HomeNewsBusinessShell CEO says governments need to tax energy firms to help poor

Shell CEO says governments need to tax energy firms to help poor

Europe Union ministers reached an agreement last week on an initial energy package, setting a goal to reduce power consumption and agreeing to tap windfall profits of companies and redirect them to customers and businesses.

October 04, 2022 / 16:11 IST
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Oil pipelines near the Wesseling green hydrogen refinery, operated by Royal Dutch Shell Plc, in Wesseling, Germany, on Friday, July 2, 2021. Europe is pinning its green hopes on hydrogen in an unprecedented economic overhaul that aims for the region to reach climate neutrality by 2050. Photograher: Alex Kraus/Bloomberg Photographer: Alex Kraus/Bloomberg
Oil pipelines near the Wesseling green hydrogen refinery, operated by Royal Dutch Shell Plc, in Wesseling, Germany, on Friday, July 2, 2021. Europe is pinning its green hopes on hydrogen in an unprecedented economic overhaul that aims for the region to reach climate neutrality by 2050. Photograher: Alex Kraus/Bloomberg Photographer: Alex Kraus/Bloomberg

Governments need to tax energy producers to help the poorest people deal with the soaring cost of fuel, said the boss of Shell Plc.

“One way or another there needs to be government intervention,” Shell Chief Executive Officer Ben van Beurden said at the Energy Intelligence Forum, a major conference for oil and gas producers in London on Tuesday. “Protecting the poorest, that probably may then mean that governments need to tax people in this room to pay for it.”

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Europe Union ministers reached an agreement last week on an initial energy package, setting a goal to reduce power consumption and agreeing to tap windfall profits of companies and redirect them to customers and businesses. The bloc has also discussed capping the price of natural gas and power in a bid to protect consumers.

Van Beurden criticized the latter approach, saying that companies like Shell would struggle to bring extra supplies of natural gas to Europe if a price incentive wasn’t there.