ConocoPhillips bets $23 bln on U.S. shale oil as rivals retreat

Despite growing shareholder pressure for climate action, ConocoPhillips chief executive Ryan Lance has doubled down on oil with a second major acquisition.
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Reuters – ConocoPhillips Chief Executive Ryan Lance on Monday doubled down on U.S. shale and the world’s continued demand for oil with his second blockbuster acquisition in less than a year.

His $9.5 billion purchase of Royal Dutch Shell’s West Texas properties, nine months after closing a $13.3 billion deal for Concho Resources, puts the company’s future squarely in shale after exiting Canada’s oil sands, U.S. offshore and British North Sea fields.

But the acquisition does not sit well with environmentalists, who this year pushed Conoco to address customers’ emissions from using its fuels. In May, 58% of shareholders voted in favor of a non-binding petition to set reduction targets including from products.

“Buying fossil fuel assets is exactly the opposite of what investors actually want,” Mark van Baal, founder of Dutch advocacy group Follow This, said in a phone interview. “Eventually he will have to listen,” he said.

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