Big Oil’s trading black box
Energy trading is an opaque business, but automated and centralised data processing systems could help lift the lid on the market’s best prices
Of the thousands of investors that attended the AGMs of Shell and BP this year, many may have hoped to gain greater insight into the extent to which energy trading has contributed to the oil majors’ bumper profits. Yet again, they will have been left without a great amount of insight. The fact is the precise impacts that trading divisions have on the bottom lines of the energy titans are hard to accurately glean. Energy trading has been called ‘black box’ of European energy conglomerates—the opaque, yet apparently highly lucrative, arm of the business of which shareholders have little understanding. This begs the question: why keep investors in the dark? After all, with big oil embarking o
Also in this section
5 February 2025
With new capacity, buyers must navigate sanctioned Russian crude, a return to traditional OPEC barrels and diversity of supply
4 February 2025
This premier event is poised to address the evolving technology and investment demands of North America’s thriving chemical and pharmaceutical sectors
4 February 2025
The threat of Trump tariffs and the departure of Trudeau have sharpened the domestic political focus on boosting the oil and gas industry
3 February 2025
Alaska has been engulfed by a lack of consistent policymaking and highlights the challenges financing energy projects in the US