Global Economy

Shell and Equinor to create Britain's largest independent oil and gas company in joint venture


The Equinor ASA offshore oil drilling platform on Johan Sverdrup oil field in the North Sea off the coast of Norway, on Monday, Feb. 13, 2023.

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Oil major Shell and Norway’s Equinor on Thursday announced plans to combine their British offshore oil and gas assets to create a jointly owned energy company.

The joint venture will be established in Aberdeen, Scotland in an effort to sustain fossil fuel production and the security of energy supply in the U.K.

The companies plan to complete the deal by the end of next year, subject to approvals. At that time, the incorporated company is set to become the U.K. North Sea’s largest independent producer, Shell said.

It is expected the company will produce more than 140,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day in 2025.

“Domestically produced oil and gas is expected to have a significant role to play in the future of the UK’s energy system,” Zoë Yujnovich, integrated gas and upstream director at Shell, said in a statement.

“The new venture will help play a critical role in a balanced energy transition providing the heat for millions of UK homes, the power for industry and the secure supply of fuels people rely on,” Yujnovich added.

Shares of Shell dipped 1% at around 1:45 p.m. London time, while Equinor’s stock price fell 0.7%.

By combining Shell and Equinor portfolios, we will be much stronger, says Equinor's Salthe

The 50-50 joint venture is set to include Equinor’s equity interests in Mariner, Rosebank and Buzzard and Shell’s holdings in Shearwater, Penguins, Gannet, Nelson, Pierce, Jackdaw, Victory, Clair and Schiehallion.

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Norway’s Equinor currently employs around 300 people in the U.K., while Shell has a staff of approximately 1,000 people in oil and gas positions nationwide.

“The reason we are doing this, to create this company 50-50 with Shell and Equinor, is because we really believe that we are combining our portfolios and they will be much stronger,” Camilla Salthe, senior vice president of UK head of upstream at Equinor, told CNBC’s “Street Signs Europe” on Thursday.

“And also by developing new ways of working we can actually really develop work processes that will really improve margins so we can actually have long-term value creation from these assets. So, that is the key business rationale for doing this,” Salthe said.

Joint venture ‘appears to make strategic sense’

Analysts led by Biraj Borkhataria at RBC Capital Markets said they expect “tax synergies” to be a significant factor in the combination of Shell and Equinor’s U.K. offshore oil and gas assets.

“Plenty has been said in recent months about the UK government’s fiscal policy surrounding oil and gas development in the North Sea, with a number of majors noting that the recent increase in the windfall tax will curtail investment going forward,” analysts at RBC Capital Markets said in a research note published Thursday.

“In that vein, with the UK not seen as a major growth market, this combination appears to make strategic sense in that it allows the two companies to pool resources and continue to grow while allocating less focus/capital to the region and follows recent moves made by the likes of Eni in the country,” they added.

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