SHELL
TODAY
Royal
Dutch Shell today is among the richest and best-positioned corporations
on earth. They do business in more than 140 countries, deal with 25
million customers daily, and have gross revenues in excess of $175
billion a year.
In
2001, an off year, they posted profits of nearly $11 billion. More than
80 percent of Shell’s revenue comes from oil and gas in one form or
another, with more than 60 percent of that made in Europe and the US.
But major markets for Shell are building in other regions too. With an
active presence on most continents, Shell is ready to move in any
direction.
Its on-the-ground hardware is most impressive: ownership or involvement
in more that 50 oil refineries and/or chemical plants, hundreds of
terminals and storage yards, 46,000 retail service stations, and
thousands of miles of production and product pipelines on every
continent.
Shell
USA
In
the US, for example, Shell will soon be the single largest gasoline
chain in the country, having gained more than 13,000 new locations
as a result of Texaco stations acquired in the ChevronTexaco divestiture.
Shell will spend $500 million to "rebrand" the Texaco
stations. When the dust clears, Shell will hold 14.4 percent of
the US gasoline market, ahead of ExxonMobil and BPAmoco.
Global
Shell
Globally,
Shell’s oil and gas exploration arm, operating in more than
40 countries and with its own dedicated work force of 15,000,
is second to none. In 2001, Shell oil and/or gas discoveries were
made in Australia, Oman, Egypt, Brazil, the Netherlands, Brunei,
and Malay-sia. In offshore Philippines, the Malampaya deepwater
gas field is the largest single foreign investment ever made in
that country.
The
company’s Gas & Power Division is laying the groundwork
to make natural gas movement, processing and utilization a reality
in many countries. The Shell partnership with Bechtel, Intergen,
is helping to build power plants that will be fired with natural
gas. New LNG terminals are being built or acquired in a number
of countries, most recently, India, Spain, and the US.
The
Oil Products Division runs the "downstream" refining and gasoline
retailing empires with interests in 50 refineries and 56,000 gas
stations globally. Chemical operations— including such major joint
ventures as Basell, Infineum, CRI International, and Saudi Arabia
Petrochemical Co. — produce a wide variety of "building block"
chemicals such as polyethylene and polypropylene, detergent
intermediates, solvents, catalysts, and additives.
Shell
is also the world’s fourth-ranked solar photovoltaic producer, the
result of an April 2001 joint venture between Shell Solar and Siemens
Solar, which now produces solar voltaic cells, modules, and systems in
Germany and the Netherlands. Shell is also developing and selling wind
energy and, after the acquisition of two wind farms in the US in 2001,
Shell now has 138 megawatts of electric generating capacity, enough to
supply 60,000 homes. Shell’s "renewables" business also grows
"sustainably-managed" forests. Among its many other businesses, for
example, is Shell Hydrogen, which invests in fuel cell technologies,
and Shell Trading, which is a major global player in energy and
chemicals trading, doing on average about 11 million barrels of
crude-oil-equivalent trading per day in 2001.
For a copy of the book send e-mail to info@shellfacts.com