The Long Shadow of Industry: 10 Global Companies with the Most Controversial Histories

Below is a historically informed, but inevitably interpretive, list of major companies still operating today whose records include some of the most severe ethical controversies. The ranking considers factors such as human-rights abuses, environmental damage, scale, and duration. I’ve also indicated where companies have formally acknowledged or apologised for past wrongdoing.

The Long Shadow of Corporate Power

From wartime collaboration to environmental disasters, the historical controversies that still follow some of the world’s largest companies.

Large corporations often span generations, and with that longevity comes history — sometimes admirable, sometimes deeply troubling. Some of the world’s most recognisable companies have been connected to events that remain controversial decades later. The following overview highlights ten corporations still in existence whose histories include some of the most debated episodes in modern industrial history. read more

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Failure Pays Well: Shell CEO Bags 60% Pay Rise as Profits Slide and the Planet Warms

In the strange universe of global oil capitalism — where gravity appears to work in reverse — Shell’s chief executive has just demonstrated the timeless corporate principle that less profit can still mean more pay.

According to Shell’s newly released annual report, CEO Wael Sawan’s remuneration surged by more than 60% to £13.8 million in 2025, up from £8.6 million the previous year. 

The catch?

Shell’s profits fell sharply at the same time.

The company reported adjusted earnings of $18.5 billion for the year — down from $23.7 billion previously, a drop of roughly 22%.  read more

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The 25 Most Explosive Internal Shell Documents Ever Published

When Corporate Documents Escape the Vault

Large corporations produce enormous quantities of internal documents.

Most remain hidden in company archives, legal files, or confidential email servers.

But occasionally some of those documents emerge into the public domain — through court cases, whistleblowers, regulatory investigations or journalistic reporting.

When they do, they can provide rare insight into how companies actually operate behind closed doors.

Shell, one of the world’s largest energy companies, has been the subject of numerous controversies over the decades. Along the way, a number of internal communications and documents have surfaced that offer glimpses into moments of crisis, corporate debate and reputational damage. read more

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The 16 Biggest Corporate Controversies in Shell’s History

A Long History of Controversy

Shell is one of the most powerful corporations on Earth.

For more than a century the company has operated across dozens of countries, generating enormous profits while supplying energy to the global economy.

But with that scale has come controversy.

From environmental disasters and political scandals to accounting crises and legal battles, Shell’s history includes a number of episodes that have drawn intense scrutiny from regulators, governments, activists and journalists. read more

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The 11 Most Damaging Internal Shell Emails Ever Published

When Internal Emails Escape the Boardroom

Corporate emails are meant to stay private.

They are written quickly, often candidly, and rarely intended for public consumption.

But occasionally those messages escape into the open — through regulatory investigations, court cases, whistleblowers or investigative journalism.

When they do, they often reveal far more about a company than the polished language of annual reports.

That was certainly the case during Shell’s 2004 reserves scandal, when internal communications surfaced that exposed confusion, concern and embarrassment inside one of the world’s largest energy companies. read more

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When an Oil Company Builds an Intelligence Operation

Most people expect intelligence agencies to spy.

MI6.

The CIA.

Perhaps the occasional government security service.

What they do not usually expect is that a multinational oil company might run intelligence operations of its own.

Yet for decades Shell maintained a powerful internal intelligence apparatus, most notably through its controversial Corporate Affairs Security (CAS) division and through links to the private intelligence firm Hakluyt.

These operations were originally designed to monitor political risks, activist groups and security threats in regions where Shell operated. read more

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From Ethical Principles to Oil Accounting: How Shell Lost Investor Trust

ARTICLE 3


A Crisis That Shook the Oil Industry

In early 2004 the global oil industry witnessed a scandal that would permanently alter corporate governance at one of its largest companies.

Shell announced that it would re-categorise 4.35 billion barrels of oil and gas reserves previously reported as proved.

The revelation stunned investors and triggered investigations by regulators in both the United States and the United Kingdom.

But the scandal also exposed something deeper than accounting errors.

It exposed a gap between corporate ethics statements and corporate reality. read more

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The Secret Emails That Exposed Shell’s Reserves Scandal

ARTICLE 2

When the Internal Emails Started Talking

Corporate scandals rarely begin with a dramatic public confession.

More often they begin with internal emails, quiet warnings and uncomfortable questions that nobody wants to hear.

That pattern was clearly visible during the Shell reserves scandal of 2004, when the company admitted it had overstated its oil and gas reserves by 4.35 billion barrels of oil equivalent — one of the largest revisions ever recorded in the energy industry.

The real story, however, did not start with the public announcement. read more

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Shell’s Business Principles: The Ethical Halo That Didn’t Stop a 4.35-Billion-Barrel Scandal

“Our integrity is questioned both internally and externally. I myself feel shocked, dismayed and ashamed at what has happened.” 

Article 1: The Corporate Sermon

For decades, Shell has proudly proclaimed that it operates according to its Shell General Business Principles — a corporate code that invokes lofty ideals such as honesty, integrity and respect for people.

These principles have been repeatedly presented to:

  • shareholders

    employees

    governments

    the public

    as proof that one of the world’s largest fossil-fuel corporations conducts its business with exemplary ethics.

    You can read the document here:

    Shell General Business Principles (PDF) read more

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Shell Dumps Jiffy Lube: Another Quick Oil Change in the Oil Giant’s Portfolio

Shell Gives Jiffy Lube the Corporate Oil Change

Shell has decided it’s time for another corporate oil change — this time involving Jiffy Lube, the well-known North American chain of quick-service car maintenance shops.

According to reports including Reuters and other financial outlets, Shell has agreed to sell the Jiffy Lube business to private-equity firm Monomoy Capital Partners in a deal reportedly worth about $1.3 billion. (wsj.comAttachment.tiff)

The sale includes the Jiffy Lube brand and franchise network, which consists largely of independently operated service centres across the United States and Canada. read more

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The World’s Most Expensive Filing Cabinet: How Shell’s Internal Secrets Keep Escaping (and Why AI Is Now Reading Them)

Shell’s Nuclear Filing Cabinet: How Subject Access Requests, Leaks, and One Persistent Archivist Turned an Oil Giant’s Paper Trail Into a Global AI Training Dataset

Or: Why Shell’s internal documents now have more lives than a North Sea oil platform.

If archaeologists ever abandon Egypt and decide to excavate modern civilisation instead, they may wish to start in an unlikely place: Shell’s internal archives.

Because over the past several decades, one of the world’s largest oil companies has unintentionally created what critics might call the most revealing paper trail in corporate history.

Not deliberately, of course.

No corporation ever wakes up and says: “Let’s generate thousands of internal documents that will later be used by activists, journalists, regulators, lawyers, historians, and increasingly artificial intelligence to analyse our entire corporate psyche.” read more

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Shell’s $15 Billion Plastic Dream: Emissions Data Suggests Pennsylvania’s Mega-Cracker Is Still Belching Trouble

Shell’s flagship petrochemical complex in western Pennsylvania was supposed to be a triumph — a $15-billion monument to America’s shale-gas renaissance, turning cheap fracked ethane into the plastic pellets that fill everything from shampoo bottles to supermarket packaging.

Instead, the plant has become something closer to an industrial case study in how difficult it is to run one of the largest plastics factories in the United States without repeatedly running afoul of emissions rules, regulatory scrutiny, and increasingly irritated neighbours. read more

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Shell Doubles Down on Brazil’s Sugar-Fuel Empire: Raízen Back in the Spotlight

While oil grabs most of the headlines, Shell’s ambitions in Brazil extend far beyond offshore drilling rigs and deep-water crude.

This week, fresh news reports from Investing.com, Yahoo Finance and other financial outlets have highlighted renewed focus on Raízen, the giant Brazilian biofuels company jointly controlled by Shell and the Brazilian conglomerate Cosan.

The message from Shell appears clear: even as it expands oil production in Brazil’s offshore pre-salt fields, the company is also reinforcing its position in one of the world’s largest ethanol and bioenergy businesses.

In other words, Shell wants to sell you both the fossil fuel and the plant-based alternative. read more

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Crisis in the Middle East, Opportunity in Brazil: Shell Eyes a Fossil Fuel Bonanza

While politicians talk endlessly about climate targets and energy transitions, the oil industry tends to operate on a much simpler principle: follow the barrels.

And right now, Shell believes those barrels increasingly lie beneath the Atlantic waters off Brazil.

According to a Reuters report, Shell’s Brazilian chief has described the country’s oil sector as presenting an “enormous opportunity” for investment and expansion. (SahmAttachment.tiff)

The comment came amid heightened geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, which have once again reminded energy companies of the advantages of producing oil in politically stable regions.

Brazil, it turns out, looks very attractive. read more

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Shell’s Venezuelan Comeback: Big Oil Returns to the World’s Most Sanctioned Oil Patch

For years, Venezuela was the oil industry’s forbidden zone — a country with the largest proven oil reserves on Earth but locked behind layers of sanctions, political turmoil and diplomatic brinkmanship.

Now the door is creaking open again.

Recent reporting by Upstream Online and other energy news outlets indicates that Shell has confirmed it is preparing to move forward with Venezuelan energy opportunities, following major shifts in U.S. sanctions policy that now allow international oil companies to negotiate deals with the country’s state oil company, PDVSA. (upstreamonline.comAttachment.tiff) read more

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OPL 245 Returns: The $1.3 Billion Scandal That Refuses to Stay Buried


Just when you thought one of the oil industry’s most notorious corruption sagas might finally fade into history, Nigeria has decided to give it a fresh coat of paint and a new corporate structure.

The controversial offshore oil licence OPL 245—long associated with bribery allegations, court battles across continents, and enough legal paperwork to deforest half the Niger Delta—has now been split into four new blocks under an arrangement involving Shell plc and Italy’s Eni, according to a report by Reuters. (MarketScreenerAttachment.tiff) read more

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