The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Shell warns of £17.8bn Covid-19 hit

- ALLISTER THOMAS

Shell has warned it will take impairment­s of up to £17.8 billon ahead of its second quarter results due to the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic.

In an update note, the energy giant said the virus had forced a review of a “significan­t portion of Shell’s Upstream, Integrated Gas and Refining” assets.

The firm warned of pre-tax impairment­s between $20bn – $27bn (£22bn), broken down between the segments.

Post-tax, it works out at between $15bn – $22bn (£12.2bn – £17.8bn), Shell said.

Upstream is expected to account for up to $6bn, largely related to Brazil and North American Shale, while Integrated Gas, including the giant Prelude FLNG project, will take write-downs of $8bn-$9bn.

Oil products will take $3bn – $7bn across Shell’s refining portfolio.

It follows similar impairment­s from rival BP, and comes ahead of Shell’s second quarter results due on July 30.

The firm said: “In the second quarter 2020, Shell has revised its mid and long-term price and refining margin outlook reflecting the expected effects of the Covid-19 pandemic and related macroecono­mic as well as energy market demand and supply fundamenta­ls.

“This has resulted in the review of a significan­t portion of Shell’s Upstream, Integrated Gas and Refining tangible and intangible assets.”

Angus Rodger, a director with Wood Mackenzie’s upstream research team, said: “The major oil companies are going through a process of reassessin­g long-term oil price assumption­s and investment hurdle rates as a result of the oil price crash and the coronaviru­s.

“BP and Shell are just two of the companies that have announced recent changes. Cutting long-term price assumption­s will generally result in a lower valuation, for certain assets to below the accounting value held on the balance sheet. That’s what will trigger an impairment charge.

‘’This process has further to run, and we expect further large impairment­s to occur across the sector.”

Unlike rival BP, Shell stayed in the black in the first quarter.

 ??  ?? Shell chief executive Ben van Beurden.
Shell chief executive Ben van Beurden.

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