Shell's Green Power Gambit; Next Major Pivot For Big Oil Aristocrat?

 | Apr 01, 2019 19:00

There comes a time when ageing aristocrats have to accept that everything must change so that everything can remain the same.

One of a handful of oil majors that dominated the global energy market over the last century, Royal Dutch Shell (NYSE:RDSa), (LON:RDSa) is betting more and more heavily on a very different business to ensure it can dominate the next one too. While it has had a sizeable power trading and supply business for years, servicing mainly its internal needs and those of industry, it’s now on the verge of selling electricity to the masses too.

Management believes it has to take that leap if the company is to stay relevant in the long term. “The energy system is going to electrify over time and that electricity needs to be renewable,” Shell Energy chief executive Colin Crooks told Sky News last week, as the company rebranded U.K-based First Utility, its initial big venture into household power supply.

As a declaration of intent, the rebranding included the launch of one of the lowest basic tariff plans on the U.K. market, 100% sourced from renewables. It also offered customers a 3% discount on purchases at its gas stations.

h2 Guessing Game/h2

As with other industries under disruption, one of the biggest challenges is guessing which part of the business will provide the most value in future: generation? Transmission? Household supply?

Guessing is made trickier by the ongoing oil production push and pull that's keeping wholesale energy prices volatile. Add to that the ability of governments to transfer value from one group of market users to another via regulatory price caps, grid fees, environmental taxes and subsidies. It’s a lottery: Germany’s RWE (DE:RWEG) has averaged a return on equity of -18% over the last five years, according to data compiled by Investing.com. Meanwhile, the U.K's Scottish and Southern Energy (LON:SSE) has managed an eminently respectable 12.7%.