Why big oil is wading into lithium
What black gold and the white metal have in common
BP AND SHELL, two British oil giants, have long sunk cash into solar and wind farms. Their rivals elsewhere have mostly stuck to their drilling. Investors have rewarded single-mindedness. ExxonMobil, an American firm unapologetically wedded to the black stuff, is worth $510bn, half as much again as the British duo combined. Its share price is up by 50% in the past five years, compared with a rise of 10% for Shell and a fall of 13% for BP.
This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Move over, big dirt”
Business June 29th 2024
- Is the revival of Paris in peril?
- European millionaires seek a safe harbour from populism
- A new lab and a new paper reignite an old AI debate
- Why everyone should think like a lawyer
- Why big oil is wading into lithium
- Boom times are back for container shipping
- Who shaved $250bn from Kweichow Moutai’s market value?
- Is artificial intelligence making big tech too big?
Discover more
Elon Musk’s xAI goes after OpenAI
The fight is turning nasty
How to behave in lifts: an office guide
Life in an elevator
Donald Trump’s victory has boosted shares in private-prison companies
A hard line means hard cash
Gautam Adani faces bribery charges in America
Prosecutors allege one of India’s richest men paid off local officials
Nvidia’s boss dismisses fears that AI has hit a wall
But it’s “urgent” to get to the next level, Jensen Huang tells The Economist
Does Dallas offer a vision of America’s future?
The Texan city embodies the allure of small government