:
“Shell's corporate spokesman Simon Buerk said the company had not announced any
intention to sell down its stake. However in a strong hint to possible
movements, he said Shell had an active divestment program under way.”
Financial Post (Canada): Ivan shuts down
oil production: Crude prices jump as 13,000 workers abandon drilling rigs in
Gulf of Mexico: “Motiva Enterprises LLC, a joint venture between Royal Dutch/
Shell Group and Saudi Refining Inc., began shutting its oil refinery in Norco,
La., which can process 225,000 barrels of crude oil a day. Motiva is reducing
production at Convent, La., which also has a 225,000 barrel a day capacity.”
AP Worldstream: OPEC weighs output increase
amid Hurricane Ivan, insurgents' attack in Iraq: “Shell began pulling workers
off its platforms Sunday. BP and others followed suit Monday”
Business Times (Malaysia): Retail sector
may see extra RM400m in festive sales: “Such changes, it said, should attract
the right investments in upstream exploration to reverse the trend of Malaysia's
dwindling oil reserves. The recent deep-water discoveries by Shell and Murphy
Oil have not been a catalyst for such incentives.”
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: OPEC
Mulls Output Hike As Traders Wait For Ivan's Impact: “Shell began pulling
workers off its platforms on Sunday. BP and others followed suit on Monday.”
AFX Europe (Focus)
Shell reserve inquiry widens as attention turns to executives – report: “Sources
told The Times that the investigation was at the earliest of stages and that no
arrests or indictments were foreseen at present.”
The Times:
Shell inquiry widens as attention turns to executives: “THE US Attorney’s office
in New York has demanded boxes of documents related to the alleged oil reserve
fraud at Royal Dutch/Shell, signalling an escalation of a federal investigation
into the scandal.”: “disgruntled American investors amended their lawsuit to
include Sir Mark Moody Stuart…”: “The lawsuit also names PriceWaterhouseCoopers
UK and KPMG”
The Guardian: Crude prices rise as Ivan
halts production in Gulf of Mexico: “There was encouraging demand for new
exploration acreage in the UK North Sea. Energy minister Mike O'Brien offered 97
offshore licences to 58 companies. Among those that have been awarded new scope
for work in the North Sea are BG, Shell and Total.”
The Scotsman: Hurricane Ivan fuels oil rise:
“Shell said that it had shut 270,000 barrels per day of oil production in the
eastern Gulf and would evacuate workers from the central Gulf”
Lloyds List: Battening down the
hatches: “Shell Oil has closed 270,000 barrels per day of oil output from its
tension-leg platforms”
Lloyds List: North Sea licences awarded:
“European oil majors BP, Eni, Shell and Total, plus US oil companies Amerada
Hess, ChevronTexaco, Apache and Kerr-McGee have gained licences in the round.”
EUBusiness.com: EU Commission approves Repsol's
acquisition of Shell Portugal assets
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: John Wood
Group Reappointed By Shell UK
Thursday 16 September, 2004
Financial Times:
Former Shell chief challenges regulator’s censure: “The FSA violated my
statutory rights to review and rebut the allegations contained in their recently
published Final Notice against Shell, because I was both identified and
prejudiced by the publication,” Watts said in a statement.”
Forbes.com: Former Shell
Chairman Appeals Censure: “The Financial Services Authority's final notice,
issued on Aug. 24, said Shell had made false or misleading announcements in
relation to its hydrocarbon reserves and reserves replacement ratios between
1998 and 2003, and had made those announcements despite indications and warnings
that they were false.”
London
Evening Standard: Shamed Shell chief hits back: “The move is a bolt from the
blue from Shell's former chairman, ousted in disgrace in March over the scandal
that has led to the worst year in the group's history.”
ABC.net.au: Shell offers 'no comment' on power
stations' future
San Jose Mercury
News: Problems mount for sale of Bakersfield refinery, sources say: "We'll
explore our options if we believe Shell is not acting in good faith.": “Lockyer
and the Federal Trade Commission have already launched investigations into
whether a shutdown would violate antitrust laws.”
AllAfrica.com: Globacom, Shell Partner to Curb
Unemployment: “Economic and social experts have described unemployment and
poverty as the main reasons for the restiveness in the Niger Delta.”
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: Oil Cos Agree
To Code Easing North Sea Pipeline Access: “Oil companies in the North Sea,
including heavyweights BP PLC (BP) and Royal Dutch/Shell Group (RD, SC) have
agreed with the U.K. government to adhere to a new code of conduct aimed at
easing access to undersea pipelines.”
Friday 17 September, 2004
ABC7Chicago.com:
Illinois sues Shell Pipeline Co.: “The Illinois attorney general's office is
suing the subsidiary of Shell Oil Company”: “A spokesman for Shell Pipeline
Company says officials did not know that the 200 tons of soil they dumped at a
landfill was contaminated with benzene -- a chemical that has been linked to
cancer”
BBC
NEWS: Dozen killed in Lagos fuel blast: “Nigeria is one of the world's major oil
producers but most of the population lives in poverty.”
THE S*** HITS
THE FAN: CLICK HERE TO ACCESS: THE AMENDED COMPLAINT FILED 13 SEPT 2004 BY BERNSTEIN LIEBHARD
& LIFSHITZ LLP, LEAD PLAINTIFF LAWYERS IN A U.S. MULTIBILLION DOLLAR CLASS ACTION
LAWSUIT FILED AGAINST ROYAL DUTCH SHELL, CURRENT & FORMER DIRECTORS, AND
AUDITORS/CONSULTANTS PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP & KPMG Accountants: CIVIL ACTION
04431 IN THE US DISTRICT COURT OF NEW JERSEY
London Evening Standard:
Vision needed to revitalise Shell: “It is just six months since possibly the
biggest post-Enron scandal erupted at Shell with the stunning admission that a
group regarded as one of the most reliable in the world had lied about the
health of its business.”
London Evening Standard:
Shell 'to create single board': “ONE OF the most outspoken shareholder activists
in Shell believes the creation of a single board under chief executive Jeroen
van der Veer is now a 'fait accompli'.”
CNNMoney: Shell may present recovery plan: “Royal
Dutch/Shell Group is expected to try to put the damaging scandal of its
overstated oil reserves behind it when it gives its annual strategy presentation
next week.”
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: Shell's
Ousted Ex-Boss Breaks Cover, Slams FSA: “Both of Shell 's parent companies -
Royal Dutch Petroleum Co., of The Hague, and London-based Shell Transport &
Trading Co. - as well as Watts, Van de Vijver and other individuals face
purported class action law suits in the U.S. from aggrieved shareholders. Watts
and other involved individuals still also face probes from the SEC and the U.S.
Justice Department.”
Financial Times: Sir Philip drops a fightback bombshell: “Topping the roster of
misdemeanours was the assertion that Shell had "announced false or misleading
proved reserves and reserves replacement ratios to the market throughout the
period 1998 to 2003 inclusive".
New York
Times: Ousted Shell Chairman Assails Regulators: “Sir Philip continues to face
investigations by British and American regulators and is a defendant in some of
the dozen investor lawsuits filed against Shell since its restatement of
reserves.”
The Scotsman: Ex-Shell Chairman Challenges
Watchdog over Oil Reserves Scandal: “The FSA found Shell guilty of market abuse
and the Anglo-Dutch company last month agreed to pay £17 million to the FSA.
(ShellNews.net)
International Herald Tribune:
Shell's ex-chairman makes counterattack: “The overstatement of Shell's reserves
by 20 percent, first disclosed in January, has led to more than a dozen
shareholder lawsuits, the loss of the company's top-tier credit rating and the
departure of three senior executives, including Watts. His defense may slow
Shell's efforts to move forward, one analyst said.”
Bloomberg: Shell Decides Against Update on Governance Next Week (Update1)
Financial Times: Lombard: Sir
Philip comes out fighting: “Much more than personal reputation looks at stake
here. The FSA has not closed its inquiry into Shell, and Sir Philip's lawyers
indicated on Thursday there was an ongoing investigation in relation to him.”
The Independent: Ex-Shell chief Watts demands
public tribunal to clear his name
The Independent: Outlook: Sir Phil Watts:
“…if I were Sir Phil, I'd lie low and save my redundancy cheque for the welter
of class actions that are already being heaped upon him. He's on a hiding to
nothing defending himself against the FSA, for even if he does show abuse of
process, he won't escape blame for this shameful episode. If Sir Phil's not to
blame, who on earth is?”
The Times: Ousted Shell chief takes FSA to
court: “The FSA accused Shell of “unprecedented misconduct” resulting in market
abuse and breach of listing rules.”
Daily Telegraph: The week in which
a watchdog came under a heavy Shelling: “Sir Philip Watts is hardly going to
enjoy being linked with Robert Maxwell but he probably owes the fat fraudster
rather more than he realises.”
Daily Telegraph: Watts attacks FSA
over 'flawed' Shell inquiry: “Sacked boss says watchdog violated his rights in
ruling on reserves scandal”
The StarOnline
(Malaysia): Shell to invest RM50mil on 50 autoserv outlets nationwide
Oilvoice.com: Shell
Awarded Eight Blocks in 22nd Offshore Licensing Round
Indo-Asian News Service: India - Angola may foil Shell's bid to sell shares to
India
Saturday 18 September, 2004
The
Guardian: You can't be sure of Shell, says the City: With an investor charm
offensive this week and a terrible year behind them, executives must be
nostalgic for the group's imperial past: “Shell will this week make a desperate
attempt to draw a line under the oil reserves scandal…”
THE S*** HITS
THE FAN: CLICK HERE TO ACCESS: THE AMENDED COMPLAINT FILED 13 SEPT 2004 BY BERNSTEIN LIEBHARD
& LIFSHITZ LLP, LEAD PLAINTIFF LAWYERS IN A U.S. MULTIBILLION DOLLAR CLASS ACTION
LAWSUIT FILED AGAINST ROYAL DUTCH SHELL, CURRENT & FORMER DIRECTORS, AND
AUDITORS/CONSULTANTS PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP & KPMG Accountants: CIVIL ACTION
04431 IN THE US DISTRICT COURT OF NEW JERSEY
Financial Times: Test of power for market watchdog: Sir Philip Watts, ousted
chairman of Royal Dutch/Shell, has complained that the FSA "identified and
prejudiced him" in its action against the company.
Irish
Independent: Shell keen to put scandal behind it
AP
Worldstream: Shell finds no damage at 5 U.S. Gulf oil gas platforms
The Times:
Inside info: Shell: Erum Loan, the Shell recruitment manager for the UK, Ireland
and Southern Europe, tells us what is needed if you want to get a graduate
career with the oil giant away from the oilrigs and forecourts
The Times:
BUSINESS WEEK: Times Online's guide to the week's business stories: “We can be
pretty sure of Shell delivering a strategy briefing. But what, after such a
torrid 2004 for the oil giant, might it contain?”
Oilvoice.com: Shell
Awarded Eight Blocks in 22nd Offshore Licensing Round
Indo-Asian News Service: India - Angola may foil Shell's bid to sell shares to
India
Sunday 19 September, 2004
THE MAIL ON SUNDAY: Day of destiny draws
near at troubled Shell: “Shares in Shell fell as low as 348p in the wake of the
scandal, and while it has since regained its pre-crisis level, it is still
lagging far behind rival BP…”
The Observer: Our red badge of failure: “Did
the great Shell really falsify its oil reserves over many years, with top people
conniving at, instead of jumping on, the deceit?”: “Yes, they did.”
Scotland On Sunday: Eyes on Shell again as new boss tries to fight back: “…Cairn
Energy - the Edinburgh firm which looks set to rake in bucketloads of cash from
Indian assets it bought for a song from Shell - officially begins trading on the
FTSE100 tomorrow.”
Sunday Herald: Different approaches to
dealing with shame: “Now, most people confronted with the evidence displayed in
an e-mail trail between senior people in the company discussing reserves going
back more than two years would have opted for keeping their headdown. Not Sir
Philip.”: “Mind you, with the number of other investigations still being
conducted into the Shell reserves affair, it was unlikely that Sir Philip was
going to be free of “my learned friends” any time soon.”
The Business:
Judgment day for new Shell boss as he faces the City: “Hopes that the group
would seal a gas deal in Libya by the time of the meeting appear to have been
dashed. Shell's lead negotiator in Libya last week told The Business that
agreement had yet to be reached.”
The Observer: When Shell freezes over:
“The Anglo-Dutch group will tighten up its sloppy board structure, which
arguably contributed to the reserves scandal. Power will be concentrated in one
board, rather than three, and the group will have a single chief executive. But
big deal. That's what most sensible companies do already."
The Observer: Shell 'to scrap dual board
structure': “Shell chief executive Jeroen van der Veer has accepted that the
beleaguered Anglo-Dutch oil company must overhaul its complicated structure and
introduce a single board, according to a key investor.”
Independent On Sunday: Shell weighs
multi-billion share buyback to win over investors: “Shell, the tarnished oil
giant…”
Sunday Telegraph: City Diary: Hedge
Hopper: “Martyn Hopper of Herbert Smith is the legal beagle sinking his teeth
into the Financial Services Authority for being beastly to Sir Philip Watts, the
ousted former chairman of Shell.”
The Business: Opec paying price for ban on oil
majors: “Qatar, eager to catch up in the Middle East, has given Exxon Mobil,
Total and Royal Dutch/Shell stakes in the North Field and used them to build
liquefied natural gas schemes.”
GreenBiz.com: What Matters Most: Shell Oil's CSR
Crisis in the North Sea: “Shell’s actions -- and Greenpeace’s reactions -- had
created a full-scale international incident.”: “What Greenpeace had helped Shell
to realize what that its reputation was a far more valuable and perishable
commodity than the Brent Spar itself”
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: Shell Has A
Chance To Impress With Strategy Update: “management will Wednesday try to
convince the market that the humbled Anglo-Dutch oil giant is on the road to
recovery after years of weak performance and a headline-grabbing reserves
scandal.”
Monday 20 September, 2004
THE NEW YORK
TIMES: YUKOS Woes Drive Oil Above $46 a Barrel: “Shell Oil (SHEL.L) (RD.AS) said
Monday it saw no significant impact from Hurricane Ivan on its oil and gas
production facilities in the Gulf of Mexico, and expects full, or near full,
recovery in output this week.”
Daily Mail: Shell
launches charm offensive: “Shell shares at 417 1/2p have recouped their losses
on the reserve shock. That should help in fighting US legal claims, but it is
largely due to the soaring price of crude.”
Daily
Telegraph: Shell asks publisher how to manage its Anglo-Dutch split: “Executives
at crisis-hit oil and gas giant Shell have approached Reed Elsevier for tips on
how to copy its management structure”
Financial Times: NLNG still faces challenges: “Investors in the $12bn project -
the Nigerian government and oil companies Royal Dutch/Shell, Total and Eni - are
hoping the optimism surrounding the project will survive challenges presented by
Nigeria and the world gas market.”
Financial Times: FSA chief pledges to 'make an example' of groups breaching
rules: “He indicated that the record £17m fine imposed on Royal Dutch/Shell for
overstating its oil reserves set a new benchmark for the level of fines that
would be levied on leading companies that failed to discharge their
responsibilities to investors.”
The Scotsman:
Comment: “Walter van de Vijver, head of exploration at Shell, got £2.5m and his
boss Sir Philip Watts £1.1m. These hand-outs are a disgrace. They undermine
popular capitalism. They throw goodwill down the drain.”: “Little wonder small
investors are turning away in droves from the stock market.”
Financial Times: “While Royal Dutch/Shell has been grappling with its corporate
structure in the wake of the scandal over its overbooking of reserves, attention
has been drawn away from the parlous state of its oil exploration business.”
Asia Pulse: ANGOLA
BLOCKS INDIAN DEAL TO BUY SHELL STAKE IN OIL FIELD
The Times: Need to
Know: “Royal Dutch/Shell, the oil giant, is on Wednesday expected to unveil its
annual strategy after a year of shock downgrades of its oil and gas reserves.”
THE
WALL STREET JOURNAL/BARRON’S ONLINE: Scapegoat?: “Sir Philip Watts, Royal
Dutch/Shell's ousted chairman, defended his role in the oil conglomerate's
energy-reserves scandal.”
THE
WALL STREET JOURNAL: Australia's Coles Myer Set To Unwrap Bumper FY04 Profit:
“It now has some 600 Coles Express outlets via its alliance with Shell (RD),
which analysts recognize has helped lure shoppers from competitors.”
THE
WALL STREET JOURNAL/ DOW JONES NEWSWIRES: Air Liquide In 15-Yr Deal To Supply
Energy To Shell Unit
Tuesday 21 September, 2004
PRNewswire: 130,000
New Shell Credit Card Applications During Second Quarter Promotion
London Evening Standard: 'Plumber'
seeks legal aid for appeal: “The setback comes only a week after former Shell
chairman Sir Philip Watts said that he was taking the FSA to the tribunal for
the way it allegedly pointed the blame at him when it fined Shell £17m for
market abuse relating to oil reserves overstatements.”
The Pasadena Citizen: Shell Deer Park
refinery set to implement environmental mandates: “Officials at Shell DP had no
comment on the pending county lawsuit.”
The Herald: Cairn’s net asset value soared 275%,
claims fund manager: “…Cairn is considered a possible takeover target for the
bigger multinationals such as BP, Exxon or Shell who need to continue growing
their reserves either through new discoveries or buying up smaller players.”
IFAOnline: Oil’s well for now, renewables can
wait a while, says managers: “Capable management contrasts with stories of, for
example, Shell ‘losing’ billions of barrels of proven reserves…”
Financial Times: Mudlark: Shell risks cracks at Plaisterers' Hall
The Guardian: Market
forces: “Shell, meanwhile, added 5p to 422.5p as dealers bet that the company
would announce radical changes at tomorrow's strategy update.”
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL/DOW
JONES NEWSWIRES: UPDATE: Australia Gorgon, NW Shelf Seek S Korea Gas Deal
THE WALL STREET
JOURNAL/DOW JONES NEWSWIRES: Russian Supply Constraints Push Crude Futures
Higher: “Monday Royal Dutch/Shell Group unit Shell Oil said it had restored full
oil and natural gas production at a number of its offshore Mexico fields and was
ramping up output at others.”
Wednesday 22 September, 2004
Reuters:
Shell makes oil find off Malaysia: "We are delighted to announce this highly
significant discovery, our second offshore Sabah oil discovery within a year,"
Shell Malaysia Chairman Jon Chadwick said in the statement on Wednesday.
London Evening Standard: Shell's battle plan fails to win City: “But the
overhaul promised by the Dutchman left the City distinctly unimpressed after he
failed to commit to increasing share buybacks and admitted that it may be 2009
before oil and gas output grows.”
London Evening Standard:
FSA bites back over ex-Shell boss
YahooNews/PRNewswire:
Shell Hosts Strategy Review: Regaining Upstream Strength, Delivering Downstream
Profits: $45 billion in capital expenditure 2004-2006 anticipated: Focus on more
Upstream gas and oil: Extend LNG leadership position: $10-12 billion in
divestments planned 2004-2006: "Disclaimer statement": "subject to risk
factors...": including potential litigation and regulatory effects arising from
recategorisation of reserves..."
Bloomberg:
Shell Says It Will Sell More Assets, Increase Capital Spending: “The company
settled investigations with the SEC and the U.K.'s Financial Services Authority
in July. Probes by the U.S. Justice Department, the Dutch securities regulator
and the Euronext stock exchange are continuing.”
The Times: FSA
chief's warning on upsurge in legal challenges: “CALLUM McCARTHY, chairman of
the Financial Services Authority, hit out last night at the soaring number of
lawsuits against the City regulator in what appeared to be a veiled swipe at Sir
Philip Watts, the former chairman of Shell.”
The Times: Strategy
to emerge from Shell: “The oil company’s annual strategy presentation, to be
held today in London, is viewed as a crucial test for Shell’s senior directors.
Analysts are looking for evidence that Shell can fill the gap left by the
removal from its proven reserves of 4.4 billion barrels of oil and gas.”
The Times:
European Briefing; Western oil firms face risk of being stung by Russians: “Oil
companies don’t mind difficult governments so long as they let them run the oil
business. In Russia, it is clear that no such deal is on offer and it would be
foolish for BP or Shell to believe that Russia is the answer to their oil
reserve problems.”
Financial
Times: FSA chairman warns against embracing 'litigious society': “…Sir Philip
Watts, the ousted chairman of Royal Dutch/Shell, said he planned to challenge
the FSA's findings on the company's oil reserves.”
Financial
Times: Tough choices for oil companies in the quest to head off a global
capacity crunch: How technology can squeeze more crude out: “Oil companies have
found it difficult to locate new oil reserves. Shell this year became the
industry's most dramatic example, having to cut its proved reserves estimate by
more than 20 per cent after struggling to find oil and providing the US
Securities and Exchange Commission with false data from 1994 to 2002.”
Financial Times: Nigerian gas venture to get $1.28bn loan: “…international banks
and credit agencies lent $1.06bn to a Royal Dutch/ Shell-backed Nigerian
liquefied natural gas project intended to become one of the largest in the
world.”
Financial Times: Gazprom looks to the world stage: “Separately, Gazprom is
trying to muscle its way into the Sakhalin-2 project where Shell holds a 55 per
cent interest.”
The Guardian:
Appeals slow FSA disciplinary process: “The latest high-profile application to
the tribunal was made last week by Sir Philip Watts, former chairman of Shell…”
Bloomberg: Shell
Chairman May Accelerate Asset Sales, Buyback (Update1): “Royal Dutch/Shell Group
Chairman Jeroen van der Veer, saddled with lawsuits and government probes
related to Shell's oil and gas reserves…”: Probes by the U.S. Justice
Department, the Dutch securities regulator and the Euronext stock exchange are
continuing."
Daily Mail:
City watchdog flexes its muscles: “McCarthy heralded Shell's record £17m fine,
saying it was four times greater than any previous penalty. He said he wanted to
change the behaviour of firms and individuals, suggesting that fines could
continue to grow.”
AFX UK (Focus): Shell to
spend 4 bln usd to boost Canada's Athabasca bitumen output UPDATE
Thursday 23 September, 2004
THE WALL
STREET JOURNAL: Shell Pegs Budget For Exploration To Higher: “Mr. van der Veer
declined to discuss details of an internal review of the company's corporate
structure. Shell is studying whether to change its dual-board structure, which
critics have blamed for obscuring accountability in Shell's reserves scandal.
The company expects to unveil options in November.”
The New York
Times: MARKET PLACE: A Strategy for Shell? “…it has paid $150 million in fines
after investigations by United States and British regulators. It still faces
about a dozen lawsuits and may suffer more negative publicity as one of the
executives, Sir Philip Watts, the former chairman, mounts his defense.”
Daily
Telegraph: City diary: On omission to explain: “…Xpose Awards - "celebrating the
confusion between rhetoric and reality". BAE Systems, Shell and British American
Tobacco fight it out for the "best omission" award”
Daily
Telegraph: We'll be running to stand still until 2009, says Shell: “…Mr Van der
Veer was dismissive of suggestions it might merge with French giant Total. He
said: "The fact that [that story] can get legs shows that our reputation is not
where we want it to be.": “Shell was embarrassed about selling a field in North
India to oil minnow Cairn Energy for a few million dollars which later yielded
hundreds of millions of barrels of oil, he said.”
Daily Telegraph: City comment: For a company that has so long considered itself
top of the heap in the oil game, the humiliation inside can only be guessed at.
Even Jeroen van der Veer, Shell's top executive, had to admit the business was
in crisis…”: “Shell's slide show was ghastly. Meaningless management-speak
phrases such as "fix and reset the business" and "growth in markets of choice"
might have been designed to reassure, but instead showed that Shell's problems
extend beyond its reserves issue.”
Daily
Telegraph: FSA denies Watts' complaint: “The Financial Services Authority
yesterday said it was "confident" of seeing off a claim from Sir Philip Watts
that his rights had been "violated" after the FSA fined Shell £17m over the
reserves scandal.”
The Scotsman: Wall
Street rattled by Fed as Shell fails to please City: More questions than
answers: “Most investors believe the overstatement of reserves fiasco shows
Shell was seriously flawed under the current management structure, and want a
single unified board instead.”
The Scotsman:
Shell fails to impress City with growth plan: “SHELL yesterday said it would
plough $45 billion (£25bn) into the business between 2004 and 2006 to drive
organic growth in the wake of the oil reserves overstatement fiasco that
prompted big regulatory fines and damaged the group’s City credibility.”
KESQNewsChannel3: Companies show interest in Shell's Bakersfield refinery
The Guardian:
Shell's revival plan falls flat in the City: Oil group to invest $45bn with no
guarantee that production will increase: “A crucial strategy briefing to
reignite City confidence in Shell fell flat yesterday with investors "underwhelmed"
by forecasts of flat production growth and no major commitment to share
buybacks.”
Financial
Times: Slick display glosses over difficulties: “While most observers agreed
that its presentation was slick and thoughtfully put together, the lack of
underlying substance was also apparent to some.”: “To shift attention away from
the reserves debacle, Mr Brinded pointed out that Shell's underlying resources
were still some 60bn barrels of oil, the same as before the reserves
readjustment. However, one analyst said Mr Brinded's highlighting of the 60bn
barrel figure was misleading…”
Financial Times: Shell spending plans dash buy-back hopes: “Royal Dutch/Shell
again disappointed the markets… …it dashed hopes for a share buy-back,
announcing that it would spend $45bn (€37bn) over the next three years as it
seeks to repair the damage caused by its reserves scandal.”
The Times:
Troubled Shell puts faith in high oil price for recovery: “The focus on growth
drew scorn from analysts, who said Shell should focus on generating cash. “It
was a fairly inept performance,” one said.”
The New York Times: Shell's New
Strategy: Spend, Sell Assets: “Years of under-investment and scatter-gun
exploration of smaller-than-needed prospects has left Shell failing to find more
oil and gas than it pumps out of the ground each year.”
Financial Times: Shell Plan
Disappoints Investors: “Scandal-hit oil giant Royal Dutch/Shell will invest $45
billion over three years to boost reserves and production but its shares fell on
disappointment it did not extend a stock buyback program.”: “Shell's reserves
cut caused the ousting of its previous top directors, led to $150 million in
regulatory fines and cost the group its ``AAA'' top-grade credit rating.”:
“Shell is such a long turnaround story that BP looks a less risky bet,'” said
Cavendish Asset Management fund manager Paul Mumford.”
Financial Times: Lex: “Royal
Dutch/Shell is trying to regain its reputation.”: “Thanks to high oil prices
Shell's share price has more than regained the ground lost in this year's
reserves scandal. But, while a rising tide lifts all boats, there is little in
Shell's strategy to significantly narrow the gap with rival BP”
The Guardian: Shell unveils $15bn
recovery plan: “The reserves scandal forced Shell's chairman, Philip Watts, to
resign, along with Walter van de Vijver, its oil and gas chief and its chief
financial officer, Judy Boynton. The company was fined by the financial services
authority in the UK and the securities and exchange commission (SEC) in the US.”
Friday 24 September, 2004
Voice of
America: Shell Oil Evacuates Employees from Niger Delta in Nigeria
Reuters: Shell
evacuates staff from Nigerian conflict: “Multinational oil giant Royal
Dutch/Shell has evacuated non-essential staff from two oil production plants in
Nigeria where troops are fighting a major offensive against rebel militia, a
spokesman said.”
payvand.com: Shell & Repsol Sign 4 Billion Dollar
Natural Gas Deal With Iran
AlertNet.Org: Shell evacuates staff from
Nigerian delta conflict: “Anglo-Dutch oil giant Royal Dutch/Shell has evacuated
non-essential staff from two flow stations in the Niger delta, where Nigerian
government forces have been attacking rebel militia, a company spokesman said on
Friday.”
The Guardian:
Democratic Dutchman with a charisma bypass: “One of his endearing traits is to
ask his exploration director Malcolm Brinded, a more natural performer it must
be said, to tell him if he gets things wrong: "Malcolm, check me if I drop the
ball," van der Veer said at one stage.”: “An outsider would be better suited for
that post, especially as van der Veer's name comes up, along with other Shell
directors, in class actions in the US. It must be hard to focus on the way
forward with the cloud of the past hanging over you…”
London Evening Standard: Eerie echo for new Shell boss: “Whether van der Veer
turns out to be the leader Shell needs is not yet clear.”: “another faceless
unknown emerged from the depths of a huge oil company to explain why the
business was on its knees, why the board had decided to fire the chairman and
what he, as the new man in charge, planned to do to put things right.”
The Times:
COMMENT: Well, well, well: “Shell has made six "significant finds" since the
start of last year and they might have been involved in more had it not,
famously, sold for a pittance its stake in the fruitful Mangala field in India
to Cairn.”: “…Shell's great lucky break was that its annus horribilis has
coincided with the strongest oil market for more than 20 years.
The Times: Pumping
jargon but not profits: “…there is even a new mantra, Enterprise First, with
which to goad the staff into “top-quartile performance”."
The Times: Need to
Know: “Royal Dutch/Shell and Repsol, the oil and gas giants, have reached a
project framework agreement with the Iranian Government…”
THE WALL STREET
JOURNAL/DOW JONES NEWSWIRES: UPDATE:Tax Bill Approval Means Boost For Wind
Energy Cos: “The tax credit should also push forward projects sponsored by
companies like Shell Wind Energy, which is owned by Royal Dutch/Shell Group”
The
Independent: Michael Harrison's Outlook: Shell supertanker steers into deeper
waters: “brotherly love has been notable for its complete absence inside the
South Bank politburo, where the motto has been stab someone in the back before
you are made to walk the plank yourself.”: “The truth is that Shell will not
begin to emerge from the black cloud which enveloped it in January until it has
fundamentally changed the way the business is run and governed.”
Financial
Times: Total tiptoes to Russia: “Quite simply, Total was envisaging a bid for
its larger but troubled oil rival Shell. Last week, Mr Desmarest poured cold
water on the idea, stating he was not interested in big acquisitions.”: “To
qualify for membership of the club of super oil majors, an American dimension is
even more necessary than a Russian one. There is an easy way to achieve this:
merging with a debilitated Shell before it recovers or is taken over by another
rival.”
Financial Times: Shell to spend $45bn over three years: “Royal Dutch/Shell
intends to spend $45bn over the next three years as it looks to repair the
damage caused by its oil reserves scandal.”: "They needed to show whether they
had the right people in charge to fix things. I think they have failed dismally
here."
The Guardian:
Shell failed to bounce back from Wednesday's drubbing. It slipped 11.25p to
406.75p after Deutsche Bank, which has been one of its biggest fans, re moved
the stock from its buy list
CityWire.co.uk:
Thursday Papers: Shell under pressure - tips and comment: Shell comes in for a
hammering in the press today after yesterday's disappointing statement.
Business Times (Malaysia): Shell's service
efficiency scheme to boost jobs: “The official was asked to comment on a news
report posted on the rediff.com's website recently which said that Shell is
cutting 600 to 800 IT jobs in the US and relocating them offshore, mainly to
India and Malaysia.”
Financial Times: Observer: Shell-shocked: The chairman of the Anglo-Dutch oil
giant told yesterday's strategy meeting that things had got so bad that even
those French upstarts at Total had been rumoured to be considering a bid.
Financial Times: Letters: Market in need of a 'most probable' reserve estimate:
By Eric Knight
AFX Europe (Focus): Repsol, Shell sign 4 bln
usd gas contract with Iran govt - report
Lloyds List: Shell pledges $45bn to rebuild
reserves and reputation: “The strategic review is designed to restore investor
confidence after Shell's shock disclosure in January that it had wrongly
accounted for a fifth of its oil reserves.”
New Straits
Times (Malaysia): Major oil discovery off Sabah ..LD: KUALA LUMPUR, Wed. - Shell
Malaysia announced today that a Shell-Petronas Carigali-Conoco Phillips joint
venture has made another important oil discovery in waters offshore Sabah. The
discovery was made by the Malikai-1
Business
Times (Malaysia): Oil stocks rally on joint venture discovery off Sabah:
“SELECTED oil-related counters closed higher yesterday on heavy volume following
news of a major oil discovery off Sabah by a Shell-Petronas Carigali- Conoco
Phillips joint venture, dealers said.”
The Times: Oil's
not well for Shell directors: “The debacle over the reserves lifted the lid on
an organisation that appears to have knowingly deceived investors.”: “It was
when Sir Mark Moody-Stuart was in charge in 1998 that a paper was produced under
the title: Creating Value through Entrepreneurial Management of Hydrocarbon
Resource Values. Inflating the reserve figures certainly did that.”
The Age (Australia): Shell spends big to recoup 'lost'
oil: “Managing director of exploration and production Malcolm Brinded admitted
that Shell's reserve replacement rate would only be 100 per cent over the next
five years - less if the "lost" barrels were excluded.”
Daily Express:
Shell pumps in £25bn to restore reputation
Daily Express:
Training is the key to avoiding new fiasco: “SHELL has so far trained more than
2,000 staff to ensure the way they book future oil reserves will meet
regulations laid down by the US watchdog, the Securities and Exchange
Commission.”
Daily Mail:
Shell clams up on reforms: “SHELL'S attempt to put the reserves scandal behind
it by blitzing investors with some big spending numbers did not inspire market
confidence. The company faces a huge credibility gap over its past exploration
failures, so there is not much optimism…”
Daily Mail: Long
game strategy set to test the market's patience
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL/DOW
JONES NEWSWIRES: Shell Pakistan Urges Govt To Increase Retail Oil Prices
Saturday 25 September, 2004
Chicago
Tribune: Hurricane disruptions spur oil loans to Shell, Placid
The Scotsman: Shell
clears Nigeria bases
The
Independent: Private Investor: ‘The company has had a rotten recent history, but
the new management team now seems determined to restore investors' faith in
Shell by going "back to basics".’
Daily
Telegraph: City briefs: Shell buyback
Daily
Telegraph: City Diary: Shell shocked: “Is BP, Exxon or, er, Shell a "model
company setting standards and behaviour and operating practices for a global
company"? …which of them "demonstrates honesty, integrity and strong ethical
thinking in the conduct of the business"? By this point I can contain myself no
more. Shell hardly needs such a silly and expensive exercise to know the
answers.”
THE WALL STREET
JOURNAL/DOW JONES NEWSWIRES: Crude-Oil Prices Climb To New Settlement High:
“…oil loans made to refineries from the U.S. emergency petroleum reserve…”:
“Companies such as Shell Transport & Trading Co. sought the loans after
Hurricane Ivan disrupted oil imports and production. Shell spokesman Mark Singer
confirmed Friday the company had negotiated a crude loan, but wouldn't disclose
the terms.”
San
Mateo Daily Journal: Government agrees with Shell, Placid Refining for oil from
reserve: WASHINGTON — An agreement has been reached to lend 1.7 million barrels
of oil from the government’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve…”
The Times: Price of oil remains burning issue
The Times: That was the week: “Shell, the
beleaguered oil group, reveals that it is pinning its hopes on long-term high
oil prices…”: “…fails to impress the City, with shares falling 14p to 418p on
the day.”
THE WALL STREET
JOURNAL/DOW JONES NEWSWIRES: Shell : 2 S Nigeria Oil Facilities Evacuated Over
Clashes: “The Niger Delta People's Volunteer Force claims to be fighting for
self-determination for an estimated 8 million ethnic Ijaws, the largest tribe in
the impoverished oil region where locals accuse joint ventures run by the
government and oil companies of cheating them out of wealth produced in their
land.”
BBC News: Shell
pulls staff from oil region: “The human rights organisation, Amnesty
International… …said that 500 civilians may have been killed and thousands of
others displaced in the ongoing security crackdown.
News24.com: Shell
evacuates platforms: “Clashes between troops and militia fighters forced oil
giant Royal Dutch/Shell to evacuate two oil facilities in Nigeria's southern oil
region, the company said on Friday.”
AFX Europe (Focus):
Shell evacuates 200 workers from Nigeria oil region; says output not affected
MSNBC: Hopes pump up for Shell refinery
(Bakersfield): “Shell is not including its pipelines in the sale, which could
limit buyer interest and may violate the company's agreement with the attorney
general to make a good-faith effort to find a buyer.”
The Independent: Sainsbury and Tesco undercut
by Shell: “THE SUPERMARKETS' reputation as the cheapest petrol retailers was
undermined yesterday by research showing Tesco and Sainsbury have both been
undercut by Shell.”
Asia Pulse: SHELL
PAKISTAN POSTS US$25.5 MLN PROFIT IN 2003-04
Sunday 26 September, 2004
THE NEW
YORK TIMES: Nigerian Rebels to Widen Conflict, Target Agip: Companies fear a
repeat of last year's uprising by members of the Ijaw tribe, which forced them
temporarily to shut 40 percent of the country's 2.5 million barrel per day
output.: "We have decided to declare Operation Locust Feast which will cover the
whole Niger delta. It is going to be an all-out war against the Nigerian state."
THE BUSINESS: BP's Azerbaijan venture to
pump up pipeline capacity: “David Woodward, president of Azerbaijan operations
for BP, which is managing the project, told The Business the company was close
to agreement with Eni, Royal Dutch/Shell, Exxon Mobil, and France's Total to
ship oil from the giant Kashagan oil development in Kazakhstan…
Bloomberg: Shell May Build Chemical Plant in
Qatar, Energy Minister Says: "The Anglo-Dutch company is counting on Qatar to
help recover proven reserves, which it said in January had been overstated for
years."
News24.com: Nigerian
rebels target Agip: “Despite fighting in the area, Shell said there has been no
disruption to its production and exports. Shell accounts for roughly half of
Nigeria's daily exports of 2.5 million barrels. Companies fear a repeat of last
year's uprising by members of the Ijaw tribe, which forced them to temporarily
shut 40% of the 2.5 million barrel daily output.”
Sunday
Telegraph: Market miscellany: It's too early to buy Shell: “Over the past year
Shell has made a habit of delivering nasty surprises, notably its disastrous
admission in January that it had overbooked its proven oil and gas reserves by
25 per cent. Last week the oil giant's long-awaited strategy presentation for
once contained no surprises - but it didn't impress either.”
Sunday
Telegraph: Shell agrees to cull surplus non-execs: “Executives of Royal
Dutch/Shell, the Anglo-Dutch oil giant, have agreed to make a huge cull of its
non-executive directors…”: “Meanwhile Judy Boynton, the discredited former
finance director, is understood to be likely to agree her severance package in
the next two weeks.”: “Her position was seen as untenable after the reserves
debacle.”: “It is understood that her package will be close to her contractual
terms, which guarantee a payoff worth at least $1m.”
Sunday
Telegraph: Rebels fight government to control Nigerian oil: “on Thursday, the
oil giant Shell evacuated more than 250 non-essential members of staff from two
facilities in the Niger Delta.”
The New York Times: Oil Prices Rise Again
As Production Lags: “…one factor that may have contributed to Friday's rise in
prices was violence in Nigeria that forced Royal Dutch/Shell Group, which
accounts for roughly half the country's daily exports of 2.5 million barrels, to
evacuate two oil facilities.”
Sarawak News: 399 Ex-Employees Of Shell Win
Suit For Refund Estimated At RM100 Million: “The Miri High Court has ordered
Sarawak Shell Bhd (SSB), Sabah Shell Petroleum Co Ltd (SSPC), the Trustees of
Shell Sarawak and Sabah Retirement Fund (SSSRBF) and Shell Sarawak and Sabah
Provident Fund (SSSPF), to pay nearly RM100 million to 399 former employees"
(Sabah Shell Petroleum Co Ltd is a UK company)
Monday 27 September, 2004
USA TODAY: Oil nears
$50 as storms, global tension drive prices: “In Nigeria, rebels seeking
political reforms in the impoverished oil-producing Niger delta scored a success
with the closure by Royal Dutch/Shell of a small 30,000 barrels a day. Shell
evacuated some staff as a security precaution as government troops battle
militia, threatening deliveries from the country that pumps 2.5 million barrels
daily.”
Bloomberg: Oil Jumps
to Record, Nearing $50, on Threat to Nigerian Supply: "Royal Dutch/Shell Group's
venture in Nigeria evacuated 235 employees from the Niger River delta Friday
amid clashes between government troops and armed militants."
The Times: Wind
farmers go for world record: “PROMOTERS of the world’s largest offshore wind
energy project, to be built off the coasts of Kent and Essex, have begun
canvassing community groups to ease objections to the £1 billion development.”:
“E.ON is a one-third partner in the project, along with Shell and Core, a
private-equity consortium.”
The Times: Financial regulator doubles total
fines: “The recent fines record was dominated by the £17 million penalty meted
out in August to Shell for repeatedly misleading shareholders over its oil and
gas reserves.”
Rte: Shell buy expands DCC UK business: “DCC's energy
division is to acquire the business and assets of Shell Direct UK for a total of
€23m. Shell Direct supplies heating oils and transport fuels to domestic and
commercial customers in Britain.”
Bloomberg: Crude Oil Rises on
Slower-Than-Expected Recovery of U.S. Output: “Production losses caused by
Hurricane Ivan prompted the U.S. government to agree to loan oil from the
Strategic Petroleum Reserve, an emergency stockpile, to refiners. Shell Trading
Co. U.S., a unit of Royal Dutch/Shell Group, will receive 1.4 million barrels of
oil…”
HK Stock Exchange: Release from Shell
Elec Mfg (Hldgs) On Delay Of Circular: “The Company has applied to the Stock
Exchange for a further extension of the deadline for despatch of the circular in
relation to a loan of HK$160 million advanced by the Group to Pacific Top”
Daily
Express (UK): SHELL’S ANNUS HORRIBILIS: Jan 9, 2004: Reserves downgraded; shares
slump: Mar 7: Chairman Sir Philip Watts ousted: Apr 19: E-mails about ‘lying’
revealed: Apr 24: FSA launches probe: Jun 6: Shell forced to speed up structural
reform: Jul 29: Fined £84m by US and UK watchdogs: Sep 22: New investment
strategy
BP/SHELL
MERGER?
THE BUSINESS: BP seeks go-ahead for
European oil mergers: "...has Royal Dutch/Shell in its sights. Its rival's share
price has been reeling from the recent writedown of oil assets and threatened
legal action.”: “A combined BP and Shell would dwarf ExxonMobil with $340bn of
assets against $180bn. New York brokerage Oppenheimer, says a BP/Shell merger
would lead to $10bn of synergies within five years and that it could sell a
further $10bn of assets to beat regulatory hurdles and provide cash for a share
buyback. Oppenheimer argues that only a new management team would lift shares.
"BP is an ideal merger partner for Shell and shareholders of both companies
should urge such a. combination," said John Cusick, oil analyst at Oppenheimer.
"If they wanted to merge, they could find a way around competition hurdles."
Financial Times: Lawsuits hit
non-US companies: “The companies involved include Royal Dutch/Shell, Nortel
Networks, Nokia, Adecco and Parmalat.”
Tuesday 28 September, 2004
AllAfrica.com: Nigerian Oil Wells Marked Part of
$15b Shell Investment: “Several top brass including chairman Philip Watts were
ousted in the wake of Shell's restatement of reserves. It later emerged that
several senior executives had been aware of problems long before they were made
public. The oil giant was fined a total of 150 million dollars by US and British
regulators last month.”
Bloomberg: Shell Shuts Some Nigerian
Oil Output as Tension Rises (Update1): “Violence in the Niger River delta, where
Nigeria's oil is produced, kills about 1,000 people a year, according to a
confidential report funded by Shell.”
THE NEW
YORK TIMES/REUTERS: Oil Charges Over $50 on Nigeria Threat: “Oil prices raced to
new record highs above $50 on Tuesday as rebel threats against Nigerian oil
facilities threatened to inflict further strain on global supplies.”: “Shell has
already cut 30,000 to 40,000 bpd due to security curbs.: “U.S. crude stocks have
fallen for the last eight weeks and are running at a 13 million barrel deficit
compared with a year ago, at a time when they should be building ahead of
winter.”
THE NEW YORK
TIMES: Oil Nears $50 as Gulf Storms Curtail Output: “A spokesman for Royal
Dutch/Shell, Andy Corrigan, said in London that Shell had evacuated 235
nonessential workers from the Port Harcourt region of Nigeria on Friday because
of a "tense security situation."
London Evening Standard: Shell
could quit Niger Delta: “…“the latest outbreak of violence in Nigeria is simply
the beginning of a civil war that could force Shell into a huge shake-up of its
activities in the oil-rich country.”: “Shell's links with Nigeria reached a low
point nine years ago when Greenpeace said the giant had blood on its hands after
the government executed activist Ken Saro-Wiwa.”
The Times: Nigeria
violence pushes oil price to new record: “Shell said it had removed some 200
non-essential workers from an area close to Soku, where the oil company has a
hub facility that collects gas from oil wells across the region for delivery to
Nigeria LNG, one of the world’s biggest gas liquefaction plants, located on
Bonny Island.”
THE WALL
STREET JOURNAL: Low Oil Inventories in U.S. Signal High Prices May Stay a While:
“Royal Dutch/Shell Group, the largest operator in Nigeria, has withdrawn
nonessential personnel from Nigeria's southern petroleum regions. Nigeria
produces about 2.4 million barrels a day of highly desirable, light, low-sulfur
oil.”
London Evening Standard: Oil price soars over $50 a barrel: “The rebel group
accused Royal Dutch Shell, Nigeria's largest oil producer, and Italy's Agip of
'collaboration with the Nigerian state in acts of genocide against our
people'.”: 'We now think that crude oil could reach $61,' warned investment bank
Morgan Stanley.
MSNBC:
How high will oil prices go? With supplies squeezed, demand continues to grow
MSNBC:
Nigerian rebels: ‘All-out war’ to start Friday: The rebel group’s leader,
Mujahid Dokubo-Asari, accused Royal Dutch Shell, Nigeria’s largest oil producer…
…of “collaboration with the Nigerian state in acts of genocide against our
people.”
Financial Times: Shell unit
purchase fuels DCC expansion: “DCC, the Irish sales and marketing group, has
agreed to buy Shell Direct UK for €20.1m (£13.7m).”
BBC Monitoring Service: Japanese
energy mission visits oil and gas facilities in Russia's Far East: “The British
and Dutch company Royal Dutch Shell and Japan's Mitsiu and Mitsubishi trading
and investment corporations are participants in the Sakhalin-2 project.”
Financial Times: Global equity
markets move into broad retreat: "The market faces the prospect of years without
sufficient flexibility or insulation from shocks during a period of extreme
geopolitical stress," Paul Horsnell of Barclays Capital told Reuters.”
The Guardian: Nigerian fighting pushes oil price
to record high: “"Once again the security situation in Nigeria is proving to be
a real concern," said Simon Wardell, oil analyst at World Markets Research
Centre in London.”
Daily Mail: Crude puts skids under Footsie:
"RECORD oil prices cast a dark shadow over friendless stockmarkets.": “Shell
edged up 1 1/2p to 408 3/4p, despite losing up to 40,000 barrels per day of oil
output in Nigeria.”
Financial Times: Technology:
Wanted: toolkit for global job ads: “Shell, the multinational oil giant, had a
multilateral problem.”
Financial
Times: Crude hits new highs on Nigerian fears: “Crude oil hit $50 a barrel in
after-hours trading in New York on Monday evening…”: “Royal Dutch/Shell Group
said it had shut up to 40,000 barrels per day of oil production for security
reasons. Shell last week evacuated 235 staff from two oilfields as government
troops launched raids on nearby communities to track down militants.”
Norway Post: Oil & Gas: Record price for
crude: “The price for light crude on Monday came close to US$ 50 a barrel. The
reason is unrest in the oil-producing nations Nigeria and Saudi Arabia,
according to analysts.”
The Scotsman: Days of
cheap oil over as prices reach record levels: “An industry source said that
Shell has lost up to 40,000 barrels of daily oil production as violence swept
across Nigeria’s Delta region.”
Daily
Telegraph: Nigerian violence pushes world oil prices to record: “Violent clashes
between soldiers and militants in Nigeria pushed the oil price to record highs
yesterday as Shell airlifted out its workers.”: "Supertanker charges have risen
by close to 80pc in the past two weeks, allowing owners to get four times what
they need to break even."
Wednesday 29 September, 2004
THE NEW
YORK TIMES/REUTERS: Nigerian Oil Delta Rebel Says Meeting Obasanjo: “A recent
consultant report for Shell estimated that about 1,000 people die every year
because of communal and political unrest in the delta, where the majority live
in abject poverty despite the oil wealth under their soil”: “…his ideas are
reminiscent of rebels such as… Ken Saro-Wiwa, who was hanged by the late
military dictator Sani Abacha in 1995.
THE NEW
YORK TIMES/REUTERS: Nigerian Oil Delta Rebel Says Meeting Obasanjo: “A recent
consultant report for Shell estimated that about 1,000 people die every year
because of communal and political unrest in the delta, where the majority live
in abject poverty despite the oil wealth under their soil”: “…his ideas are
reminiscent of rebels such as… Ken Saro-Wiwa, who was hanged by the late
military dictator Sani Abacha in 1995.
THE WALL STREET
JOURNAL/DOW JONES NEWSWIRES: Russian PM To Talk To Shell About Shtokmanov –
Interfax
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL/DOW
JONES NEWSWIRES: Shell Says Chmn, E&P Head Met With Russian PM Wed
The Independent:
Petrol prices set to rise as crude holds at $50 a barrel: “Crude oil prices have
surged following hurricane damage to Gulf of Mexico supplies, uncertainty over
the Russian oil giant Yukos, violence near Shell's Nigerian sites and tensions
in the Middle East. Some analysts say crude prices could reach $60 before coming
down.”
Daily
Telegraph: Oil gushes through $50 level for the first time: “Meanwhile, Shell
staunchly refused to shut down production in Nigeria, despite threats from
militants of an "all-time war" from Friday. Shell has evacuated 235 workers and
has temporarily lost about 30,000-40,000 barrels of oil a day from the region.”
Financial Times: Violence in
Nigeria forces Shell to cut output
Financial
Times: Fifty dollar oil: “…the world will have to get used to a future in which
new oil no longer comes from stable areas such as Alaska and the North Sea but
increasingly from risky and unstable parts of the planet.”
Financial Times: Good news boosts energy and mining sectors: “but Shell fell 0.3
per cent to 407½p as investors switched into BP”
AFX Europe (Focus): Unocal, Royal Dutch/Shell
cancel East China Sea project
Bloomberg: CNOOC to Develop Gas Field
Without Unocal, Shell (Update1)
AP Worldstream:
Nigerian militia threatens "full-scale" armed struggle in oil region: “Donald
Boham, a spokesman for Royal Dutch/Shell's subsidiary, Shell Petroleum
Development Company of Nigeria Ltd., said "we're not really worried about the
threats. But we have to watch the situation as it develops."
The Washington
Post: Oil Continues Upward March: “Royal Dutch/Shell Group of Cos… withdrew
nonessential personnel from the Niger Delta, said Simon Buerk, a London-based
spokesman for the company. Citing policy, Buerk would not say whether production
in the country was reduced as a result of the personnel withdrawal.”
The Guardian: Some Total for sale: BP and
Shell… may come under pressure this morning as the City digests a huge share
placing in French oil group Total.”
Thursday 30 September, 2004
THE NEW
YORK TIMES: Nigerian Oil Delta Peace Talks to Resume After Truce: “Nigeria's top
producer, Royal Dutch Shell Group, said it evacuated more than 200 workers from
two oilfields located near fighting, and closed one flow station pumping 28,000
barrels per day.”
Financial
Times: Shell, Unocal pull out of Chinese venture: “Royal Dutch/Shell, the
Anglo-Dutch oil group, and Unocal of the US have withdrawn from a gas
exploration and development scheme in the East China Sea, the second time in two
months western energy companies have walked away from a Chinese-led project.”
THE
WALL STREET JOURNAL: ConocoPhillips to Buy Stake in Lukoil: “Meanwhile, the rush
for a foot in the Russian door continued on other fronts yesterday as top
executives at Royal Dutch/Shell Group met with Russian Prime Minister Mikhail
Fradkov during his visit to The Hague.”
The Times:
Nigerian troops prepare for oil war after rebels threaten attacks: “On Tuesday,
Royal Dutch Shell, which produces half of Nigeria’s daily output, said that it
had had to shut down one of its flow stations. It said that the decision had
cost it 28,000 barrels a day of production.”
Times OnLine: Oil
prices to 'cause global recession': “The Niger Delta People's Volunteer Force,
accusing Shell and Agip, the oil giants, of "collaboration with the Nigerian
state in acts of genocide against our people", advised the withdrawal of foreign
citizens from the area.”
Times Online:
ANALYSIS: World economy held to ransom: What hope is there for global growth
when political and economic developments have left power over the oil markets in
the hands a few insurgents?
The
Independent: Nigeria's oil rebels fuel fears of global shortage: “…the oil world
is in crisis. And Nigeria is no exception.”: “A Shell official, who asked not to
be named, said essential supplies were being airlifted to staff still in the
area.”: "The battle for oil has commenced in Nigeria. Many other countries are
looking on nervously."
Kyodo News Service: Japan will
continue exploring for natural gas resources despite Wednesday's announcement by
oil majors that they would pull out of a Chinese-led natural gas project in the
East China Sea, the industry minister said Thursday. Shell and Unocal said their
decision to withdraw was a result of a one-year period of appraisal. They did
not say whether their decision was related to the row between the two Asian
neighbors.
The Times: Need to Know: “Royal Dutch/Shell said
it was considering developing a gas field in the Barents Sea…”
New Straits Times (Malaysia): The
question of overlapping claims on two new oil and gas blocks offshore east Sabah
does not arise, as the areas are solely within Malaysia's jurisdiction, Foreign
Ministry parliamentary secretary Datuk Zainal Abidin Osman said today.: “On Sept
22, Shell and its joint venture partners PCSB and ConocoPhillips made
significant discoveries at Malikai-1 in the Block G exploration well in Sabah.”
Yahoo/Dow Jones Newswires: NZ
Watchdog Says May Revoke Pohokura Gas Marketing Deal-2: “Commission Chair Paula
Rebstock said that Shell Exploration New Zealand and OMV New Zealand have
informed the commission in April this year that the parties have decided to
market gas from the field separately.”
The Moscow Times: Shell Mulls Joining
Shtokman Project: “Royal Dutch/Shell is considering developing a gas field in
the Barents Sea in a joint liquefied natural gas project with Gazprom, Shell
said Wednesday.”
Bloomberg: Shell Receives Permits to Start
$600 Mln Gas Plant in Mexico
THE WALL STREET
JOURNAL/DOW JONES NEWSWIRES: FTC Clears Magellan's $492.4M Purchase Of Shell
Assets: “In June, Shell Oil Products agreed to sell its pipeline and storage
assets in Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas and Colorado to Magellan for $492.4 million.”
Lloyds List:
Spiralling oil prices pumped up by marketplace 'fear factor': Nigerian unrest,
Iraqi insurgency, Russian export problems and the effects of adverse weather
conditions could lead to winter oil shortages, writes Martyn Wingrove
AFX Europe
(Focus): Royal Dutch/Shell quits selling 'green' electricity, moves customers to
Eneco
Kyodo
News Service: The Tokyo Local Labor Relations Commission on Wednesday ordered
Showa Shell Sekiyu K.K. and one of its affiliates to pay wages due to 64
employees and give promotions to 59 of them, ruling that they were discriminated
against because of their labor union
AFX Europe
(Focus): Royal Dutch/Shell dismisses report to sell Argentina assets to
Venezuelan PDVSA
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