Oman Daily Observer

Shell looks beyond fuels to secure future of refining

- RON BOUSSO AND DMITRY ZHDANNIKOV

While the world braces for the electricve­hicle revolution, Royal Dutch Shell is betting on growing appetite for asphalt and plastics to sustain its century-old oil refining business for the coming decades. Converting crude oil into products ranging from gasoline to industrial chemicals has long faced obstacles due to volatile profits, high costs, safety issues and pollution and more recently, forecasts of peaking demand for oil.

But refining, together with trading, marketing and chemicals — known together as downstream — has proved its importance during the oil industry’s downturn since 2014, providing the bulk of Shell’s profits as the price of crude collapsed.

Shell has in recent years transforme­d its downstream business by selling some plants and upgrading others to have them better resist oil price fluctuatio­ns and shifts in demand, delivering double-digit returns on capital employed.

“Refining will continue to be part of our portfolio for decades to come,” said Shell’s head of manufactur­ing Lori Ryerkerk, who is in charge of refining.

Shell is perhaps the most aggressive in its sector in forecastin­g that the demand for gasoline could reach an apex by the 2030s as drivers shift to electric vehicles and traditiona­l engines become more efficient.

But still, Shell says, the continued expansion of the world’s economy, particular­ly in Asia, means consumptio­n of other refined oil products and petrochemi­cals is likely to grow.

For instance, there are no economical­ly viable substitute­s for asphalt, needed to build roads, or for the polymers and chemicals used to produce plastics for cars, toys and clothes, Ryerkerk said.

“While the peak products will come, decades.

There are still many products that we make for which there is no other alternativ­e at the moment — heavy transport, industrial applicatio­ns that require high heat.”

The Anglo-Dutch company plans to double the size of its chemicals business by the middle of the next decade with several new plants including in Louisiana and Pennsylvan­ia that benefit from access to cheap shale gas, said Shell’s head of chemicals, Graham van’t Hoff.

It also wants 20 per cent of sales from its fuel stations worldwide to come from demand for our it won’t come in recharging electric carbon fuels by 2025.

The oil sector’s outlook for growth in demand for oil and plastics could prove wrong if government­s around the world introduce regulation­s to reduce fossil fuel consumptio­n in their fight against pollution and global warming.

A study said a quarter of the world’s oil refineries risk closure by 2035 if those targets are met.

Just as some countries such as China and India contemplat­e banning gasoline and diesel vehicles, rules to limit consumptio­n of plastics such as bottles and bags could dampen demand, analysts said.

“Regulation is one of the biggest risks to the business,” said Jason Kenney, head of European oil and gas equity research at Banco Santander.

Overcapaci­ty is another danger as other companies including Exxon Mobil and France’s Total also expand into petrochemi­cals.

“Shell currently offers double-digit returns on capital employed from downstream and chemicals.

But then you could have a flood of capacity and it will be a difficult sector to remain competitiv­e for decades,” Kenney said.

Even when demand starts to fall, Shell says its refining arm will have an edge over many competitor­s thanks to the company’s access to its own, cheaper crude and complex trading operations that curb its vulnerabil­ity to fluctuatin­g oil prices.

It has 43,000 petrol stations in 70 countries, making Shell the world’s largest fuel retailer. vehicles and low-

 ?? — Reuters ?? Shell fuel tanker is pictured inside the Grangemout­h Oil Refinery in Grangemout­h, central Scotland.
— Reuters Shell fuel tanker is pictured inside the Grangemout­h Oil Refinery in Grangemout­h, central Scotland.

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