What a BP and Shell merger means for the UK oil industry

What a BP and Shell merger means for the UK oil industry

Investment bankers are keen to engineer a merger between BP and Shell to create a “national champion [to] compete with international rivals such as France’s TotalEnergies and US giants Exxon Mobil and Chevron”, says Mark Shapland in The Mail. The combined entity would be a “behemoth” with 180,000 employees; it would have enough scale to keep costs low. What’s more, Shell, which has “gone from strength to strength” under Wael Sawan, could help turn around BP, whose CEO Murray Auchincloss is now in the “last-chance saloon” after a string of poor results.

Merging BP and Shell isn’t a completely mad idea, says Yawen Chen in Breakingviews. Even modest savings from eliminating duplication could add $33 billion to the value of the combined group. But there are some big “drawbacks”. The size and age of both firms mean that there would inevitably be “a big culture clash and disquiet over job losses”. Moreover, competition authorities would require disposals “in sectors such as retail sites, aviation supply and lubricants”, while BP’s board would demand a high premium on behalf of their shareholders. The upshot? The idea is little more than a “fantasy”.

Should BP and Shell merge?

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