Yorkshire Post

Shell enjoys fourteen-fold rise in profits due to soaring oil prices

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IT HAS been a bumper three months for energy giant Shell, which managed to increase its profits nearly fourteen-fold amid soaring oil and gas prices.

As prices surged, the company’s upstream unit was able to collect 8.88 dollars for every thousand cubic feet of gas it sold to customers over the last quarter of 2021.

Just six months earlier gas had been selling for 4.31 dollars, less than half of its most recent level.

Gas prices have been pushed up in the last year for many reasons, including Russia restrictin­g supply to Europe and China buying up more internatio­nal gas shipments.

Meanwhile, winds in Europe were unusually still last summer, meaning more gas was needed to replace the electricit­y that would otherwise have been produced by wind turbines.

The price rises have led to energy suppliers going out of business, contribute­d to soaring inflation, and from April 1 households will be hit with a hike in energy bills of hundreds of pounds.

But for Shell the rises in gas prices, and an 18 per cent spike in the price at which its upstream business sold oil, helped propel it to a 16.3 billion US dollar (£12bn) pre-tax profit in the fourth quarter of last year, compared with just 1.2 billion dollars (£885.5m) in the third quarter.

Chief executive Ben van Beurden said: “We delivered a very strong financial performanc­e in 2021, and our financial strength and discipline underpin the transforma­tion of our company.”

That transforma­tion has included a move of Shell’s headquarte­rs to the UK, a simplifica­tion of the company’s previously confusing share structure, and the dropping of the ‘Royal Dutch’ part of its name.

Officially the company formerly known as Royal Dutch Shell is now just Shell plc.

These bumper profits have given Mr van Beurden the chance to treat his shareholde­rs.

Combined with 5.5 billion dollars (£4.1bn) from the sale of a massive US oil field, he plans to return 8.5 billion dollars (£6.3bn) to investors by buying back their shares.

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