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BUSINESS TODAY 24 March 2022

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11 COMMERCIAL 24.3.2022 Shell reconsiders its exit from oil field off Shetland ENERGY giant Shell is reconsidering its recent decision to pull investment from a large new UK oil field In December, Shell said the econom- ic case - along with possible regulato- ry delays - meant it was withdrawing from the Cambo oil field, which is 75 miles off the west coast of Shetland. At the time the price of crude oil was under $70 a barrel. It has since touched double that price and has consistently been over $100. Oil prices are volatile because of fears that Russian oil will either be shunned, or cut off. The desire to reduce European de- pendence on Russian exports has also made the UK government willing to fast track investment in domestic fos- sil fuels. Shell has not yet sold its interests in the field. Sources close to the matter said that, while the company's offi- cial position had not changed, it did acknowledge that the economic, po- litical and regulatory environment had changed enormously since the decision was announced just three months ago. Shell last week resubmitted an appli- cation to develop the Jackdaw North Sea gas field - off the east coast of Scotland - having had it turned down in October by environmental regula- tors. The company said it had modified the chemical processes involved in the gas extraction to meet regulatory requirements. The UK government said investment decisions are a commercial matter for the companies involved, but it remains committed to the domestic offshore oil and gas sector as the UK transitions to net zero greenhouse gas emissions. The UK's North Sea regulator plans later this year to hold the first oil and gas licensing round for new fields since 2020. Shell's decision last December to pull out of the project was taken two weeks after COP26 - a high profile global climate conference in Glas- gow - and was roundly welcomed by environmental campaigners, who de- scribed Shell's decision as a hammer blow to the project. Tessa Khan, director of environ- mental group Uplift, said new oil and gas assets like Cambo would not help bring down prices or secure UK ener- gy security of supply. "Contrary to what [Business Secre- tary] Kwasi Kwarteng has said, this isn't 'our oil'," she said. "It belongs to Shell who will sell it abroad to the highest bidder. Accord- ing to the government's own figures, 80% of North Sea oil is put in tankers and exported. "What it will do is produce carbon emissions equivalent to 18 coal-fired power stations, when we are already experiencing the impacts of the cli- mate crisis. Cambo makes as little sense today as it did last year." The government is due to unveil its energy supply strategy early next week. Shell is reportedly reconsidering its decision to pull out of the controversial Cambo oilfield development in Scotland Shell's decision last December to pull out of the project was taken two weeks after COP26 - a high profile global climate conference in Glasgow, and was roundly welcomed by environmental campaigners

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