Thursday, 14 March 2019

RenewEconomy/Giles Parkinson: Shell’s big power plans point to rapid shift to electric, and scale of disruption

RenewEconomy
Fair Dinkum Power News & Analysis
Shell’s big power plans point to rapid shift to electric, and scale of disruption
Giles Parkinson 14 March 2019 8 Comments
share

When the world’s second biggest “Big Oil” company, Royal Dutch Shell, announced the purchase of German battery maker Sonnen last month, the talk from inside the company was that Shell is preparing for a significant and rapid shift to electric – perhaps within a decade.

Such forecasts, including by those like Stanford University futurist Tony Seba, are generally downplayed, by incumbents whose business models will be destroyed by the scale and speed of such a transition, by the nay-sayers still clinging to last century technologies, and by the regulators and policy makers who know they have already been left behind.

But Shell has all but confirmed that this scenario is exactly what they are planning for. By the early 2030s, it says, it expects to be the biggest power company in the world, as just about everything – including transport and heating – turns electric.
Shell’s acquisition of Sonnen is part of a $US2 billion a year spending  budget on new technologies that it will use to “test its theory”.
Once that happens, the investment rate will be doubled and then ramped up even further as it shifts its focus from dominance of the transport fuels industry to dominance of the electric power industry – and leaps from one trillion dollar industry to another.
It is a phenomenal shift, and a repeated warning that the current transition will accelerate and be mighty disruptive, rather than controlled and linear.
Shell has also bought into home energy management and electric vehicle charging companies, along with a range of wind, including offshore wind technologies, solar, hydrogen and other storage investments.
“Once we prove our hypothesis, we will scale up,” Maarten Wetselaar, the director of Shell’s “new energies” unit, told Bloomberg in a video interview this week.
And by scale, he means scale. By the early 2030s, Wetselaar says, Shell expects to be the biggest electric power company in the world, generating returns of between 8 per cent and 12 per cent, and hopefully at the highest end.
“Electrification is the biggest trend in energy … it is by far the easiest way to decarbonise energy usage,” he says. And customers are on board, particularly in Australia, the US and Europe, where he says consumers want batteries, solar panels and the ability to charge cars.
“There are companies and individuals who want to go green, who don’t need a law to force them to.”

And they will be careful who they seek such services from.
“We don’t think that customers will want to buy that clean energy from people who don’t generate it. They will want to see the real source of it, rather than someone who buys it on the open market.”
Shell says the company has no interest in transmission, or in coal or nuclear, and will focus on wind, solar, hydrogen, battery and other forms of storage, and gas, which it obviously has lots of.
Shell says it is not just a matter of hardware – solar panels and wind turbines – but also software. And given the company’s experience in demand response (it is the biggest provider in Texas), and its other purchases, it expects to be able to make better returns than the industry has so far.
Giles Parkinson

Giles Parkinson is founder and editor of Renew Economy, and is also the founder of One Step Off The Grid and founder/editor of The Driven. Giles has been a journalist for 35 years and is a former business and deputy editor of the Australian Financial Review.
Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Previous post

How renewables can help electrify Indonesia's sprawling island nation
Next post

New Mexico joins list of American states targeting 100% zero carbon

    New rooftop solar, battery connection standards: What do they mean? Who needs to know?
    by Sophie Vorrath on 14 March 2019 at 12:55 PM

    Personal air conditioning: A low energy option for keeping your cool
    by Dave Southgate on 14 March 2019 at 11:55 AM

    Renewable microgrids: For preventing climate change, and powering through it
    by Ken Silverstein on 14 March 2019 at 11:42 AM

    Musk promises Tesla store in W.A. to the delight of enthusiasts
    by Bridie Schmidt on 14 March 2019 at 1:42 PM

    Tesla Model 3 outsold all other EVs in 2018, while China charged ahead
    by Bridie Schmidt on 14 March 2019 at 1:29 PM

    James Bond goes electric with Aston Martin Rapide E
    by Bridie Schmidt on 14 March 2019 at 11:38 AM



Subscribe to the free daily newsletter

Live Australia Electricity Generation Data

Upcoming Events

Sponsored Links

    About RenewEconomy
    Contact Us
    Merchandise
    Jobs Board

    Donate
    Glossary
    Advertise
    Press Releases
    Governments & Companies

Subscribe to the free daily newsletter

@ Copyright RenewEconomy 2018. All rights reserved.

No comments: