Royal Dutch Shell Group .com
SCANDAL, LIES & COVER-UP DESTROY SHELL'S REPUTATION
JAN 2004
The Times: How Shell blew a hole in a 100-year reputation
Daily Telegraph: Shell drops 'bombshell' on reserves
The West Australian: Investors howl for Shell's blood
The Independent: Reserves shock wipes £8bn from value of oil giant Shell
London Evening Standard: Reserves shock hammers Shell
The Sunday Times: Shareholders can no longer be sure of Shell
The Sunday Times: A broken Shell
MARCH 2004
The New York Times: Shell Chairman Resigns Over Reserves Shock
The Mail on Sunday: Scandal of Shell's oil bonus
The Sunday Telegraph: Shell board shocked by devastating report
London Evening Standard: Shell facing up to 15 fraud claims
Yahoo News Report: Shell Execs Hid Reserves Problem
The Wall Street Journal: Shell Officials Kept Board in Dark
The
Economist: Royal Dutch/Shell - Another Enron?
The law
firm of Berger & Montague, P.C. has filed a securities fraud class action
complaint against Royal Dutch Petroleum Company
The New York Times: Credit Agency Lowers Its Outlook on Shell
The
Observer: FSA probes scandal of 'missing' Shell reserves
Mail on Sunday: Now FSA probes scandal at Shell
London Evening Standard: Watchdog probes Shell scandal
The Miami Herald: UK Financial Watchdog Launches Investigation into Shell
Scandal
The
Times: Shell chiefs in criminal inquiry over ‘lost’ reserves
The Times:
Are predators eyeing lame Shell?
BBC
News: Shell boss 'shocked' at revisions
The Guardian: Busted brands
The Sunday Telegraph: You can't be sure of Shell
The Sunday Telegraph: The Shell debacle infects four FTSE company bosses
The
Observer: The Shell supertanker is holed below the line ('Everyone's very
scared. They've all got their own lawyers,' said one City expert late last week
about Shell, the once-unsinkable flagship of the global oil industry).
SundayHerald.com: After week of shocks, you can’t be sure of Shell
Daily Mail: Crisis grows at oil giant Shell
HoustonChronicle .com: Criminal investigation possible, Shell confirms
BBC
RADIO 4 "FILE ON 4" TRANSCRIPT OF PROGRAMME BROADCAST ON 23 MARCH 04: "The
world’s third largest oil and gas group, a British icon, is reeling from a
scandal
APRIL 2004
Daily
Times: Shell's corrupt shell game in Nigeria
Mail on Sunday: Shell chief 'had a private army'
The Independent: Shell faces human rights grilling
The Independent: Shell man speaks (...entire CMD would be forced to resign)
The New York Times: Shell Officer Said to Have Ordered Report Destroyed
The Independent: Shell board studies crunch report on oil reserves fiasco
Financial Times: Unsure of Shell
The Daily Star: Shell scandal points to exaggerated estimates of oil reserves
Daily Telegraph: Shell to report on reserves debacle
London Evening Standard: Shell bosses lied to the City
Bloomberg.com: Shell Loses AAA Credit Rating, Lowered to AA+ by S&P (Update2)
San Francisco Chronicle: Shell exec said he was tired of lying; company's
finance chief resigns
Houston Chronicle: 'Sick and tired about lying' at Shell
BBC.co.uk: Shell bosses 'fooled the market'
The Independent: Lies, cover-ups, fat cats and an oil giant in crisis
ChannelNewsAsia: Shell name dragged through mud after explosive report: “The
closely guarded reputation of Royal Dutch/Shell was left in tatters as British
newspapers accused the oil giant of lies and a cover-up after an explosive
internal report admitted executives knew of problems with reserves over two
years ago.”: “"Lies, cover-ups, fat cats and an oil giant in crisis," was the
damning front-page verdict of the Independent newspaper, which said Shell was
facing the "biggest corporate scandal for almost 30 years". (ShellNews.net) 20
April 04
The Times: Deceitful Shell 'needs ten years' to rebuild exploration business
The Times: Unravelling of the cover-up
The Guardian: Trail of emails reveals depths of deceit at the heart of Shell
The New York Times: Shell's Report on Its Troubles Cites Discord at Top: "The
report also noted that last December, Mr. van de Vijver sent an e-mail message
directing a subordinate, Frank Coopman, to destroy a document Mr. Coopman had
produced that concluded that the company was "under a legal obligation" to
immediately correct overstatements of its proven reserves.": "Our story is not
one anyone would be proud of, and we have no excuses," said Lord Ron Oxburgh,
chairman of Shell Transport and Trading, the British half of Royal Dutch/Shell
(19 April 04)
The Scotsman: Shell admits reserve 'lies'
The Scotsman: Shell admits reserve 'lies'
Edinburgh Evening News: Damning report shows Shell hid reserves shortfalls
The Scotsman: Shell implodes as e-mails provide damning evidence
Financial Times: Unsure of Shell
Financial Times: Observer Column: Shell-shocked
(Corporate
slogans consigned to the dustbin of history no. 94: "You can be sure of
Shell.")
Minneapolis Star Tribune: Dutch/Shell Group exec was 'sick and tired' of lying
The Scotsman: Shell's reputation left in tatters
The Scotsman: Shell faces 15 US lawsuits
Tallahassee.com: Shell shaken by execs' dishonesty on holdings
TheStarOnline: Shell report exposes lies, CFO sacked
PlanetArk.com: Shell reserves scandal may aid Ogoni case
London Evening Standard: Shell facing court over 'rights abuses'
Bloomberg.com: Shell Loses AAA Rating at Fitch; Rating Cut to AA+ (Update1)
The Independent: Criminal charges loom over Shell
The Independent: We can all learn from Shell's debacle
Financial Times: Staff around the world left reeling as Shell image cracks
Forbes.com Shell's Watts was fired face to face, escorted away
Investors.com: Exxon, Halliburton, Shell and more
Sacked Shell boss 'escorted from HQ'
REPORT OF DAVIS POLK & WARDWELL TO THE SHELL GROUP - AUDIT COMMITTEE EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY
The
Economist: Humiliation: A once proud firm, brought down by its own flaws, needs
a thorough shake-up
The Economist: Royal Dutch/Shell: Sick and tired about lying: “I AM becoming
sick and tired about lying.” Those are not words shareholders want to hear from
a senior executive.": “The report into how the phoney numbers emerged paints a
picture of deception and backbiting at the top—and, despite ongoing board
efforts to exonerate the new management, contains plenty to encourage
shareholder lawsuits and, maybe, criminal prosecutions, not least in America,
where jail may await. More senior Shell people may yet have to quit.”
Daily Telegraph: Shell's lies over reserves spark FSA investigation
The Independent: FSA confirms formal inquiry into Shell over reserves scandal
Financial Times: Shell will have to dig deep to recover its reputation
ChannelNewsAsia.com: Shell name dragged through mud after explosive report
ChannelNewsAsia.com: Moody's cuts 'AAA' debt rating of Shell subsidiaries
SundayHerald.com: Who can be sure of Shell today?
The Independent: DTI is poised to probe Shell as scandal grows
TimesOnline: Agenda: William Lewis: And so farewell then dour, plump, bald
bloke..
(Shell is a disreputable company in need of a strong injection of ethics)
Al-Jazeera:
Shell Oil Lies - A tip of the iceberg as World Oil crisis looms?
Daily Mail: Shell attacked from all sides
Daily Mail: Shell's £13bn credibility gap
National Post: Shell Canada distances itself from parent company reserves
estimates scandal
MAY 2004
The Independent: Watchdog shakes up oil audits in the wake of Shell scandal
smh.com.au:
Shell reputation reserves close to emptyInternational
Herald Tribune: Shell Concealed Extent of Its Problems to Protect Nigeria
Partnership.
The Independent: Shell paid little attention to its in-house legal team. But as
the recent scandal showed, no modern business can afford to keep its briefs
unbriefed
Newark Star-Ledger: Judge to choose lead plaintiffs in Shell oil reserve
fraud case.
("This
is a fraud that was orchestrated apparently at the highest levels of the
company, extending over many, many years, and executed knowing that this is
defrauding the public.")
Sacramento Bee: Shell denies greed spurs the closure
BBC News:
Shell trims back reserves again -Can Shell draw a line under the scandal?
Financial Times: Shell aims to Shed arrogant reputation
Daily Telegraph: Watts' pension pot tops £10m
news-press.com: Shell Oil replaces sulfur-tainted gasoline
JUNE 2004
Local10.com: Tainted Gas Leads To Class-Action Suit: Federal Lawsuit Filed
Against Shell Oil: 2 June 2004
The Wall Street Journal: US Court Reinstates Shell, ChevronTexaco Price Fixing
Suit: 1 June 2004
The Independent: “Even those clowns at Shell": 5 June 2004
Mail on Sunday: Chairman Jeroen van der Veer in frame over Shell scandal – could
lead to 20 years in jail: 6 June 2004
nbc6.net:
Another Class-Action Lawsuit Filed Against Shell Over Tainted Gas; “Another day,
another lawsuit for Shell Oil": 9 June 2004
Daily Mail: Shell aims to quell rebellion: "The National Association of Pension
Funds... is preparing to publish its report into the scandal-hit oil giant this
week": 14 June 2004
Radio Netherlands: Oil
and Ethics: 15 June 2004
THE ABOVE ARE A SELECTION OF
ARTICLES PUBLISHED PRIOR TO EIGHT ROYAL DUTCH SHELL COMPANIES ISSUING DEFAMATION
PROCEEDINGS AGAINST SHELL WHISTLEBLOWER DR JOHN HUONG FOR ARTICLES PUBLISHED IN
JUNE 2004 ON THIS WEBSITE UNDER HIS NAME
STILL JUNE 2004
The Guardian: Shell tries to win friends as it owns up to mistakes: 15 June 2004
Times-Picayune: Company can't say which locations sold the tainted gasoline: 16
June 2004
The Guardian: 'I'm really very worried for the planet': Ron Oxburgh is chipping
away at the fossilised thinking that cost Shell its reputation: 17 June 2004
The Times: Double Dutch: Once again, Shell has managed to strike negative
publicity where it was thought that none could be found: 17 June 2004
Financial Times: How Shell changed its culture and lost its way: Or, as a
"shocked, dismayed and ashamed" Mr van der Veer put it: "We have more problems
than just the reserves issue.": 18 June 2004
USNewsWires.com: Regulators Given Internal Shell Documents: "provide
incontrovertible evidence the company has once again misled California…”
The Times: The lost Arabic school for scandal: “the spy school": 22 June 2004
TheAdvocate.com: Woman sues Shell Oil, refinery for damage caused by gasoline:
23 June 2004
The Independent: Shell hires new finance director after reserves scandal 25 June
2004
London Evening Standard: Shell 'has lied for 10 years': 25 June 2004
The Independent: Shell hires new finance director after reserves scandal: 25
June 2004
London Evening Standard:
SHAMED “Shell chairman Sir Philip Watts has secured a pay-off worth more than
£1m in cash plus stock options potentially worth £6m more”: 25 June 2004
Reuters.com:
Shell says Watts pay-off does not rule out legal action: "Asked if the
announcement earlier in the day of a one million pound settlement meant the
company SHEL.L had decided not to sue its disgraced boss, a spokesman said on
Friday, "We cannot speculate on the outcome and implications of external
investigations.": 25 June 2004
ChannelNewsAsia: Shell hit by new lawsuit in US over reserves scandal: “fresh
lawsuit names 27 directors and officers of Royal Dutch/Shell, and also their
accounting and audit firms, PricewaterhouseCoopers International and KPMG
International": 26 June 2004
Financial Times: Pension funds file suit on behalf of Shell: 26 June 2004
NewsDay.com: Shell pays former executive nearly $2 million in severance: PLUS
"lawsuit... suggests the defendants forfeit salaries, bonuses, stock awards,
profits and special benefits for violating their fiduciary duties": 26 June 2004
Daily Telegraph: Sacked Shell boss walks away with £1m: “despite his role in the
oil giant's reserves debacle": 26 June 2004
Paper by Alfred Donovan prepared for presentation at the National Union of Ogoni
Students (NUOS International, USA) Convention in Lincoln, Nebraska, held on
26/27 June 2004
LETTER TO WILLIAM LERACH, US CLASS ACTION LAWYER: INCONTROVERTIBLE DOCUMENTARY
EVIDENCE OF SHELL DELIBERATELY HIDING INFORMATION FROM ITS SHAREHOLDERS FROM
1994 ONWARDS: 26 June 2004
ChannelNewsAsia.com: Embattled Shell braces for shareholder showdown: “officers
and directors of these interconnected companies have hidden behind an opaque and
complicated corporate structure to falsify proved oil and gas reserves for
nearly 10 years": 27 June 2004
The Observer: Ethical funds dump Shell shares: “blue-chip City institutions have
confirmed that they have ditched all their Shell shares”": 27 June 2004
Taipei Times: Former chairman of Royal/Dutch Shell gets giant payout: "after an
accounting scandal": 27 June 2004
BBC News: Shell appeals to shareholders' patience "You are still covering up the
scandal," the heckler cried to some applause,": 28 June 2004
The Guardian: Shareholders vent anger over Shell scandal: 28 June 2004
The New York Times: Shell Asks Shareholders for Forgiveness: 28 June 2004
Oil & Gas Journal: Pension funds sue Shell brass, auditors, seeking damages,
policy changes": 28 June 2005 (This claim resulted in a multi-million dollar
settlement by Shell in 2005)
Daily Telegraph: Shell's board survive: No wonder Shell is in such a mess: 29
June 2004
The Guardian: Shell investors vent fury on 'incompetent' board: "This company is
giving world class salaries to non-executives for a world class scandal.": 29
June 2004
The New York Times: Testy Annual Meeting Focuses on Shell's Scandal: “A few of
Shell's top executives mislead shareholders and the financial world, he said.
”In the United States,'' he said, "they'd have been taken away in handcuffs.":
29 June 2004
Business
Report (SA) Shell
chairman to view problems at Sapref, says activist: "Shareholders are tired of
Shell's lying and spinning": “a chorus of disillusionment over its integrity and
transparency": 29 June 2004
Toronto Star: Oil giant's brass beg for pardon and time: Contrition expressed at
Royal Dutch/Shell: Reserve-booking fiasco stays at centre stage: 29 June 2004
The
Times: Investors snub Shell in vote on liability: “When this scandal came up,
Sir Mark was present. Why did he allow this departure from Shell’s business
principles? He should resign from all his other directorships.": 29 June 2004
The Independent: Investors lambast Shell over ousted chairman's £1m pay-off:
“the £1.06m pay-off for Sir Philip Watts proved that, even under new leadership,
the company was still living in "a parallel universe": 29 June 2004
The Independent: Still Shell-shocked: “a company which is obviously still in
denial": 29 June 2004
JULY 2004
Daily Telegraph: Shell to clean up its act with assets sales: “struggling to
restore its reputation": 2 July 2004
The Wall Street Journal: Shell Will Take Quarterly Charge Of $330 Million:
“reserves-booking scandal this year exposing Shell's need for new reserves": 2
July 2004
Toronto Star: Shell reduces profit over reserves $276 million U.S.
overstatement: “Filing reveals impact of debacle”: "inappropriate" accounting in
other areas": 3 July 2004
Washington Post: Shell Restates Profits: "revision followed an embarrassing
series of disclosures": 3 July 2004
The New York Times: Shell Says It Overstated Profits by $276M: "profits..
exaggerated.."; "inappropriate accounting.."-"resulted in profits being
embellished": 3 July 2004
The Observer: Bad publicity - not goodbye, but good buy: “Shell illustrates how
a steady barrage of negative publicity can bring a company to its knees”: “The
company's reputation is now in tatters”: "We list the latest batch of leaders
and laggards in the corporate publicity league in the accompanying table. These
rankings are based upon news reports in the last three months. The current '10
worst' list is led by Shell.": 4 July 2004
The
Observer: Counting the wrong beans: 'At some stage something happened to Shell's
values that made it acceptable to put up figures that weren't completely above
board,': 4 July 2004
News Leader.com Shell admits overstating its profits: "also made errors in the
way it accounted for exploration costs, certain gas contracts and earnings per
share of its parent companies": 4 July 2004
Sunday Telegraph: BP reserves the right to go its own way: “in the wake of the
scandal at Royal Dutch/Shell": 4 July 2004
Business Day: Overstatement raised oil giant's profit by $432m: “Last Monday the
leaders of Royal Dutch/Shell asked shareholders for forgiveness and time to
revamp the oil giant.": 5 July 2004
nzherald.co.nz: Shell takes profit hit: “profits being exaggerated”:
"inappropriate accounting”: “profits being embellished": 5 July 2004
LETTER FAXED TO MALAYSIAN HIGH COURT JUDGE 5 July 2004
Email from Mr Charles Wiwa, nephew of the late Nobel Laureate Ken Saro-Wiwi:
"...we trust that our weapon of TRUTH will prevail over the evil tendencies of
the 'multi-national goliath'": 8 July 2004
Financial Times: Shelled out: “If only the executives of Royal Dutch/Shell,
under fire over its reserves debacle, could achieve redemption so easily": 9
July 2004
Financial Times: S&P raises concerns over Shell review: “battered by a scandal":
9 July 2004
Financial Times: Shell edges closer to shake-up: “in the wake of the Anglo-Dutch
oil group's reserves crisis": 9 July 2004
The Wall Street Journal: Shell Sold 24% Of Its Malaysian Refining Company
Thursday: “dogged for months by a scandal over the accounting of its oil and
natural gas reserves": 9 July 2004
The Times: SHELL SHOCK: The Money Programme provides a clear and merciless
indictment of Shell, a company that prided itself on being a safe investment for
widows and orphans: "...Walter van de Vijver, was appalled and fired off
numerous warnings. “I am becoming sick and tired,” he wrote, “of lying about the
extent of our reserves.”: 10 July 2004
Daily Telegraph: Shell accounts change brings $226m upgrade: “Shell has been
plunged into crisis after admitting that it had overstated its "proven" oil and
gas reserves by 23pc": 14 July 2005
The Wall Street Journal: Shell's Outside Auditors Got Warning on Reserves in
2002: “The documents also suggest that some potential reserves problems at Shell
were much more widely known and discussed": "Shell's reserves-accounting scandal
raises new questions about the responsibility of independent auditors." 15 July
2004
London Evening Standard: Shell alarm two years before scandal: “SHELL'S external
auditors were warned the oil giant was inflating its energy reserves two years
before the company finally came clean": 15 July 2004
Reuters: Outside auditors warned on Shell reserves: “documents… indicate
problems were flagged repeatedly to a wider circle of senior executives and
board members than previously disclosed": 15 July 2004
BBC TV:
Oil giant Shell's investors shocked: “that's fraud in the United States and the
Justice Department will have a basis for criminally prosecuting the executives":
15 July 2004
The
Times: SHELL SHOCK: BBC Two, 9.50pm: “I am becoming sick and tired,” he wrote,
“of lying about the extent of our reserves.": 15 July 2005
The Times: Shell tipped to merge UK and Dutch parents: “Shell is under intense
pressure to streamline its complex board structure after the reserves
misreporting scandal": 15 July 2005
The Scotsman: Shell tight-lipped on claim: “TROUBLED Shell was involved in fresh
turbulence yesterday as it stonewalled questions": 16 July 2004
The Guardian: Shell had early reserves warning: “Shell admitted yesterday that
it had been warned about inflated reserves before it was forced to issue the
first of four downgrades this year.": 16 July 2004
SHELL2004.com: UNOFFICIAL TRANSCRIPT BBC2 TV “THE MONEY PROGRAMME”, BROADCAST 15
JULY 2004, 9.50pm: 17 July 2004 - For extracts from the content read below:
-
ShellNews.net commentary on the content: Stanley Bernstein
of Bernstein Liebhard & Lifshitz LLP, the lead US plaintiff lawyers bringing a
class action case against Shell for Pennsylvanian State Retirement Funds,
described the scandal on the BBC TV Money Programme in the following terms:
"There are a lot of investors and many maybe more investors that were affected
by this fraud than any other fraud in history". The following are extracts from
the same programme broadcast on 15 July 2004.
Comments about current Shell Chief Executive, Jeroen van der Veer:
"signed statements declaring that the submission known as a 20F was a true and
faithful description of Shell’s reserves"; "He signed false financial
statements"; "he signed certifications that the financial statements met with
SEC guidelines."
Comments about the Royal Dutch Shell Committee of Managing Directors (the CMD):
"And what about the Committee of Managing Directors? They too had received a
much stronger warning about fooling the market. Jeroem van der Veer and the rest
of the CMD still took no action."
DESCRIPTIONS USED ABOUT THE CONDUCT OF SHELL MANAGEMENT: "deceit";
"false pretences"; "falsely exaggerating"; "misled the world"; "basically they
had been told a lie"; "embellished on the numbers"; "exaggerated the numbers";
"basically we lied to you"; "cover it up"; "doctoring the books"; "inventing
numbers"; "certifying the reserve which he knows doesn’t exist"; "reserves
replacement and production growth were inflated"; "I am becoming sick and tired
of lying about the extent of our reserves"; "cover-up"; "actually destroyed
documents"; "the scandal blew up and the company’s reputation carefully nurtured
over a century was destroyed"; "Shell has lied intentionally and deceived the
public" ; "now they know that Shell lied to them and cost them money"; "a fraud
perpetrated over a long period of time"; "a fraud perpetrated by the very heads
of the company".
There was none of the usual caveats which precede
statements or comments which would otherwise be labelled as libellous: e.g.
"allegedly". The above descriptions were applied during the BBC TV programme
without any such qualification. They were put on record as statements of FACT.
The Guardian: worthwhile policy or simply propaganda?: Or take Shell. It
suffered a series of public relations disasters in the mid-90s, notably the
Brent Spar oil rig disposal fiasco and its association with human rights abuses
in Nigeria. These debacles spurred it on to spend millions on rebranding, wooing
environmentalists and human rights groups and investing in renewable energy.
Yet, having done all that, it now finds a lot of its good work undone by the
financial scandal of its under-reporting of oil reserves.17 July 2004
The Sunday Times: Market Mover: Richard Dunn: “As the Shell scandal proves,
there are reserve issues with some of the major oil companies": 18 July 2004
Financial Times: Shell in move to reduce its legal costs: a host of civil
lawsuits following its admission that it overstated its oil and natural gas
reserves”: “550 in-house lawyers": 20 July 2004
The Guardian: Nigerianisation: Shell's solution for troubled delta: “The
reserves scandal that led to Sir Philip's removal in part related to Nigeria":
21 July 2004
The Wall Street Journal: SEC May Require Auditors To Sign Off on Oil, Gas
Reserves: “SEC's re-evaluation of its rules comes on the heels of the accounting
scandal": 21 July 2004
The New York Times: House Panel to
Begin a Hearing on Shell's Reserve Scandal: "Shell officials were asked to
testify, but will not, the company said.": 21 July 2004
LA Times: "scandal at Shell oil": SEC
Weighs Requiring Certified Reserves: 'overstatement of its proven reserves and
"inappropriate" accounting in other business areas resulted in profits being
inflated by $432 million.': 21 July 2004
CBCNews: Shell to compensate Quebec motorists for damage caused by gas additive:
“Hundreds of thousands of Quebec motorists may be eligible to receive money from
Shell as part of a settlement of a class-action lawsuit.": 21 July 2004
CJAD.com:
Shell Canada disputes $100 million figure in suit involving Quebec drivers;
"related to a fuel additive the company used in 2001 and 2002": 22 July 2004
The
Times: US watchdog under fire over oil reserves scandal: “House Committee on
Financial Services convened a hearing on the Shell reserves scandal.": 22 July
2004
The Wall Street Journal: Shell Canada Settles Suit Involving Quebec Drivers –CP:
"Shell Canada could pay up to $100 million to about 500,000 Quebec drivers": 22
July 2004
National Post: Shell Canada settles Quebec class-action suit: “Radio-Canada
reported Shell Canada could pay as much as $100-million": 22 July 2004
London Evening Standard: How BP lords it
over Shell: “looking ahead, one is in terrific shape, the other could be in
terrible trouble”: “Shell's reputation among investors lies in tatters": 25 July
2004
London Evening Standard: The oil giants' scorecard: "How they add up: BP 66,
Shell 49": "Shell Desperately needs to find more oil after the reserves
debacle”: “Bonuses for the executive team for 2003 were scrapped in the light of
the reserves scandal" 25 July 2004
Bloomberg.com: BP, Shell, Eni Results May Put European Oil-Stock Gains at Risk:
“The company disclosed in January it overstated oil reserves for more than five
years.": 26 July 2004
Financial Times: Oil sector governance: “Royal Dutch/Shell's reserves downgrade
was a dramatic failure of corporate oversight.”: “Good reputations take time to
build, but are quickly lost.": 26 July 2004
Business Week: Can Shell Put Out This Oil Fire? "a devastating portrait of Shell
as a dysfunctional company”: "The two boards should move quickly to find a
successor to the 56-year-old van der Veer, who looks like a caretaker.": 26 July
2004
Reuters: BP profits at bottom of forecasts: “has outshone scandal-hit rival
Royal Dutch/Shell": 27 July 2004
Fortune.com: Is Shell Ready to Rebound? "Forget Iraq and Iran," says Gheit.
"Royal Dutch/Shell needs a regime change.": 27 July 2004
Fortune.com: Now If Only Shell Could Find Some Oil: Forget the reserve drama: At
the current rate, Shell will run out of oil in a decade: "Shell will be a
no-growth company at least for the next few years.": 27 July 2004
Financial Times: BP earnings rise 23% as week of good news begins: "Shell was
especially hit this year by the scandal that revealed it had wrongly booked more
than 20 per cent of its reserves" 28 July 2004
The Guardian: Kremlin soothes BP over trading in Russia: “now was the opportune
time to make a takeover move for Shell, whose share price has been battered by
slow growth and the oil reserves scandal.": 28 July 2004
The Guardian: High oil prices boost BP profits: “outshone its scandal-hit rival
Royal Dutch/Shell this year": 28 July 2004
Thursday 29 July,
2004
Wall Street Journal: Shell Transport To Resolve FSA And SEC Investigations:
"Shell to cease and desist from future violations of, the antifraud, reporting,
recordkeeping and internal control provisions... SEC rules.”
Wall Street Journal: Royal Dutch/Shell 2Q Net Profit $4.0B: “Management… remains
unable…to estimate…possible losses from the entire set of regulatory and other
actions and litigation in relation to the reserves restatement.”
The Scotsman: Shell Fined £65M after Reserves Crisis: “inquiry which found that
Shell violated reporting, record-keeping and anti-trust rules.”
Reuters: Shell pays fines for reserves woes: “Royal Dutch/Shell will pay about
$150 million (82 million pounds) in fines for an oil reserves scandal that
tarnished its reputation”
TheStarOnline: Shell fined US$120 million "Rebuilding credibility'' and
"regaining trust'' are now the company's key priorities, it said in its annual
report.”
BBC
NEWS: Shell fined over reserves scandal: “will pay a penalty of £17m to the FSA
- the biggest fine ever imposed by the regulator - and a $120m (£65.7m) civil
penalty in the US.
London Evening Standard: Shell pays over reserves scandal: “It still faces a
host of multi-billion dollar class-action lawsuits and a US Department of
Justice probe.”: "Shell revealed today production was likely to remain flat
until 2007 at best"
Bloomberg: Shell Pays $150 Million to End Probe; Output May Fall: “hopeful step
in ending the reserves debacle that led to the ouster of three senior
executives, the loss of a top-tier investment rating and more than a dozen
shareholder lawsuits”
Yahoo.com: SEC Settlement With Royal Dutch Shell Fails to Fix Governance Flaws
That Allowed Fraud to Occur and Fails to Hold Executives Personally Accountable
for Over $150 Million in Fines
Friday 30 July,
2004
The
Times: Simple solutions are best for Shell: “One of
the world’s most trusted investments lost its credibility and its top credit
rating.”: "directors and top managers were the authors of Shell’s misfortunes"
The
Times: Shell and BASF set to sell $6bn plastics
business : “first strategic move for the Anglo-Dutch oil company since becoming
mired in its oil reserves scandal in January.”
The
Times: Shell agrees to pay fines of £83m:
“continuing criminal investigation by the US Department of Justice.”: “Both
Euronext and AFM, the Dutch securities institute, are also investigating
Shell”
Financial Times: Shell pays $151m to watchdogs:
“Thursday's announcement has no bearing on the civil and criminal cases against
individuals linked to the company.”
Financial Times: US watchdog shows its teeth: "Parmalat"; "Enron"; "Shell"
AccountancyAge.com: Shell pays huge penalties to
regulators: “Shell also confirmed that it breached
market abuse provisions of the FSA's Financial Services and Markets Act 2000”
Business Report: Shell gets hefty fine for reserves
fiasco : “The SEC found the Anglo-Dutch group had violated reporting,
record-keeping and anti-trust rules”
The Washington Times:
Shell
agrees on penalty to settle charges: “While trying to put the scandal behind it,
Shell reported a 16 percent increase in underlying
second-quarter profits thanks to higher oil prices.”
Financial Times: Setting the scene: "Shell
expects hostile takeover bids from BP and ExxonMobil within the next few months.
These bids will be followed by a successful 'white knight' bid from Total”
Financial Times:
Shell fighter begins the big clean-up: “it could itself become a bid
target”; “if you get it hopelessly wrong, then people start sniffing around.":
"In answer to a question about whether they are sniffing now, he said: "You will
have to ask the sniffers"
Financial Times: UK and US regulators team up and levy £83m in penalties: “more
robust policing since the Enron scandal broke in 2001.”
The Independent: Shell's road to redemption remains a long one: “An extradition
battle involving Shell's former chairman Sir Phil Watts would provide splendid
entertainment but it would also guarantee plenty more bad headlines”
The Independent:
Shell pays £83m fine to settle scandal over oil reserves: “Shell
and a number of former and serving directors are also still under criminal
investigation by the US Justice Department”
The Boston Globe:
Shell to pay $151m to settle misstatements: “fails to hold personally
accountable the corporate insiders who perpetrated the fraud,"
Daily Telegraph: Shell to pay watchdogs £80m for
oil reserves row: “but warned it could not put a figure on the cost of investor
lawsuits.”
The Wall Street Journal: Shell to Pay $150 Million
in Penalties: “Shell also has arranged with U.S.
authorities to grant Dutch and British employees special diplomatic safe passage
to and from American shores”
New York Times: Shell to Pay $150 Million in
Settlement on Reserves: "production fell 5 percent to the equivalent of 3.58
million barrels of oil a day": "The underlying numbers are 'pretty horrendous,'
said Neil McMahon, an analyst with Sanford C. Bernstein in London,":
“Separately, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission said… Shell's energy
trading unit, Coral Energy Resources, had agreed to pay $30 million to settle
accusations that it had submitted FALSE price data to publishers"
Daily Mail: Shell is beached in the past: “there
are deep-seated problems at Shell that go far
beyond fiddling the numbers to make the reserves look better than they were.”:
“exploration and production look dire”
FT: An ocean of difference across the Atlantic: “It still faces a regulatory
inquiry in the Netherlands, potential criminal investigation by the US Justice
Department and myriad class action suits. They form a pretty powerful deterrent
against following Shell's abuse of the markets."
FT: Shell files revised statement with SEC: The
revision was necessary because of the Dutch-UK oil and gas group's serial
restatements of proved reserves earlier this year.
FT: Settling the bill but not the issues: “companies also tend to look to their
more reputable peers, of which Shell used to be
one. This is no longer the case.”: “whether a management that lied to its
biggest shareholders would have any compunction doing the same to Nigerian
villagers.": 30 July 2004
Saturday 31 July,
2004
The Guardian: Shell fined £84m over reserves
scandal: “Shell is facing a criminal investigation
by the US department of justice, ongoing inquiries by the Dutch financial market
regulator and the Euronext stock exchange as well as litigation in the US”
The Wall Street Journal: Moody's Confirms Aa1 Ratings Of Royal Dutch
Shell Entities: “the negative outlook reflects
uncertainties”: “Another factor implicit in the negative outlook”
The Wall Street Journal: Moody's Cuts Motiva Enterprises L-T Debt To A2: “The
long-term rating downgrade primarily reflects the impact of Moody's downgrade in
May 2004 of Motiva's 50% owner, Shell Oil”
The Wall Street Journal: Shell SEC Deal Fails To
Solve Governance Issues – Lawyer: “accuses executives and board members of
numerous wrongdoings - including breach of fiduciary duty and fraud”
The Wall Street Journal: UK Market Regulator Earns Stripes With
Shell Fine: “"The Shell
case, by raising the stakes so dramatically for the FSA, is kind of another way
of rattling the handcuffs."
The Guardian: British watchdog catches up with US hare: “Shell
faces the prospect of a string of civil actions from shareholders who feel
duped.”
Financial Times: Victims punished at
Shell: “The FSA
justifies the fine by saying it has to send a signal to the market about
unacceptable behaviour.": 2 August 2004
Financial Times: Lament of the
Shell shareholder The penalty is the equivalent to
the imposition of a fine on a victim of a robbery rather than on the
perpetrator!: 3 August 2004
Reuters: Shell to unify boards: 3 August 2004
Daily Herald: County wants changes from
Shell: “illegal
dumping of 201 tons of benzene-tainted soil”: "We have found problems with the
procedures Shell
followed," said county board Chairman Mike McCoy. "It was more than just a
simple, honest mistake.": 5 August 2004
The Guardian: Corporate battle lines: "stories of corporate fraud, unbridled
greed and negligent auditing, have given much support to the Galbraithian
thesis": “How different are the skills required to succeed in, say,
Shell, from those
needed in the Treasury? (Apart of course from the need in the former case to
cultivate a blind eye.)": 7 August 2004
The Independent: Bill Gammell: A £2.2bn Indian summer for rugby international
who struck black gold: “And Cairn's success will be all the more satisfying
because it came at the expense of the oil giant Shell": 11 August 2004
The New York Times: Gas Traders, Supervisors Face Probe: “commission collected a
total of about $250 million in penalties… $30 million from Coral Energy
Resources, a Houston-based trading subsidiary of Shell: "11 August 2004
Reuters: Ex-Shell
director gets 2.5 million pounds: “Walter van de Vijver": "Former Royal
Dutch/Shell director Walter van de Vijver, who resigned after a reserves scandal
at the oil giant...":12 August 2004
Financial Times: Shell to unify boards and look at
merger: “to restore the company's credibility": 12 August 2004
Pulse TC.com: Firing Shell’s Chairman? “Sir Philip the Finagler after it was
discovered in an internal investigation that, on his watch,
Shell had been cooking its books Enron-style": 12
August 2004
The Independent: Michael Harrison's
Outlook: Money talks for Shell's singing director: “Shell
is hardly a byword for good corporate governance, and yesterday it lived up to
its reputation by producing another stonker": 13 August 2004
The Times: Shell
director who was 'tired of lying' given £2.5m payoff: “Shell
investors lost 50p for every barrel that went missing while Phil and Walter
together earned 80p for every barrel mislaid": 13 August 2004
DAILY EXPRESS: BUMBLING
SHELL BORDERS ON FARCE: “HAPPY memories of Peter
Sellers' portrayal of the bumbling Inspector Clouseau": 13 August 2004
Daily Express: Shell scandal boss wins £2.5m
payoff": "I am becoming sick and tired about lying about the extent of our
reserves issues and the downward revisions that need to be done because of far
too aggressive/optimistic bookings.": 13 August 2004
The Star-Ledger: Major shareholder
lawsuit pending: “the Royal Dutch/Shell Group's
legal woes aren't yet finished.”: “a mega-lawsuit making its way through the
U.S. District Court in Newark.": "In the SEC agreement, Shell neither admitted
nor denied any wrongdoing, but allowed that the company violated anti-fraud,
reporting, bookkeeping and internal control provisions of the securities laws.
It will pay about $125 million in penalties. The company will also pay roughly
$31 million to cover the British penalties, according to a statement.": 14
August 2004
The Scotsman:
Shell 'Braced for Takeover Bid from Oil Rival Total': “an inquiry found
it violated reporting, record-keeping and anti-trust rules.": 15 August 2004
SUNDAY EXPRESS: WHY SHELL MUST ACT NOW TO CALM
TROUBLED WATERS: “But restructure may not be enough after scandal, resignation
and fines, reports Robin Pagnamenta": 15 August 2004
Sunday Express: All’s well with Cairn in the Indian desert: It was an act of
stupidity... You don't sell off your golden eggs like that. Shell's loss is
Cairn's gain.”: "Oil minnow’s £4m field is worth billions": 15 August 2004
Channel News Asia: Shell fears swoop by French oil
giant Total: report: “Shell has been shaken by a
scandal involving the overestimation of its reserves of oil and gas.": 16 August
2004
London Evening Standard: Shell in the bid spotlight
as oil price keeps climbing: “reports suggested top brass at scandal-struck
Shell think a bid may be on its way from France's
Total.": 16 August 2004
The Scotsman: Cairn's soar-away success ups pressure on
Shell: “The Edinburgh-based group’s astonishing success raises further
questions about the quality and calibre of Shell’s management and the company’s
modus operandi.": 16 August 2004
Daily Telegraph: Cairn oil bonanza nets chiefs £4m bonus: “Cairn's finds in
India are a source of continued embarrassment to Shell,
which sold its 50pc share in the concession to Cairn for just $7.25m.": 16
August 2004
Financial Times: Virtually no hiding place from long arm of computer detectives:
“…fraud investigation is to turn on a "smoking gun" document…,”: "I am becoming
sick and tired about lying about the extent of our reserves issues.": 19 August
2004
Financial Times: Instant messaging used in 'untraceable' City leaks: “follows a
string of cases where e-mails have provided crucial evidence, such as when Royal
Dutch/Shell disclosed e-mails showing the feud
between two of its directors over its overstatement of reserves.": 20 August
2004
Guardian: Corporate battle lines: “The collapse of Enron, and the related and
unrelated stories of corporate fraud, unbridled greed and negligent auditing”:
“How different are the skills required to succeed in, say,
Shell, from those needed in the treasury? (Apart, of course, from the
need in the former case to cultivate a blind eye.): 20 August 2004
The
Times: Lifers who climb right to the top: “A less edifying example of the breed
is Sir Philip Watts, chairman of Shell, who was
forced to resign after the group admitted to misrepresenting oil and gas
reserves.”": 21 August 2004
Sunday Express: Shell cuts back on forecourts to
boost production: “managers hoped the new strategy would draw a line under the
reserves-misreporting scandal which triggered the departure of three of Shell's
bosses earlier this year.": 22 August 2004
The Business: Shell powers ahead with plan to clear
out $15bn of its assets: “Underspending in exploration and production throughout
the 1990s is seen as partly to blame for the 4.35bn barrel reduction in reported
reserves that made this year one of the worst in Shell's 97-year history.": 22
August 2004
London Evening Standard: Damage question: “Shell…
everyone knows its reputation is still in tatters and it will take years for the
company to rehabilitate itself.": 22 August 2004
The
Times: Need to Know: Royal Dutch/Shell… appeared in
a Swedish court again over a 1999 price-fixing cartel": 24 August 2004
Bloomberg: Shell to Update Investors on Governance
Next Month: “Van der Veer, 56, is trying to regain investors' confidence after
the company said in January it had overstated oil reserves by a fifth. That led
to an investigation by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the ouster
of three top executives and the loss of Shell's top-tier credit rating.": 24
August 2004
Wednesday 25 August,
2004
Financial Times: Shell ‘knew of reserves
overstatement in 2000': TWO YEARS EARLIER THAN PREVIOUSLY REPORTED BY THE
COMPANY'S OWN INVESTIGATION INTO THE REPORTING SCANDAL."
Financial Times: Lex: Royal Dutch/Shell: “Creating
value through entrepreneurial management of hydrocarbon resource values” could
be the title of just another jargon-filled memo. The fact that the paper was
written at Royal Dutch/Shell in May 1998 and led to
a relaxation of reserve guidlines lends it a more ironic slant.": "The findings
further damage the oil group's battered reputation."
Lloyds List: Shell settles with regulators to end
reserves scandal: “findings and conclusions in the FSA's 'final notice' and the
SEC's 'cease and desist order'.”
The Independent: Shell still wrestling with its
moment of shame: “Shell is bluntly accused of
making false and misleading statements about its oil reserves over a five-year
period, of doing so despite internal warnings that the statements were false"
The Independent: Regulators to pursue former Shell
chiefs over market abuse: “The UK's market regulator set out in detail a pattern
of "false and misleading" information given to the market between 1998 and 2003
which Shell did not start to correct until January
this year."
AccountancyAge: Shell committed 'unprecedented
misconduct': “This included the false announcements made about the levels of its
oil reserves, despite warnings that its figures were 'false or misleading'.”
Fool.com:
Shell Shocked?: “If the stink of a recent
restatement and high-sulfur gas mixture wasn't enough to have shareholders
gasping for air, then the past year's proven oil reserves scandal certainly
was.”
The Scotsman: Shell's £82.7M Fines over Reserves Crisis Confirmed: “False or
misleading statements were given to investors about the extent of Shell’s
reserves as far back as 1998, the FSA said.”
thisislondon.co.uk: Shell oil scandal 'began in
1998': “the FSA said Shell made false and
misleading statements between 1998 and 2003.”
CNN:
Shell settles fraud case for $150M: Oil company
agrees to pay SEC for overstating reserves, also settles market abuse case in
Britain.
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CLICK ON LINK BELOW TO READ
SECURITIES & EXCHANGE COMMISSION REPORT:
http://www.sec.gov/litigation/admin/34-50233.pdf
CLICK ON THIS LINK TO READ
FINANCIAL SERVICES AUTHORITY REPORT:
http://www.fsa.gov.uk/pubs/final/shell_24aug04.pdf
The Times: FSA exposes long-running deception by Shell
executives: “raises questions about the role of senior executives who led
Shell in the late 1990s, including Sir Mark
Moody-Stuart”
The Times: SHELL shareholders have demanded that
more heads roll at the world’s third-largest oil company to regain investor
confidence.: “The people who are in charge of Shell
today ... were there when these activities were going on and are still involved
at the highest level..."
The Times: Pressing questions: “Can Shell rebuild
its reputation?”: “Is Shell a takeover play?”: “Why
did the auditors not resign when they questioned the booking of gas reserves in
1998?”: “Should they resign now?”
Daily Telegraph: Shell takes mauling over 'market
abuse': “Shell was yesterday savaged by regulators
in Britain and America for "unprecedented misconduct": ‘The FSA said
Shell "disseminated false or misleading information
as to the true extent of its proved reserves" from 1998 until last July.'
The Guardian: Solitary part-timer conducted group audit: “The FSA makes clear
that Shell's reserves difficulties began in 1997”
The Guardian: Shell's shame: FSA spells out abuse: “Fadel Gheit, an oil analyst
at broker Oppenheimer & Co in New York, said the latest revelations from the
regulators proved this was a corporate scandal of "historic proportions". He
added: "Short of Enron... I have not seen anything like this in 30 years of
covering the market."
The Guardian: Damned in detail - but let off lightly:
Shell faced far higher penalty in the US: The Financial Services
Authority's judgment of the Shell reserves scandal
is damning both in detail and conclusion, accusing the company of "unprecedented
misconduct".
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: SEC Order Shows Many Involved In
Shell Reserves Debacle: “administrative order confirms that the scandal
touched many officials beyond the senior executives who have left the company”
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: SEC, FSA Fine Shell For
Reserves Overstatements: "The SEC can still bring civil charges against
individuals. Prosecutors at the U.S. Justice Department - who can bring criminal
and civil charges - are continuing their own probe into the reserves issue"
Houston Chronicle: Probe aims at top: Investigators say Royal Dutch-Shell
officials in sights
Investors.com: Royal Dutch/Shell Fined $120
Million, Lives On to Overstate Another Day: “It is the third largest for the
SEC, after WorldCom Inc…”
The New York Times: Shell Settles Oil Reserve
Fraud Case for $150.7 Million: Degenhardt added that the overstatements
had occurred ``over an extended period.''
The Times: An auditor of no account: “the horror story that has emerged from
Shell”: “determination to present the City with
inflated numbers…widespread": "when the company, under the leadership of SIR
MARK MOODY-STUART, established five Value Creation Teams, it was certainly
looking for creativity. That a paper of May 1998 could have been entitled
'Creating Value through Entrepreneurial Management of Hydrocarbon Resource
Values' is an eloquent indication of what was to follow"
Daily Mail: Shocking rebuke stings Shell:
“Officials are said to have found Shell's behaviour particularly appalling given
the fact that the Anglo-Dutch giant had appeared a pillar of respectability.”
London Evening Standard: Shell scandal 'could be
repeated’: “Findings by regulators have widened the scandal by accusing
Shell of giving false reserve figures from 1998 to
2003, raising questions about the role of executives, including SIR MARK
MOODY-STUART"
The Scotsman: Fresh probe into Shell oil reserves
scandal: Watchdogs to target ‘those responsible’
ShellNews.net: The Shell Chairman responsible for
Shell’s descent into cover-up, scandal and shame on an epic scale - Sir Mark
Moody-Stuart
London Evening Standard: Shell faces £830m Nigeria
claim: “The FSA's conclusions will raise questions about the part played by
Watts' predecessor, SIR MARK MOODY-STUART, chairman between 1997 and 2001.
Forbes: Nigerian Senate Orders Shell Unit to Pay:
“Nigeria's Senate has ordered a subsidiary of petroleum giant Royal/Dutch
Shell to pay a Nigerian ethnic group US$1.5
billion… for oil spills in their homelands”
Forbes: Shell to Spend More on North Sea Venture:
Shell has acknowledged that the overstatement of
reserves and "inappropriate" accounting in other business areas resulted in
profits being inflated by US$432 million.
Los Angeles Times: Shell Increases 2004 Spending in
Europe: “The alleged role of individuals in the scandal remains under
investigation by the SEC, and Shell also faces a
separate probe by the U.S. Justice Department.”
Thursday 26 August,
2004
The Independent: Shell hit by $1.5bn oil pollution
claim from Nigerian Senate: “Shell was linked by
international campaigners to the military government of Sani Abacha, which
executed a delta activist, Ken Saro-Wiwa.”
ShellNews.net: Sir Mark Moody-Stuart - The Shell
Chairman responsible for Shell’s descent into cover-up, scandal and shame on an
epic scale
The Times: The misreporting scandal: Shell
penalties 'bolster' “BILLION-DOLLAR” class action lawsuits: “A source close to
the SEC told The Times last night that a list of questions had been sent to all
Shell executives involved in the inquiry. It is
understood that those questions have been passed to, among others, SIR MARK
MOODY-STUART..."
Financial Times: Regulators dig deeper into Royal Dutch/Shell's problems: “The
SEC is scathing about Shell's advice to investors that it had changed its
mathematics, saying in its 1998 annual report only that estimation methods "have
been refined".
The Times: Shareholders could be damaged beyond repair: “Several lawyers
specialising in class actions on behalf of aggrieved investors are circling the
Anglo-Dutch group, which is well within the orbit of American law.”
The Guardian: Shell hit by $1.5bn Nigeria spill
claim Senate: action on pollution adds to damage from reserves scandal
Friday 27 August,
2004
Financial Times: Governance: Managers look for the moral dimension: “Post-Enron,
post-Shell, post-WorldCom, post-Parmalat”
The Independent: Oil companies must be made to follow UN on human rights: “Shell
and BP the leaders in building a human rights responsibility into their business
principles and recognising that explicit adherence to the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights"
Saturday
28 August, 2004
Daily Telegraph: The landslide bringing
down Shell grandees: “The SEC and FSA reports,
however, go back to the previous regime, when Sir Mark Moody-Stuart was
chairman.”: "The Shell Show, a tragicomedy in an
unlimited number of parts..."
The Times: “FSA’s report accuses
Shell of market abuse by announcing false oil
reserves between 1998 and 2003, implicating several major executives in the
scandal, including Sir Mark Moody-Stuart”
Financial Times: Shell-shocked: “Shell
was found to have "announced false or misleading reserves and reserves
replacement ratios throughout the period 1998 to 2003"…: “three heads have
rolled… other people in key positions during that time remain. They include
Jeroen van der Veer… and Sir Mark Moody-Stuart”
Financial Times: Buoyant E&P sector “Shell has a
particular problem at the moment. It is running out of oil in the ground and has
lost a chairman and faced public humiliation following surprise cuts in its oil
reserve estimates earlier this year.”
The Guardian: He's no Hector: David Varney, executive chairman of Revenue and
Customs: “Varney admits to being "very concerned" about seeing
Shell immersed in a reserves scandal.”
Daily Mail: Alarm at former Shell chiefs' options:
“Pirc says Watts could make £3.1m if the shares reach 552p”: “Regulators are
still investigating those believed to have had a role in the company's reserves
scandal.”
Sunday 29 August,
2004
Sunday Telegraph: Shell's auditors in firing line as US lawyers prepare class
action: “Shell had ignored internal warnings for
several years that it was overstating its reserves"
Sunday Telegraph: Shell in Hell
The
Observer: We all pay price for murky gas market: “Shell's £84 million fine for
falsifying its gas and oil reserve statements”
THE BUSINESS: Regulators must bring Shell directors
to book: “a deliberate attempt by Shell, over a
number of years, not just a few months, to overstate their oil and gas
reserves.”
Daily Express: FAT CATS REWARD: SIR PHILIP Watts: His deputy, Dutchman Walter
van der Vijver, repeatedly warned him of the overstatement and finally exploded
in an angry e-mail last November that he was "sick and tired of lying about the
extent of our reserves".
Sunday Times: Shell plans bonus to rally workforce:
“some staff in the exploration and production division had oil-reserves
replacement as one of the targets that determined their pay.”
The Scotsman: Concerns over potential £3m windfall: “Ensuing investigations by
the US Securities and Exchanges Commission and the UK Financial Services
Authority revealed that the oil major had been over-inflating its reserves since
1998, implicating the company’s top management in the scandal.”
Stuff.co.nz: Oil finds fuel shareholders' bid against
Shell: “to press their long-running $23 million insider trading case
against Shell.”: “The High Court has already ruled
the small shareholders had a case to take against Shell.
That decision was upheld by the Appeal Court.”
Monday 30 August,
2004 (UK BANK HOLIDAY)
The Scotsman:
Shell knew of error in reserves in 1998: “AUDITORS at Royal Dutch/Shell,
the British-Dutch energy group, warned the company as early as 1998 that its
reserves figures may have been overstated…”
The Scotsman: Auditors dragged into
Shell lawsuit: “role of auditors KPMG and
PricewaterhouseCoopers in the scandal
that wiped £2.9 billion off Shell’s market capitalisation in one day.”
Daily Telegraph: Shell will abolish 'discovery
bonus' “Crisis-hit Shell is scrapping a
controversial scheme which links staff pay levels to the amount of oil and gas
employees find.”: “latest attempt by Shell to
restore its reputation”
The
Times: Shell boss pours oil on troubled water: “the
scathing reports, in which the FSA accused Shell of
announcing false oil-reserve figures since as far back as 1998 again drove
investors to rage that not enough was being done to restore credibility.”
The Guardian: £17m
Shell shock was just an early broadside in FSA war
on abuse: “Shell's action was made more serious because false or misleading
announcements on reserves were made from 1998 to 2003. Even though
Shell had indications and warnings from 2000 to
2003 that figures for proved reserves were incorrect, its actions continued.”
Financial Times: Royal Dutch/Shell to revise staff
bonus scheme: “The scandal prompted the resignation of three senior executives,
investigations by US, UK and Dutch regulators, a criminal probe by the US
Department of Justice and investor lawsuits.”
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: Shell Plans Team
Performance Bonus Scheme From January: “intended to help rebuild the company's
credibility.”
Planet Ark: Russian Oil Project to Be Vetted for Whale Threat: “the
International Whaling Commission last month warned energy exploration could kill
off the 100 or so remaining gray whales on the oil-rich shelf near Russia's
Pacific coast”
Tuesday 31 August,
2004
Daily Telegraph: Boards beware: the
road to Shell was paved with 'good' intentions:
“This being Shell, everything was systematic, and
was approved at the highest level, and had been going on for years.”: “On
top of all this comes the loss to Shell's reputation - its ultimate hidden
reserve.”: “It will have to be rebuilt and earned, and that takes time, if it
can be done at all.”
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL:
Shell Sheds Refineries, Gas Stations: “Even after
this year's headline-grabbing scandal over its oil reserves, most people still
best know Anglo-Dutch oil company Royal Dutch/Shell
Group by the scallop-shell logo”: “a lot fewer
people will be seeing this iconic emblem in the future”
The Scotsman.com:
Shell Abandons 'Self First' Bonus Culture: "Shell
was found by the Financial Services Authority in the UK and the Securities and
Exchange Commission in the US to have committed market abuse and breached
listing rules by misleading the market over the extent of its reserves."
FILE CURRENTLY ENDS AT END OF AUGUST 2004
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