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Shell Spends $2Bn Yearly On Renewable Energy Devt

Shell Petroleum, a leading global oil and gas company, has disclosed that its yearly investment on renewables and clean fuel technology is about $2 billion, from its total annual budget of between $25 billion to $30 billion.

Even then, the Chief Executive Officer of the oil and gas company, Ben van Beurden, on Thursday said it would be “foolhardy” for the company to set hard targets to reduce carbon emissions as that will create the risk of exposing it to legal challenges.

He said: “It is more sensible to say we will go faster than society, we will catch up with society on its way to meeting Paris,”

“It is a very clear ambition, we will articulate this ambitions in steps as we go along the way. We will be totally transparent”, van Beurden added.

the company had last year set out ambitions to halve its carbon emissions by 2050, far exceeding rivals, but the CEO resisted calls by activists and some investors to set binding targets.

Commenting on the issues at a company’s event, van Beurden said that “it would be somewhat foolhardy to put ourselves in a legal bind by saying these are the targets we will adopt.

“Before we put ourselves at the mercy of a legal challenge, I want to make sure we are doing the right thing first”, he added.

Van Beurden, a vocal proponent of the world’s need to meet the Paris goals, urged investors to trust him.

“You have to believe us that setting an ambition, sticking my neck out, my personal reputation, the reputation of the company, is a big enough incentive to get it right,” he told reporters.

Oil companies have faced a growing number of legal challenges over climate change in recent years.

On Monday, the U.S. state of Rhode Island sued several major oil companies, including Exxon Mobil Corp , Shell and BP, accusing them of contributing to climate change that is damaging infrastructure and coastal communities.

BP this year announced plans to keep carbon emissions from its operations flat until 2025. But BP CEO, Bob Dudley, echoed van Beurden’s concerns at the company’s annual general meeting in May and refused to disclose details of the plan.

“You want to get us to make statements here in front of you that you can document that will lead to a class action,” Dudley said in response to a question from a shareholder.

 

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