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SHEL Shell Plc

2,624.50
11.50 (0.44%)
Last Updated: 09:22:33
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Shell Plc LSE:SHEL London Ordinary Share GB00BP6MXD84 ORD EUR0.07
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  11.50 0.44% 2,624.50 2,624.00 2,624.50 2,630.50 2,618.00 2,624.00 839,932 09:22:33
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Crude Petroleum & Natural Gs 316.62B 19.36B 2.9804 8.79 170.25B
Shell Plc is listed in the Crude Petroleum & Natural Gs sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker SHEL. The last closing price for Shell was 2,613p. Over the last year, Shell shares have traded in a share price range of 2,214.00p to 2,793.00p.

Shell currently has 6,495,789,107 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Shell is £170.25 billion. Shell has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 8.79.

Shell Share Discussion Threads

Showing 6276 to 6296 of 7850 messages
Chat Pages: Latest  254  253  252  251  250  249  248  247  246  245  244  243  Older
DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
27/11/2022
16:44
Why it's time to put Net Zero to a referendumMADELINE GRANT9 February 2020 • 1:00pm??"No one voted to be poorer", has been the Europhiles' long-playing refrain of recent years. This slogan, though patronising, exposes an interesting paradox.While we have hotly debated the costs and benefits of everything from Brexit to a Corbyn government to HS2, another crucial policy area – the environment – has been virtually ignored amid facile discussions and a total absence of democratic engagement.In the dying days of the May premiership, to little fanfare, Parliament passed a binding pledge of net zero carbon emissions by 2050. The economic cost of this could make the most apocalyptic 'No Deal' scenarios seem small change – yet the level of detail is astonishingly slight.In an interview last week, Environment Secretary Michael Gove dodged questions about the cost of banning petrol, diesel and hybrid cars. Ministers use carefully chosen words to describe the public cost of Net Zero, vaguely referring to "1-2 per cent of GDP by 2050". This is because the estimates they refer to only apply to 2050, as an FOI reveals. They ignore the years 2020-2049, conveniently omitting the expense of overhauling national infrastructure in the interim.I cannot estimate the price of dismantling every gas boiler, retrofitting some 26 million homes, building a vast network of electric car charging points, and so on. Suffice to say it will be a mind-boggling sum – and that is before negotiating the tricky politics.... Daily Telegraph 2020
xxxxxy
26/11/2022
21:45
Water down windfall tax or energy industry will collapse, Jeremy Hunt warnedChancellor told he risks 'destroying' North Sea production altogether after increasing the levy from 25 to 35pcByCamilla Turner, CHIEF POLITICAL CORRESPONDENT26 November 2022 • 7:00pm... Daily Telegraph
xxxxxy
26/11/2022
10:43
That's the windfall tax for you. Sometimes a little from a little is better than nothing from a lot.spud
spud
26/11/2022
10:19
(Bloomberg) -- Shell Plc is selling its stakes in a group of North Sea oil fields, according to marketing materials seen by Bloomberg News.

The assets include minority stakes in two fields operated by BP Plc and an interest in a discovery field also operated by BP in the waters east of Scotland.

A spokesperson for Shell declined to comment.

All the sites are connected to a central processing facility in what’s known as the Eastern Trough Area Project. Shell has a 25% stake in the producing Madoes field and a 21% stake in the Mirren field in the same area. Net production is estimated to be about 1,000 barrels a day.

The Kate field, in which Shell has a 25% stake, is estimated to contain 180 million barrels of oil.

Potential bidders will be able to access a data room on the projects in January, with offers due by the middle of April, according to the materials.

sarkasm
25/11/2022
11:43
and very dirty!!
lippy4
25/11/2022
11:30
adg - And that's bunker fuel which is dirt cheap!

spud

spud
25/11/2022
11:12
Rachel Kenward13 HRS AGODoesn't matter how many wind turbines you build, no wind = no power so what's the gain? Let's face it, we need nuclear and domestically produced gas, fracking if necessary to get it.... Daily Telegraph
xxxxxy
25/11/2022
10:52
ESG=The Big Con.
xxxxxy
23/11/2022
10:21
another billion on the planet in 15 years making 9 billion,so they say which i think will happen sooner..
lippy4
23/11/2022
10:03
Shell have spudded Pensacola today in the North Sea with Deltic energy, why no RNS from Shell?
therealdeal25
22/11/2022
17:19
Altec Lansing5 MIN AGOMessage ActionsMaybe AEP should put his big boy pants on and tell a few very uncomfortable home truths the first one being that Goldman Sachs has just issued a report showing that the world collectively spent over $3 trillion in the last 7 years and managed to reduce global emissions by - wait for it - around 1%. Perhaps he'd like to tell us where the other $299 trillion is going to come from to finish the job?The second one being that the world has underinvested in fossil fuels for a decade now. That means that at any time, the world is going to start to run out of the additional energy it requires to support current population growth rates. You cannot run a world of 8 billion people (and counting) on renewable energy. The physics don't permit it let alone the amount of resources needed to achieve it both in terms of raw materials, people and land.The third one being that there is a direct 100% correlation between global GDP growth and energy consumption. Without additional energy capacity the global economy will stagnate and when you have a financial system that cannot be sustained without permanent growth you have a serious problem (as we are about to experience).Finally, as energy resources become scarcer, they will become weaponised (already happening) and the world will split into two strategic alliances with the US leading one and China/Russia leading the other and the outcomes will not be peaceful. History tells us that over and over again.So some real 'economic intelligence' would be nice to hear from you for once rather than the somewhat fantastical and hubristic notion that human beings can somehow control the temperature of a planet.... Daily Telegraph
xxxxxy
22/11/2022
12:47
Low turnover week = UpSimples
the white house
22/11/2022
10:31
Telegraph, last night: Shell reconsiders £25bn investment in UK energy over windfall tax raid - Levies will force oil giant to ‘rerun the economics’ on future projects, says UK chairman
jrphoenixw2
22/11/2022
09:46
NY times leaked “a story” yesterday that OPEC+ were gonna hike production at 4th December meeting.

I’m sure a few insiders made a LOT of money out of the $5 dip ! Nothing surprises me now - and will somebody get prosecuted…. I doubt it!

I topped up £20k BP in SIPP @ 4.57, was a toss up between BP and Shell but think BP slightly stronger.(and it brings holdings approx equal monetary wise)

adg
21/11/2022
20:14
Shell to review £25bn investment in UK projects after windfall tax extended

The oil giant's UK chairman tells Sky News the company knows it has to play its part but it wants to know when the levy will be withdrawn.

Paul Kelso

Business correspondent @pkelso

Monday 21 November 2022 19:53, UK



Shell will review £25bn of investments in British projects after the chancellor extended the windfall tax on energy companies, its UK chairman has told Sky News.

David Bunch said the oil giant would re-examine each of its projects on a "case-by-case basis" after Jeremy Hunt increased the levy on "excess" oil and gas profits from 25% to 35% in last week's autumn statement.

The measure takes the total tax paid on oil and gas profits to 75%, though fossil fuel companies are able to claim relief against investments.

Shell announced a £25bn programme of investment five months ago but Mr Bunch said the government's move, intended to help fund energy support and balance the national balance sheet, meant it would be re-examined.

"We outlined an investment package five months ago of £25bn, and the one thing I said was we really need a stable fiscal environment to make sure we can get that investment out of the door," he said. "Since then we have had three budgets, a couple of prime ministers, so it's welcome to see some stability.

"But we are going to have to look at each of those projects on a case-by-case basis and re-evaluate them, based on the current fiscal outlook, and that will determine whether or not we invest to the amount we previously discussed."

Mr Bunch called on the government to set out how the windfall tax might be withdrawn if and when prices return closer to historical norms.

"As the UK's biggest company we need to do our part. We understand the need that is out there, and I think we understand the nature of the windfall tax.

"However, the current design of the windfall tax does not have an off switch. It doesn't have a price point at which that windfall tax turns off. That is something we would like to talk to the government about.


"We are still incredibly committed to the UK, it's a great market, we're the biggest company, we put out a great investment programme, I'd really like together with what we heard today from Rishi to help create that environment so we can help build a sustainable energy future, but doing that is going to need a few different levers."


Oil and gas companies have benefitted from elevated prices driven by demand and latterly the war in Ukraine, and were hit by the first iteration of the windfall tax at 25% in March by then-chancellor Rishi Sunak.

The company sparked calls for a review last month when it revealed its UK arm had paid zero windfall tax despite recording global profits of £26bn because of relief covering drilling projects in the North Sea.

Mr Bunch also revealed that Shell will not be accepting any energy support from the government for any of its businesses despite the current scheme, which ends in April, being available to companies of any size.

"We won't accept any business energy support from the government, I don't think anyone would expect us to but that's clearly the right thing to do, and I think that support has to be very much targeted to those who really need it, both business and consumers."

waldron
21/11/2022
19:20
We really do have a bad government.
xxxxxy
21/11/2022
16:13
Oil prices have slumped to their lowest level since before the war in Ukraine after Saudi Arabia and other Opec countries were reported to be discussing an output increase alongside China tightening its Covid-restrictions, hurting the outlook for demand.Global benchmark Brent fell below $83 a barrel today for the first time since January, a drop of 5.3pc. Shares in Scottish oil and gas producer Harbour Energy were the biggest faller in the FTSE 100 this afternoon, down 6.7pc, while BP was not far behind after a drop of 4pc. Shell was off 3.1pc.... Yahoo Finance
xxxxxy
21/11/2022
15:05
i wonder what was said in the early 1600's when the mini ice age started,

oh sire i do believe my doublet has got frozen to my pantaloons..

quick lets tax all these scurvy serfs some more to buy our wood,better still lets tax wood to raise even more money from them and if caught stealing trees for their fires they will be hung from the nearest one..

lippy4
21/11/2022
09:53
Spud
Post 3016.
Am of the same inclination.
Sceptical it is anthropogenic. Experts and the most vocal proponents of such certainly havent covered themselves in any glory given their rank hypocrisy. To me it looks like a money/power grab by these people, using climate change as an excuse.

geckotheglorious
20/11/2022
22:55
I believe the climate is warming up. Is it man made or natural, now there's the question. spud
spud
20/11/2022
20:19
JUST STOP SHOUTING AT ME!They get a pretty good run, the environmental road-blockers whenever they appear on television. They get to ululate, weep and screech, "Don't you love your children?" and "You want everything to die!" Sky's Mark Austin heard himself begging young Indigo, "Stop shouting at me!"When arguing with young hysterics, maybe some calming devices might be helpful? It's unlikely, but worth a try.Look at this graphic which shows that how 97% of computer models are predicting far more warming than is actually happening.Do you know it was so warm in the 1920s they thought the Arctic ice would melt so much that a North West passage would open up to the Pacific?You know there used to be vineyards in York in Roman times?Now breathe, and breathe. No, dear, you are not going to die of climate change... Order order
xxxxxy
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