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| Shell’s technology centre in Amsterdam. Photo: Shell Media Library Shell |
Shell has
paid no tax on its profits booked in the Netherlands for years, Trouw reported
on Thursday, quoting unnamed company and other sources.
The company, which
earns ‘billions of euros’ on Dutch soil, uses legal deductions to minimise its
tax bill here, Trouw said, a claim which the paper says is backed up by an
internal document from the Dutch finance ministry.
Over the past 10 years,
Shell’s net profits have ranged from €2bn to €55, most of which is earned
abroad. In the Netherlands, the headquarter operations, roadside petrol
stations, the Pernis refinery and the Moerdijk chemicals plant added up to net profit
of €1.3bn last year.
NAM, the gas joint venture between Shell and ExxonMobil,
is not included in the national book-keeping.
‘Various sources’ have
highlighted two ways in which Shell is able to polish away any corporation
taxes, Trouw said. One involves using legal deductions such as interest on
loans made to invest abroad.
The second allows Shell to deduct losses booked
abroad, such as on exploration, from the Dutch profits.
A spokesman for Shell
told Trouw it is not true to say the company pays no tax on its profits in the
Netherlands. However, he declined to say if this tax is paid by NAM, which does
not publish an annual report.

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