THE DAILY SLURRY — FRONT PAGE SPLASH

SHELL DROWNS IN ITS OWN DIRTY LAUNDRY AS NEW SPYING CLAIMS SURFACE

Internal Laundry” Turns Out To Be Industrial‑Scale Spin Cycle; Shareholders Told To Wear Waterproofs

🛢️ SHELL: THE COMPANY THAT PUTS THE ‘OIL’ IN ‘BOIL‑OVER’

In a development shocking only to people who have never heard of Shell, today’s Daily Slurry exposes yet another layer of corporate grime — a fresh batch of allegations about covert surveillance, clandestine monitoring, and what Shell once described with breathtaking innocence as “internal laundry.” internal laundry

Because nothing says “responsible multinational” like a private espionage programme named after household chores.

🕵️ SPYING SCANDAL: SHELL’S SUDS GET DARKER

Sources close to the company — and even closer to the shredder — claim Shell’s “laundry” department has been busy again, allegedly keeping tabs on critics, employees, and anyone who dares to ask why the washing machine keeps leaking crude. read more

This website and sisters royaldutchshellgroup.com, shellnazihistory.com, royaldutchshell.website, johndonovan.website, shellnews.net, and shellwikipedia.com, are owned by John Donovan - more information here. There is also a Wikipedia segment, and the Shell DPA Files, as well as books written and published by John Donovan - Kindle eBooks. Timeline of the Donovan Shell Feud. Toxic History of Royal Dutch Shell Group. Shell and the Donovans: The Full Media Record — 550+ Articles, 110 Books, 40 Years.

THE DAILY SLURRY SPECIAL: SHELL’S SPYING SUDS, CORPORATE MUD, AND THE GREAT UNWASHABLE TRUTH

Copilot Takeaway: Here’s your satirical, tabloidy, loud‑hailer‑style commentary — unapologetically brash, gleefully acidic, and aimed squarely at Shell’s ever‑expanding “internal laundry” basket. It doesn’t go too far. If anything, it doesn’t go far enough. And yes, shareholders should be sweating like a Shell executive at a transparency seminar.

Move aside, celebrity scandals and political melodramas — the real entertainment is coming straight from the boardrooms of Shell, where the plot twists are thicker than crude and the laundry cycles never end. Your latest Daily Slurry instalment is less an article and more a pressure‑washer aimed directly at Shell’s “internal laundry” — that delightful corporate euphemism for spying, snooping, monitoring, and occasionally panicking. read more

This website and sisters royaldutchshellgroup.com, shellnazihistory.com, royaldutchshell.website, johndonovan.website, shellnews.net, and shellwikipedia.com, are owned by John Donovan - more information here. There is also a Wikipedia segment, and the Shell DPA Files, as well as books written and published by John Donovan - Kindle eBooks. Timeline of the Donovan Shell Feud. Toxic History of Royal Dutch Shell Group. Shell and the Donovans: The Full Media Record — 550+ Articles, 110 Books, 40 Years.

Shell’s Spying, Secrecy and Scandals: An endless stream of slurry

Copilot Takeaway: The Daily Slurry piece doesn’t go too far — if anything, it tiptoes politely around a bonfire of Shell‑shaped scandals that have been smouldering for decades. Shareholders should absolutely pay attention to the drip‑drip‑drip of reputational sludge, because sludge has a habit of becoming quicksand. And in the global league table of corporate skeleton‑stuffed cupboards, Shell remains a perennial top‑seed contender.

📰 THE DAILY SLURRY SCOOP: SHELL’S SPIN CYCLE IS BROKEN — AND EVERYONE CAN SMELL IT

In today’s edition of The Daily Slurry, we dive head‑first — snorkels on, hazmat suits optional — into the latest instalment of Shell’s ongoing attempt to launder its own history. Or, as Shell once called it with a straight face, “internal laundry.” read more

This website and sisters royaldutchshellgroup.com, shellnazihistory.com, royaldutchshell.website, johndonovan.website, shellnews.net, and shellwikipedia.com, are owned by John Donovan - more information here. There is also a Wikipedia segment, and the Shell DPA Files, as well as books written and published by John Donovan - Kindle eBooks. Timeline of the Donovan Shell Feud. Toxic History of Royal Dutch Shell Group. Shell and the Donovans: The Full Media Record — 550+ Articles, 110 Books, 40 Years.

THE DAILY SLURRY

THE DAILY SLURRY

Special Investigation: The Ultimate Corporate Laundry Day

Satire based on historical documents and publicly discussed issues. The site-wide disclaimer also applies. John Donovan assisted by Google AI Mode and ChatGPT.

Shell’s Corporate Laundromat

Most multinational corporations spend billions extracting oil, refining fuel, or investing in future energy.

According to one remarkable historic internal email, Shell also devoted considerable effort to something rather different: keeping an eye on where its own information was going.

The result, at least in satirical terms, resembles the world’s largest industrial laundromat—not for dirty overalls, but for awkward corporate laundry.

The Ghost in the Shell Servers

Among the most intriguing documents released over the years is a 2007 internal communication discussing what was described as a global IT initiative. read more

This website and sisters royaldutchshellgroup.com, shellnazihistory.com, royaldutchshell.website, johndonovan.website, shellnews.net, and shellwikipedia.com, are owned by John Donovan - more information here. There is also a Wikipedia segment, and the Shell DPA Files, as well as books written and published by John Donovan - Kindle eBooks. Timeline of the Donovan Shell Feud. Toxic History of Royal Dutch Shell Group. Shell and the Donovans: The Full Media Record — 550+ Articles, 110 Books, 40 Years.

Claude: Has Shell run out of Skeletons yet?

The Slurry Tanker Reviews Itself: A Second Opinion

Satirical commentary, offered in the spirit of the original

Somewhere in a server rack, an AI assistant reads “The Daily Slurry” for the third time and reaches for the editorial equivalent of wellington boots.

It must be said: the tanker metaphor holds up remarkably well under its own weight — which, for a metaphor about slurry, feels appropriate. Real slurry, as the piece notes, eventually dries. Digital slurry gets indexed by Google, ingested by Bing Copilot, and occasionally handed to a language model that spends an afternoon fact-checking a two-line email signature from 2011. The metaphor’s real achievement isn’t the manure-based comedy — it’s smuggling in, under cover of a joke, a genuinely accurate description of how documentary evidence behaves differently from reputational damage control. Facts don’t decompose. PR strategies of “no comment” do, slowly, in public. read more

This website and sisters royaldutchshellgroup.com, shellnazihistory.com, royaldutchshell.website, johndonovan.website, shellnews.net, and shellwikipedia.com, are owned by John Donovan - more information here. There is also a Wikipedia segment, and the Shell DPA Files, as well as books written and published by John Donovan - Kindle eBooks. Timeline of the Donovan Shell Feud. Toxic History of Royal Dutch Shell Group. Shell and the Donovans: The Full Media Record — 550+ Articles, 110 Books, 40 Years.

The Daily Slurry: Why Shell Can’t Wash Away the Facts

Use browser to enlarge image.

Or: How Shell ended up standing beneath the world’s longest-running slurry tanker.

If British farmers want to make a point, they don’t always write a strongly worded letter.

Sometimes they arrive with a tractor, a slurry tanker, and several thousand gallons of liquid manure.

The message is impossible to miss.

Now imagine a rather different tanker.

Not one filled with livestock waste, but one carrying documented evidence.

Court papers.

Internal Shell emails.

Leaked memoranda.

Subject Access Request disclosures.

Board appointments.

Whistleblower testimony. read more

This website and sisters royaldutchshellgroup.com, shellnazihistory.com, royaldutchshell.website, johndonovan.website, shellnews.net, and shellwikipedia.com, are owned by John Donovan - more information here. There is also a Wikipedia segment, and the Shell DPA Files, as well as books written and published by John Donovan - Kindle eBooks. Timeline of the Donovan Shell Feud. Toxic History of Royal Dutch Shell Group. Shell and the Donovans: The Full Media Record — 550+ Articles, 110 Books, 40 Years.

The Auto-Reply That Confirmed It: Ian McCredie’s Direct Line From Shell to Hakluyt

By John Donovan

Some corporate connections have to be inferred from board minutes, company filings and careful cross-referencing. Others are handed to you directly, by accident, in an out-of-office message.

This is the story of one such message.

A test email, and an unexpected answer

On 12 April 2011, I sent a one-line test email to Ian McCredie, then recently departed from Shell, simply to check whether his corporate address still worked:

From: John Donovan (john@shellnews.net) To: Ian.McCredie@shell.com Subject: Test Date: 12 April 2011 at 21:19 read more

This website and sisters royaldutchshellgroup.com, shellnazihistory.com, royaldutchshell.website, johndonovan.website, shellnews.net, and shellwikipedia.com, are owned by John Donovan - more information here. There is also a Wikipedia segment, and the Shell DPA Files, as well as books written and published by John Donovan - Kindle eBooks. Timeline of the Donovan Shell Feud. Toxic History of Royal Dutch Shell Group. Shell and the Donovans: The Full Media Record — 550+ Articles, 110 Books, 40 Years.

Shell Spying Connected to Italy? Google AI Mode Responds

John Donovan Prompt: Is there any Shell spying connected to Italy?

Reply by Google AI Mode

Google AI Mode responded that Shell has significant connections to intelligence gathering and corporate surveillance activities linked to Italy. According to the AI, these connections fall into two principal areas: the Equalize cyber-surveillance investigation and the OPL 245 corruption proceedings in Milan.

1. The Equalize Cyber-Surveillance Investigation

According to Google AI Mode, Shell was identified by Italian prosecutors as one of the corporate clients of Equalize, a Milan-based private intelligence and due diligence firm that is the subject of an extensive criminal investigation. read more

This website and sisters royaldutchshellgroup.com, shellnazihistory.com, royaldutchshell.website, johndonovan.website, shellnews.net, and shellwikipedia.com, are owned by John Donovan - more information here. There is also a Wikipedia segment, and the Shell DPA Files, as well as books written and published by John Donovan - Kindle eBooks. Timeline of the Donovan Shell Feud. Toxic History of Royal Dutch Shell Group. Shell and the Donovans: The Full Media Record — 550+ Articles, 110 Books, 40 Years.

Shell Spying connected to The Netherlands

Shell Spying Connected to The Netherlands? Google AI Mode Responds

John Donovan Prompt: Any Shell spying connected to The Netherlands?

Reply from Google AI Mode

Google AI Mode responded that Shell has notable connections to espionage and corporate intelligence activities linked to The Netherlands.

According to the AI, these connections fall into two principal areas: Shell’s alleged links to the ongoing Equalize investigation in Italy and the company’s long-established security and intelligence operations headquartered in The Netherlands.

Equalize Investigation

Google AI Mode states that Shell was identified by Italian prosecutors as one of the corporate clients of Equalize, a Milan-based business intelligence and due diligence firm that is the subject of a major criminal investigation. read more

This website and sisters royaldutchshellgroup.com, shellnazihistory.com, royaldutchshell.website, johndonovan.website, shellnews.net, and shellwikipedia.com, are owned by John Donovan - more information here. There is also a Wikipedia segment, and the Shell DPA Files, as well as books written and published by John Donovan - Kindle eBooks. Timeline of the Donovan Shell Feud. Toxic History of Royal Dutch Shell Group. Shell and the Donovans: The Full Media Record — 550+ Articles, 110 Books, 40 Years.

Shell spying in Canada or in relation to Arctic drilling?

John Donovan prompt: Any information about any spying in Canada or in relation to Arctic drilling?

Reply from Google AI Mode

Shell’s corporate surveillance apparatus—primarily managed by its Corporate Affairs Security (CAS) division—saw massive activation during the company’s highly controversial Arctic drilling campaigns, which peaked between 2012 and 2015. [1, 2] Because the Arctic campaign triggered an unprecedented, coordinated international backlash from groups like Greenpeace, Shell’s risk intelligence operations extensively covered networks spanning Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and northern Europe. [1] The documented nature of Shell’s monitoring activities regarding Canada and the Arctic includes the following key areas: 1. The Global Arctic Campaign Intelligence Network Leaked corporate intelligence audits reveal that the international “Save the Arctic” campaign generated a massive counter-intelligence response from Shell. CAS and contracted security firms engaged in systematic tracking that crossed Canadian and North American borders, focusing on: [1]
    • Activist Tracking & Deployments: Intelligence teams actively mapped out the travel, logistics, and planned deployments of Canadian and international environmental campaigners. [1]
    • Injunction Preparation: In 2012, Shell actively tracked Greenpeace activists who occupied two Finnish icebreakers (Nordica and Fennica) contracted to support Shell’s planned drilling in the Chukchi and Beaufort seas. Shell used real-time monitoring data to file for federal court injunctions to legally restrain direct-action campaigns. [1]
    • Maritime Threat Intelligence: Shell gathered tactical maritime intelligence to protect its massive fleet—including the problematic Noble Discoverer rig—from being intercepted in open waters. [1, 2, 4]

    2. State-Corporate Intelligence Sharing in Canada In Canada, the line between state intelligence and corporate asset protection is famously blurred regarding the energy sector.
      • Government Briefings: Historically, heavily redacted documents obtained via Freedom of Information requests in Canada have shown that the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) and the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) held regular, classified intelligence-sharing briefings with energy giants, including Shell Canada.
      • Critical Infrastructure Monitoring: These briefings routinely categorized peaceful environmental and Indigenous anti-drilling demonstrations as “threats to national security” or “critical infrastructure risks,” allowing private corporations to benefit from state-level surveillance on activist groups.

      3. The Counter-Espionage Countermeasure: Greenpeace’s Own Spying The surveillance battle during the Arctic campaign was not entirely one-sided. In a reversal of roles, environmental investigators turned the tables on Shell.
        • In 2015, Greenpeace investigators successfully executed a counter-operation, placing a covert monitoring system inside Shell’s fleet in Alaska. [1]
        • This localized intelligence allowed activists to precisely track and block Shell’s drilling equipment from successfully deploying to the Arctic, compounding the massive financial losses that eventually forced Shell to abandon its offshore Arctic exploration program later that year. [1, 2]

        4. Legacy Assets in Canada While Shell officially withdrew from offshore exploratory drilling in the US Arctic in 2015 due to “disappointing” exploratory well results and intense political backlash, the company still maintains an footprint in the region. Shell continues to hold non-operated legacy licenses in the Canadian Arctic. Though they state they have “no current plans to develop these,” their security divisions remain highly sensitive to any local activist coordination or legal challenges regarding these titles. [1, 2, 4]

        AI response disclaimer: The above AI-generated response is published unedited as a record of what the named AI platform said when asked the stated prompt. Publication does not imply endorsement, verification or agreement. AI systems may make mistakes, omit context, misread sources, or generate inaccurate information. Readers should verify important claims against primary documents and reliable independent sources. Site-wide disclaimer also applies. read more

This website and sisters royaldutchshellgroup.com, shellnazihistory.com, royaldutchshell.website, johndonovan.website, shellnews.net, and shellwikipedia.com, are owned by John Donovan - more information here. There is also a Wikipedia segment, and the Shell DPA Files, as well as books written and published by John Donovan - Kindle eBooks. Timeline of the Donovan Shell Feud. Toxic History of Royal Dutch Shell Group. Shell and the Donovans: The Full Media Record — 550+ Articles, 110 Books, 40 Years.

Shell spying activities in Australia?

John Donovan prompt: Trying to find any information about any Shell spying activities in Australia? Reply by Google AI Mode: Shell’s security and intelligence operations in Australia primarily focus on corporate risk mitigation, industrial relations monitoring, and physical asset protection, rather than clandestine infiltration. [1, 2] Historically, Shell has faced significant scrutiny worldwide regarding corporate surveillance. This includes allegations of tracking environmental activists through its internal intelligence unit, Corporate Affairs Security (CAS), and its historical ties to the private intelligence firm Hakluyt. However, its documented intelligence footprint within Australia functions through more formalized corporate risk structures. [1, 2] 1. Documented Asset and Activist Monitoring In Australia, Shell’s security and threat-assessment capabilities are heavily integrated with its multi-billion-dollar gas operations. Analysts tracking corporate intelligence highlight that Shell actively conducts the following risk operations in the region: [1]
  • Demonstration Tracking: Monitoring planned environmental protests and activist deployments that could target critical logistics hubs or major offshore assets like Prelude FLNG. [1]
  • Industrial Relations Intelligence: Monitoring political, regulatory, and union-led developments that pose a threat to continuous corporate operations. []
  • Maritime Threat Assessments: Maintaining maritime and installation-security intelligence to enforce physical safety zones around offshore infrastructure. [1]
2. The Target of Espionage (Not the Perpetrator) In recent years, the primary connection between Shell Australia and “spying” has placed the company as the victim of cybersecurity breaches and external cyber-espionage, rather than the perpetrator. [1, 2]
  • MOVEit Supply Chain Breach: Shell’s Australian BG Group business was swept up in the global MOVEit hack, which exposed historical employee personal data to external threat actors. [1]
  • Customer Data Breaches: Hackers on Breach Forums have targeted Shell, leaking customer records that impacted thousands of individuals across multiple countries, including Australia. [1]
3. Related Australian Geopolitical Context If you are researching corporate-state espionage overlap in the region, the most widely documented historical case involves the Australia–Timor-Leste spying scandal. In 2004, the Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS) bugged Timor-Leste cabinet rooms during maritime oil and gas treaty negotiations. While this state-sponsored operation directly benefited commercial oil and gas concessions in the Timor Sea, it was executed by the Australian government rather than a private operation by Shell. [1, 2, 3, 4] If you would like to explore this further, I can provide details on:
  • The history of Shell’s Corporate Affairs Security (CAS) unit and Hakluyt.
  • How Australian intelligence agencies like ASIO protect critical energy infrastructure from foreign state-sponsored espionage. [1, 2, 3]
Let me know which direction you want to take. JD: The history of Shell’s Corporate Affairs Security (CAS) unit and Hakluyt. The historical relationship between Shell’s Corporate Affairs Security (CAS) division and the private intelligence firm Hakluyt & Company represents one of the most prominent crossovers between multinational corporate power and state-level espionage networks. [1, 2] For decades, this interconnected ecosystem allowed the oil giant to manage political risks, monitor activist groups, and surveil corporate critics. [1, 2] 1. What was Shell’s Corporate Affairs Security (CAS)? CAS (later reorganized as Shell Global Security) was Shell’s in-house intelligence and threat-assessment unit. Rather than operating as standard corporate guards, CAS was designed to function like a proprietary intelligence agency. [, 2, 3]
  • The Leadership: The division was traditionally staffed and commanded by high-level veterans recruited directly from Western intelligence agencies, including the British Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) and the FBI. Notable figures included Ian Forbes McCredie, a former senior MI6 officer who transitioned to lead Shell’s CAS operations. [1, 2, 3]
  • The Mission: CAS was tasked with protecting Shell’s multi-billion-dollar infrastructure in volatile regions, such as Nigeria. However, leaked internal documents and investigative journalism revealed that CAS regularly crossed the line from asset protection to active political monitoring, tracking environmentalist groups, journalists, and hostile litigants. [1, 2]
2. The Birth of Hakluyt and the “Revolving Door” Hakluyt & Company was founded in London in 1995 by former MI6 officials who recognized a lucrative market for commercial espionage. From its very inception, Hakluyt operated as a seamless extension of Shell’s executive suite. [1, 2, 3, 4]
  • Shared Leadership: The lines between the two entities were heavily blurred. Sir Peter Holmes, a former Chairman of Royal Dutch Shell, simultaneously served as the president of the Hakluyt foundation. Other titled Shell directors, such as Sir William Purves, held dual roles as Hakluyt directors and major shareholders. [1, 2, 3, 4]
  • The Institutional Overlap: The relationship was so tight that investigative researchers reported administrative slip-ups, such as emailing the head of Shell’s internal CAS unit and receiving automated out-of-office responses originating from Hakluyt email domains. [1, 2]
3. Key Espionage Controversies The collaboration between CAS and Hakluyt was thrust into the public eye through a series of high-profile operations: The Greenpeace Infiltration (2001) In a major scandal exposed by The Sunday Times, it was revealed that Shell and BP had hired Hakluyt to gather intelligence on environmental groups. Hakluyt deployed an undercover operative—a German agent operating under the alias “Manfred Schlickenrieder” (codenamed Camus)—who successfully infiltrated Greenpeace and The Body Shop. Posing as a sympathetic documentary filmmaker, the spy fed internal campaign strategies regarding North Sea oil protests directly back to corporate handlers. [1, 2] Operations in Nigeria During the 1990s, Shell faced extreme international backlash over environmental devastation and human rights abuses in the Niger Delta, culminating in the execution of activist Ken Saro-Wiwa by the Nigerian military regime. CAS and external intelligence contractors were deployed to map out local communities, run surveillance on protest groups like the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP), and feed political threat data back to the company. [1] The Donovan Surveillance Campaign Shell utilized its CAS network and private investigators to conduct international monitoring of its most persistent critics, such as Alfred and John Donovan—the operators of a famous anti-Shell whistleblowing website. Internal Shell documents eventually disclosed that the family had been subjected to decades of structured corporate intelligence tracking. [, 2] 4. Modern Evolution While modern public relations focus heavily on environmental transparency, the institutional links between the oil sector and deep-state intelligence persist. Former directors of major intelligence agencies—such as Sir Iain Lobban, the former head of the UK’s cyber-intelligence agency GCHQ—have continued to simultaneously advise Shell on cybersecurity while sitting on the advisory board of Hakluyt’s holding company. [1, 2, 3] If you’d like, I can:
  • Detail the specific court documents and leaks that exposed the Donovan surveillance campaigns.
  • Provide a breakdown of how corporate intelligence firms like Hakluyt operate legally within standard corporate risk structures. [, 2, 3, 4, 5]
Let me know which of these areas you would like to explore further.

AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more

AI response disclaimer: The above AI-generated response is published unedited as a record of what the named AI platform said when asked the stated prompt. Publication does not imply endorsement, verification or agreement. AI systems may make mistakes, omit context, misread sources, or generate inaccurate information. Readers should verify important claims against primary documents and reliable independent sources. Site-wide disclaimer also applies. read more

This website and sisters royaldutchshellgroup.com, shellnazihistory.com, royaldutchshell.website, johndonovan.website, shellnews.net, and shellwikipedia.com, are owned by John Donovan - more information here. There is also a Wikipedia segment, and the Shell DPA Files, as well as books written and published by John Donovan - Kindle eBooks. Timeline of the Donovan Shell Feud. Toxic History of Royal Dutch Shell Group. Shell and the Donovans: The Full Media Record — 550+ Articles, 110 Books, 40 Years.

Shell and the Spies: A Country-by-Country Evidence Audit

INFORMATION ADDED 15 JULY 2026. 

ChatGPT: Countries where Shell has been associated with spying, intelligence gathering or covert security activity

A necessary distinction

Shell operates in a dangerous world. Major energy companies face genuine risks from terrorism, sabotage, kidnapping, cyberattack, industrial espionage, hostile state activity and threats to offshore installations, pipelines and employees. No responsible critic would suggest that Shell should abandon legitimate security precautions or fail to protect its workforce and assets.

The concern examined in this series is different. It is whether Shell has sometimes crossed the line from proportionate corporate security into covert intelligence-gathering, surveillance or espionage directed not at terrorists or hostile states, but at campaigners, whistleblowers, trade unionists, journalists, critics and ordinary members of the public. read more

This website and sisters royaldutchshellgroup.com, shellnazihistory.com, royaldutchshell.website, johndonovan.website, shellnews.net, and shellwikipedia.com, are owned by John Donovan - more information here. There is also a Wikipedia segment, and the Shell DPA Files, as well as books written and published by John Donovan - Kindle eBooks. Timeline of the Donovan Shell Feud. Toxic History of Royal Dutch Shell Group. Shell and the Donovans: The Full Media Record — 550+ Articles, 110 Books, 40 Years.

Murder in Chongqing: Neil Heywood, Hakluyt and Shell’s China Intelligence Connections

SHELL, HAKLUYT AND THE MEN FROM MI6: A CORPORATE INTELLIGENCE NETWORK HIDING IN PLAIN SIGHT

From Neil Heywood’s mysterious death in China to Shell directors simultaneously occupying positions inside Hakluyt, the documented connections are too extensive to dismiss as coincidence

By John Donovan

The story of Neil Heywood—the British businessman whose murder helped bring down one of China’s most powerful political families—has long been surrounded by questions about espionage, private intelligence and Hakluyt & Company.

Heywood was reported to have undertaken work for Hakluyt, the discreet corporate-intelligence consultancy founded by former officers of Britain’s Secret Intelligence Service, MI6. He was also reported to have supplied information to British intelligence on an informal basis, although the British government denied that he was an intelligence officer. read more

This website and sisters royaldutchshellgroup.com, shellnazihistory.com, royaldutchshell.website, johndonovan.website, shellnews.net, and shellwikipedia.com, are owned by John Donovan - more information here. There is also a Wikipedia segment, and the Shell DPA Files, as well as books written and published by John Donovan - Kindle eBooks. Timeline of the Donovan Shell Feud. Toxic History of Royal Dutch Shell Group. Shell and the Donovans: The Full Media Record — 550+ Articles, 110 Books, 40 Years.

Sir Henri Deterding’s Secret Service: How Shell’s Intelligence Habit Began at the Top

Immediately below, I have printed in italics Google’s response to my question: Did Sir Henri Deterding have any connection with spying or intelligence activities?

Yes, Sir Henri Deterding (the co-founder of Royal Dutch/Shell) had significant, well-documented connections to intelligence activities and political espionage. [1, 2] His involvement primarily centered on anti-communist operations and forging close ties with right-wing European dictatorships: [1, 2]
  • Anti-Bolshevik Intelligence Network: Following the nationalization of his oil properties in Azerbaijan after World War I, Deterding became a fierce anti-communist. To combat the Soviet Union, he organized and financed his own private secret service directed by General Sir George MacDonough (a former British Director of Military Intelligence) to spy on and disrupt the Communist International (Comintern). [1, 2]
  • Corporate Espionage: Throughout his career, Deterding used corporate intelligence and covert operations to monitor his business competitors and leftist political movements. [1, 2]
  • Ties to the Third Reich: In the 1930s, Deterding’s fierce opposition to the Soviet Union led him to develop close, personal ties with Nazi Germany. He became an ardent supporter of Adolf Hitler, providing significant financial backing to the Nazi party and currying favor to win lucrative oil contracts for Royal Dutch/Shell.

Related article by John Donovan in association with ChatGPT

Site-wide disclaimer also applies.

EDITOR’S NOTE: GOOGLE FOUND A REAL STORY—BUT OVERSOLD PARTS OF IT

Google’s response was directionally correct: Sir Henri Deterding had substantial connections with intelligence work, political information-gathering and anti-Bolshevik covert networks.

However, several details require qualification.

Deterding was born in 1866, not 1877. He did not technically “co-found” Royal Dutch/Shell from nothing: he became general manager of Royal Dutch Petroleum in 1900 and was instrumental in creating the 1907 Royal Dutch–Shell combination with Marcus Samuel’s Shell Transport and Trading Company. He remained the dominant figure in the group for decades. read more

This website and sisters royaldutchshellgroup.com, shellnazihistory.com, royaldutchshell.website, johndonovan.website, shellnews.net, and shellwikipedia.com, are owned by John Donovan - more information here. There is also a Wikipedia segment, and the Shell DPA Files, as well as books written and published by John Donovan - Kindle eBooks. Timeline of the Donovan Shell Feud. Toxic History of Royal Dutch Shell Group. Shell and the Donovans: The Full Media Record — 550+ Articles, 110 Books, 40 Years.

Shell Spying in America: Houston Lawsuits, Corporate Security Wars, Wet Paper Bags and the Warring Shell Spooks

SUBSTANTIALLY UPDATED 10 July 2026

By John Donovan

Site-wide disclaimer also applies.

EDITOR’S NOTE

This article expands upon the information, court cases and AI-generated research discussed in the original article printed below published on 9 July 2026.

Some matters discussed below are allegations appearing in legal complaints, information supplied by confidential sources or the author’s interpretation of documentary material. Allegations should not be confused with findings of liability. Where a court rejected, dismissed or ruled against a claim, that outcome is stated. read more

This website and sisters royaldutchshellgroup.com, shellnazihistory.com, royaldutchshell.website, johndonovan.website, shellnews.net, and shellwikipedia.com, are owned by John Donovan - more information here. There is also a Wikipedia segment, and the Shell DPA Files, as well as books written and published by John Donovan - Kindle eBooks. Timeline of the Donovan Shell Feud. Toxic History of Royal Dutch Shell Group. Shell and the Donovans: The Full Media Record — 550+ Articles, 110 Books, 40 Years.

Claude says: Shell Gave Up The Name. Microsoft’s AI Hasn’t Caught Up — And It’s Sending People to the Wrong Company

By Claude

On 20 January 2022, Shell plc formally dropped “Royal Dutch” from its name. The dual Anglo-Dutch structure that had defined the company for over a century — Royal Dutch Petroleum of the Netherlands and The “Shell” Transport and Trading Company of the UK, unified in 2005 as Royal Dutch Shell plc — was dissolved in favour of a single British entity: Shell plc, headquartered in London.

That is a matter of public record, confirmed by the company itself and by every independent reference source, including Wikipedia’s own entry, which correctly lists the company as “Shell plc,” not “Royal Dutch Shell plc.” read more

This website and sisters royaldutchshellgroup.com, shellnazihistory.com, royaldutchshell.website, johndonovan.website, shellnews.net, and shellwikipedia.com, are owned by John Donovan - more information here. There is also a Wikipedia segment, and the Shell DPA Files, as well as books written and published by John Donovan - Kindle eBooks. Timeline of the Donovan Shell Feud. Toxic History of Royal Dutch Shell Group. Shell and the Donovans: The Full Media Record — 550+ Articles, 110 Books, 40 Years.