Categories: BusinessEnergyNews

Shell LNG trading provides quarterly boost despite output drop

LONDON, Jan 6 (Reuters) – Earnings from Shell’s liquefied natural gas (LNG) trading operations are likely to have been significantly higher in the fourth quarter of last year despite a sharp output drop owing to plant outages, it said on Friday.

Europe’s largest oil and gas company’s update ahead of its full-year results on Feb. 2 also said it expects to pay about $2 billion in additional 2022 taxes related to the European Union and British windfall taxes imposed on the energy sector.

Fourth-quarter LNG liquefaction volumes are expected to be the lowest since the company acquired BG Group in 2016 for $53 billion, dropping to between 6.6 million and 7 million tonnes as a result of prolonged outages at two major plants in Australia.

But Shell, the world’s top LNG trader, said its LNG trading results are set to be “significantly higher” than in the previous quarter.

Shell shares rose nearly 1% as the market opened.

Shell’s third-quarter results were dented by weaker refining performance and a slump in LNG trading.

The LNG trading division recorded a loss of nearly $1 billion in the third quarter after traders were caught out by a sharp rally in European gas prices when Russia halted supplies.

Yet Shell remained on track for record annual profit in 2022, having posted earnings of $30 billion in the first three quarters, just shy of the 2008 record profit of $31 billion.

General view of a Shell petrol station, in Milton Keynes, Britain, January 5, 2022. REUTERS/Andrew Boyers

Shell said it expects fourth-quarter oil product trading results to be “significantly lower” than the third quarter.

Reuters Graphics

London-based Shell, whose Chief Executive Wael Sawan succeeded Ben van Beurden on Jan. 1 after nine years at the helm, said in October that it intends to increase its dividend by 15% in the fourth quarter.

Several governments across Europe and Britain have imposed windfall taxes on energy companies this year to rein in excess profits as energy prices have soared since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Shell expects to pay $2 billion in taxes related to the windfall levies on top of $360 million it announced earlier in 2022.

Reporting by Ron Bousso Editing by David Goodman

Source.

World Economic Magazine

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