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Posts from ‘June, 2009’

Company defends security operations at Corrib gas sites

SHELL EP Ireland yesterday defended the ongoing security operation at its Corrib gas sites in north Mayo on the final day of a Bord Pleanála hearing into the development.

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Oil giant Marathon sells interest in Corrib gas field for $400m

US OIL company Marathon is selling its share of the Corrib natural gas field off the west coast to Canadian rival Vermilion in a deal potentially worth $400 million (€285 million).

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Nigeria rebels say hit Shell site despite amnesty

REUTERS

Fri Jun 26, 2009 1:52am EDT

LAGOS, June 26 (Reuters) – Nigeria’s main militant group said on Friday it had blown up a well-head in a Royal Dutch Shell (RDSa.L) oil field in Delta state overnight, hours after President Umaru Yar’Adua announced an amnesty offer for rebels.

The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) said it attacked the well-head in the Afremo oil field because the military had gone on a “punitive expedition” in Delta state shortly after the amnesty proclamation.

It was not immediately possible to independently verify whether there was an attack or a military offensive. (Reporting by Nick Tattersall, editing by Ralph Gowling)

© Thomson Reuters 2009 All rights reserved

REUTERS ARTICLE

Oil Rises a Second Day on Equity Gains, Shell Pipeline Attack

Militants said yesterday they attacked a Royal Dutch Shell Plc pipeline supplying an export terminal in Nigeria, Africa’s largest producer.

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Just the man for BP: a boss with no oil in his bones

An industry outsider, a foreigner and an oil novice with a critical eye may be a good thing. Royal Dutch Shell thought as much when it hired Jorma Ollila, the former Nokia boss, to run its boardroom…

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Carl-Henric Svanberg is just the man for the job – Scout’s honour

We may at last have a chance of winning Wimbledon but it is a bit of a blow to the national self-esteem that we can’t find a Brit to chair BP.

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Shell’s botched attempt to seize its own Internet domain name

By John Donovan

Since we have many new American visitors, we thought some might be interested and amused by the story of how Shell management attempted in proceedings launched via The World Intellectual Property Organisation to seize three Shell related domain names including the domain name for this website – royaldutchshellplc.com.

This happens to be the precise dotcom domain name for the unified company Royal Dutch Shell Plc. 

It was of course an uneven contest with Shell and its army of 650 in-house lawyers, including Shell Legal Director Richard Wiseman on one side and an 88 year old 2nd World War veteran, Alfred Donovan (my father) on the other, who had no legal representation. Shell lost the action on all three domain names.

This is perhaps unsurprising in view of its litigation track record with us. We had already fought 6 High Court actions and a County Court action with Shell, which never won a single case. Wiseman led the Shell legal team; all of the actions were settled out of court by Shell. In each case, Shell caved in and put forward settlement proposals. 

Wiseman, who admitted breaching professional rules and using undercover activity against us during the litigation, was subsequently elevated to the position of Chief Ethics and Compliance Officer of Royal Dutch Shell Plc. 

How did we end up with the dotcom domain name for Royal Dutch Shell Plc? Ask Wiseman who has publicly boasted he was the conductor of the legal orchestra responsible for creating the unified company out of the ashes of the Shell Transport/Royal Dutch structure destroyed by the reserves fraud.

DOMAIN NAME BATTLE IN 2005

SHELL INTERNATIONAL INTERNATIONAL PETROLEUM COMPANY LIMITED v. ALFRED DONOVAN

Domain name proceedings for…

www.royaldutchshellplc.com

www.royaldutchshellgroup.com

www.tellshell.org

Shell Complaint to World Intellectual Property Organisation

Shell Complaint Exhibit Supplied to WIPO

Donovan Response to proceedings

WIPO Notification

WIPO Decision Notification

Domain name decision published on the net by The World Intellectual Property Org in August 2005: http://arbiter.wipo.int/domains/decisions/html/2005/d2005-0538.html

RELATED ARTICLES

THE WALL STREET JOURNALShell Wages Legal Fight Over Web Domain Name: 2 June 2005:http://shell2004.com/week22/shell_wages_legal_fight_over_web2june05.htm

Bloomberg: Shell in Legal Battle Over Name of Web Site, Journal Reports: 2 June 2005

The Times: 21/06/2005http://business.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,8210-1662343,00.html

THE NEW YORK TIMES: Shell Shareholders to Back Unification: “Another dampener on Shell’s biggest corporate overhaul since the two holding firms tied up in 1907, is a spat over the rights to the web domain “royaldutchshellplc.com.” Disgruntled shareholder Alfred Donovan beat Shell to register the domain name. Shell has sued Donovan for the rights to the domain but while the matter plays out, Donovan uses the site to lambaste Shell management. Posted Saturday 25 June 2005http://shell2004.com/week25/newyorktimes25june2005.htm

(Variations of the New York Times/Reuters article mentioning the domain name battle were also published by The Washington Post, MSN Money, Yahoo, The Gulf Times of Qatar, The Boston Globe and money.iwon.com, all in June 2005)

The Times 16/08/2005http://business.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,8210-1736270,00.html

AN ATTEMPT by Royal Dutch Shell to claim the websiteroyaldutchshellplc.com from an 88-year-old veteran who uses it to publish material that criticises the oil giant has failed. The Geneva-based WIPO Arbitration and Mediation Centre has ruled in favour of Alfred Donovan, who has said that he will not relinquish the site until the company gets rid of all the management he deems responsible for its various recent woes, notably the reserves scandal.

Oil edges up towards $69 on Nigeria pipeline raids

SINGAPORE (Reuters) – Oil rose toward $69 on Thursday, after Nigeria’s main militant group raided a Royal Dutch Shell pipeline and disrupted a major export terminal, recouping losses caused by hefty builds in U.S. fuel stocks.

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BP Taps Ericsson’s Svanberg as Chairman

BP PLC said Thursday that it appointed Carl-Henric Svanberg, chief executive of Swedish telecommunications-equipment maker Telefon AB L.M. Ericsson, as its chairman, finally bringing to an end the protracted search for a replacement for current Chairman Peter Sutherland.

[Carl-Henric Svanberg]AFP/Getty Images 

Carl-Henric Svanberg

The move mirrors the appointment of Jorma Ollila, then CEO of Finnish mobile-handset maker Nokia, as chairman of Royal Dutch Shell PLC, BP’s rival, in August 2005.

It shows how eager western majors are to position themselves as technology companies rather than straight-forward oil-and-gas producers, especially at a time when Big Oil is under pressure to help fight global warming by investing in green energy and high-tech solutions to climate change such as carbon capture and storage.

But the choice of someone from outside the energy industry, with no experience of running a major oil-and-gas company could raise some shareholders’ eyebrows.

The process of finding a replacement for Mr. Sutherland suffered a setback last year when BP shareholders came out against one of the leading candidates, Paul Skinner, then chairman of miner Rio Tinto PLC, because of his support for Rio’s $19.5 billion fund-raising deal with Aluminum Corporation of China Ltd.

Mr. Svanberg, 57, who is also chairman of Sony Ericsson and a nonexecutive director of Melker Schörling AB, will join the BP board as chairman-designate and a nonexecutive director on Sept. 1, 2009, the company said in a statement. He will succeed Mr. Sutherland as chairman on Jan. 1, 2010.

BP CEO Tony Hayward called Mr. Svanberg “a businessman of international stature who is recognized for his transformation of Ericsson.”

“Our shared views on many aspects of global business give me great confidence that we will work very effectively together on the next phase of BP’s progress,” he said in a statement.

Since Mr. Hayward took over as CEO of BP in 2007, he has embarked on a major restructuring of the company with the aim of trimming costs and improving safety and efficiency. “We are coming to the end of chapter one, restoring the fortunes and financial performance of BP,” Mr. Hayward said. “Carl-Henric is coming in as we embark on chapter two … creating a 21st century company.”

Ericsson said Mr. Svanberg will be succeeded by Finance Chief and Executive Vice President Hans Vestberg. Mr. Svanberg will remain on the Ericsson Board. Major shareholders InvestorAB and Industrivarden AB have said they want him to remain as a board member long-term.

—James Herron and Dominic Chopping contributed to this article.Write to Guy Chazan at guy.chazan@wsj.com

BP names Svanberg as chairman

BP said on Thursday that it had appointed Carl-Henric Svanberg, chief executive of Swedish telecoms equipment maker Ericsson, to take the place of Peter Sutherland as chairman of the UK oil major.

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