Showa Shell HQ, Tokyo
|
|
Public limited company | |
Traded as | : |
Industry | Oil and gas |
Founded | April 11, 1900 (original) January 1, 1985 (merger) |
Headquarters | Daiba Frontier Bldg, 2-3-2, Daiba, Minato-ku, Tokyo 135-8074 |
Area served
|
Japan and Worldwide |
Key people
|
Jun Arai (CEO) Shigeya Kato (Chairman) |
Products | Petroleum, Natural Gas, Chemicals, LPG, Electric Generation, Solar Power Plant, and Other petrochemicals |
Revenue | JP¥ 2,953 billion (2013), aprx US$ 29.53 billion |
Number of employees
|
953 |
Parent | Royal Dutch Shell |
Website | Showa Shell Sekiyu |
Showa Shell Sekiyu Kabushiki Kaisha (昭和シェル石油株式会社 Showa Shell Sekiyu Kabushiki Kaisha) is the base of Royal Dutch Shell group in Japan. It was formed by the merger of Showa Oil Company and Shell Sekiyu which was begun around 1876 in Yokohama by Samuel Samuel & Co, the predecessor of Shell Group today. Showa Shell Sekiyu provides oil and energy solution business in Japan and worldwide.
In 1900, Samuel Samuel & Co, which had started in Japan in 1876 by Samuel Samuel as an international trading business in Yokohama, created an independent petroleum division. It subsequently set up Rising Sun Petroleum Co. Ltd (which later became Shell Petroleum) to expand its distribution channels of candles and kerosene for lamps.
Before long, Samuel Samuel & Co, which expanded as Shell Transport, merged with Royal Dutch to form Royal Dutch/Shell. Rising Sun Petroleum continued to expand its operations as the base of the Shell Group in Japan.
At the same time, oilfields were discovered in Japan along the coast of the Japan Sea primarily in Niigata Prefecture. Hayama Sekiyu and Niitsu Sekiyu, the predecessors of Showa Sekiyu, were established amidst the production of domestic petroleum.
In 1947, Rising Sun Petroleum was renamed Shell Sekiyu and resumed business. Starting with a capital agreement between the Shell Group and Showa Sekiyu, domestic oil companies deepened the collaboration with foreign oil companies, and before long were preparing to be a key industry to support the energy needs of the impending recovery period.
Shell Sekiyu and Showa Sekiyu, which had played crucial roles since the dawn of Japan's oil industry, merged in 1985 to form Showa Shell Sekiyu.
Showa Shell Sekiyu refines crude oil imported from around the world at Group refineries in Japan (Yokkaichi, Keihin, and Yamaguchi; crude oil processing capacity: 445,000 barrels/day), and sells it to customers as gasoline and other oil products at about 3,460 (as of Dec 31, 2013) service stations (SS) throughout Japan. In addition, Showa Shell Sekiyu sells oil products including industrial fuels, LPG, chemicals, lubricants, and bitumen, and utilize the Shell Group's global network to export oil products.
(1) Solar Business
Showa Shell Sekiyu has developed the technology for manufacturing next-generation CIS thin-film solar panels. The production plants owned by its subsidiary Solar Frontier K.K. have a total annual production capacity of about 1GW, and its CIS modules have been sold in Europe, the U.S., the Middle East, and Asia, as well as Japan. Solar Frontier K.K. is providing a wide range of services from plant engineering to plant operation and further to selling those plants to end-users or investors in relation to the solar power plant development.