Behind the scenes at Greenpeace’s Lego and
Shell protest viral video
From an article published by the Guardian newspaper on 22 July 2014
It had more than 4.5m views in its first week…
The film was designed to increase the pressure on Lego to cut its ties with Shell. Arguably it is the way the film subverts and disrupts expectations that explains why more than 4.5 million people have watched it since it was released earlier this month.
Tagged: Alaska · Arctic Ocean · Beaufort Sea · Chukchi Sea · Greenpeace · Oil · Royal Dutch Shell Plc
Death of 193 Dutch Strains Russian Relations for Shell, Heineken
At one point the largest foreign investor in Russia, Shell declined to comment on whether its business would be affected after the downing of the plane. The company lost four employees in the incident, it said yesterday.
BloombergBusinessweek article by Celeste Perri, Maud van Gaal and Fred Pals published 22 July 2014
For centuries, the fortunes of the Netherlands, the wind-swept country carved out of North Sea wetlands, have relied on preserving the peace with its global trading partners. Last week’s downing of an airliner carrying 193 Dutch nationals is testing one of its most important relationships, involving companies from Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDSA) to Heineken NV. (HEIA)
The Netherlands was Russia’s third-biggest trading partner last year, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The Dutch, home to the busiest container port in Europe and the region’s biggest energy company, send dairy products, meat and machinery to Russia, which the U.S. says is complicit in the attack.
“We’ve passed a turning point,” said Jan Melissen, a senior research fellow at Clingendael, the Netherlands Institute of International Relations. “Even for a trading nation, this is the point when you have to consider whether economic interests are outweighed by principles and values.”
While Malaysian Air Flight 17 was likely caught in military crossfire by a missile rather than a chosen target, it represents the gravest act of violence against Dutch civilians since World War II.
Unlike the U.S., the world’s biggest economy, the Netherlands has always had to be pragmatic when choosing trading partners. Since the founding of the Dutch East India Company, which carried spices from Indonesia back to the canals of Amsterdam, the Dutch set themselves apart from their European neighbors by focusing on financial interests.
Financial Interest
For a country smaller than West Virginia, the Netherlands has major trading relations with Russia. From 2011 to 2013, Dutch imports from Russia jumped 20 percent.
Dutch companies including the Port of Rotterdam, Shell and Heineken have a significant eastern exposure. The Port counts on Russia for 15 percent of all its throughput, while Heineken is a major brewer in the country.
Shell, which Deutsche Bank AG estimates has about $6.7 billion of oil and gas producing assets in Russia, is exploring for shale gas and plans to expand its Sakhalin-2 project there.
At one point the largest foreign investor in Russia, Shell declined to comment on whether its business would be affected after the downing of the plane. The company lost four employees in the incident, it said yesterday.
“The demand is there and the Shell CEO has visited Russia more than any other nation since he took office to make the Sakhalin-2 expansion a reality,” said Bertrand Hodee, an analyst at Raymond James in Paris.
Deep Ties
Royal Philips (PHIA) NV has been selling in Russia since 1898, when Anton Philips got his first order for 50,000 light bulbs. The company, which lost two employees in the crash, called the incident “unacceptable,” while saying governments should lead the investigation.
Russia, where the company employs 1,000 people, accounted for 3 percent of Philips’ business last year. Paintmaker Akzo Nobel NV (AKZA) produces coil coatings in the Russian city of Lipetsk. Russians have also been increasingly consuming dairy products sold by Dutch food company Royal FrieslandCampina NV.
Ties between Russia and the Netherlands that stretch back to Tsar Peter the Great were the subject of a yearlong celebration in 2013. Even months after unrest between Russia and Ukraine had erupted, Dutch Foreign Minister Frans Timmermans stressed that relations between the countries were of great importance, suggesting that energy trade between Europe and Russia could help solve the crisis.
First Casualty
Timmermans changed his message today.
For the Netherlands, “all options are on the table as it is clear that things have changed since Thursday,” the minister said at a meeting in Brussels. “This is no longer about economy and trade only, but about security.”
The first casualty of the crisis is likely going to be new investment by Dutch companies in Russia, according to Marcel Stoeten, the secretary of the Netherlands-Russia center in Groningen, which was created to promote and support contacts between companies and governments of Russia and the Netherlands.
“I expect companies that were planning to do business in Russia will be hesitant at this point to pursue that, even without sanctions,” Stoeten said.
Another area that may come increasingly under fire is the Dutch practice of marketing itself as a tax haven to Russia.
Russia’s biggest oil, gas, mining and retail companies — including some run by billionaires close to President Vladimir Putin — have moved tens of billions of dollars in corporate assets to the Netherlands and other European countries. The firms include OAO Rosneft (ROSN), OAO Gazprom (OGZD), OAO Lukoil (LKOH) and Gunvor Group Ltd., a Geneva-based company that was co-founded by a Putin associate now under U.S. sanctions.
“We have always been against those tax haven constructions,” said Bram van Ojik, the leader of the GreenLeft opposition party. “This is a litmus test on how serious we are about sanctions as they can hurt us as well. We need to be prepared to shoot ourselves in the foot.”
To contact the reporters on this story: Celeste Perri in Amsterdam at cperri@bloomberg.net; Maud van Gaal in Amsterdam atmvangaal@bloomberg.net; Fred Pals in Amsterdam atfpals@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jacqueline Simmons at jackiem@bloomberg.net Benedikt Kammel, David Rocks
Shell’s Ho-Ho pipeline plagued by mechanical issues
Extract from a Reuters article by Catherine Ngai published Tuesday 22 July 2014 under the headline: “Ho-Ho pipeline slow to start but pickup anticipated- traders”
(Reuters) – Royal Dutch Shell’s RDSs.L Houston-to-Houma pipeline meant to relieve bottlenecks in the country’s oil hub has been plagued by mechanical issues that have led the line to run below capacity though traders said on Tuesday volumes are expected to increase. The most recent data from the Louisiana Department of Natural Resources shows that the pipeline had a throughput of barely one-third of its capacity in each of the first four months of the year.
Nigerian Federal Government, Shell and the Ogoni: Treachery all round?
Extract from an article by Ifeanyi Izeze published 21 July 2014 by ngex.com
Without doubt, treachery has continued to be the defining attribute in the tripartite relationship between Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria (SPDC) and the Federal Government on one side and the Ogoni people of Rivers state with the Rivers state government on the other. Each side has always tried to outwit the other by firing loads of lies from all sides to win sympathy from the outside world.
Qatar’s LNG Dominance Threatened by Shell’s Reported Withdrawal
Extract from an article byAndy Tully published by oil price.com on 21 July 2014
In 2013, however, one Shell well in Block D of the field came up dry, although Qatar had promoted it as a rich source of energy. As a result, Shell decided against even beginning a second exploratory well, anonymous sources told The Wall Street Journal. A person identified by The Journal only as a Shell spokesman said the first well had reached the depth planned to explore for gas, but “it did not encounter commercial volumes of hydrocarbons.” Now, he said, Shell is negotiating with QP and PetroChina on how to withdraw from the venture without drilling the second well.
Protecting Oil Installations in Nigeria
Extracts from an article published 22 July 2014 by ThisDayLive under the headline: Protecting Oil Installations through Community Engagement
At a recent practical dialogue on the security and human rights practices of stakeholders involved in Nigeria’s oil and gas industry, especially within the Niger Delta operational basin, the Global Rights Nigeria disclosed that oil companies in the country might have spent over $53 billion securing their operational facilities between 2007 and 2011.
Global Rights, which is currently headquartered in Washington noted that it was possibile the federal government expended such huge amount of money in securing oil and gas operations within the Niger Delta, owing to the region’s poor history of human rights practices.
It was also revealed that Shell maintains a 1,200-strong internal police force, called ‘supernumerary’ or SPY police, in addition to a network of plain clothes informants; irrespective of Shell’s claims that it does not admit to allegations that the SPY police are usually armed, especially on escort duties and despite a law banning them from bearing firearms.
Legal challenge launched against Shell Centre decision
Extracts from an article by Elizabeth Hopkirk and Ike Ijeh published by bdonline.co.uk on 22 July 2014
An opponent of Squire & Partners’ Shell Centre development has launched a legal challenge in the High Court. Activist and writer George Turner claims communities secretary Eric Pickles’ decision to approve the £1.3 billion scheme last month was flawed and will unleash a planning free-for-all on the South Bank. He served the challenge on Pickles, as well as the mayor of London, Lambeth council, Shell and developer Braeburn Estates, a joint venture between Qatari Diar and Canary Wharf Group. The defendants now have two weeks to respond. They are expected to contest the validity of Turner’s challenge.
The TRUTH will set you FREE.
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