- Press Release
Shell’s £13.6 billion annual profits could cover UK’s £2.8bn bill for extreme weather damages almost five times over, analysis shows
Greenpeace activists stage protest outside Shell HQ contrasting extreme weather damage costs to oil giant’s profits – photographs available here
Shell’s 2025 annual profits statement of £13.6 billion stands in stark contrast to the misery suffered last year by communities across the UK – who endured successive storms, floods, wildfires and drought – amounting to losses and damages exceeding £2.8 billion.
Following the profits announcement, Greenpeace activists staged a protest outside Shell’s London HQ, holding giant figures comparing Shell’s annual profit with the UK’s 2025 bill for damages caused by extreme weather.
In 2025, insurance pay-outs of £936 million were made to thousands of homeowners and businesses recovering from weather-related property damage, according to the latest available data; while the UK’s hottest spring and summer on record proved disastrous for farmers whose crop losses exceeded £800 million. The impacts from wildfires were felt across the country with damages climbing beyond £478 million; meanwhile local councils are facing spiralling costs spending on average £566 million on clear-up operations in the wake of flooding events.
UK damages are a drop in the ocean when it comes to the costs of extreme weather events globally – with the 10 most expensive disasters of 2025 totalling over £90 billion in estimated losses. This is still a fraction of the true cost of last year’s extreme weather which remain hidden.
In response to Shell’s profits announcement, Maja Darlington, Greenpeace climate campaigner said:
“Shell’s dirty profits are an insult to communities who have been on the frontlines of extreme weather events fuelled by climate-wrecking oil and gas emissions. The oil giant’s profits could cover the UK’s £2.8bn climate damage bill from floods, fires, storms and droughts almost five times over.
“Extreme weather, and the damage it is causing, will only get worse as fossil fuel-driven climate change intensifies. It is reprehensible that Shell is allowed to act with impunity. Governments must make these oil giants pay for the climate chaos they have created. While they wallow in their profits, home-owners, shop-keepers, farmers and firefighters are paying the price.”
Ends
Contact: Greenpeace UK Press Office –press.uk@greenpeace.org or 020 7865 8255
Notes to editors:
Photos of the Greenpeace protest outside Shell are available here
Wildfire damages calculation based on the £10,000 estimated cost per hectare burned as identified in Moorland Association research paper and the area using data from Copernicus .