Leveraging their relationship, Shell Energy and Wells Fargo will discuss their respective renewable energy adoption strategies, and highlight how two leading brands are making an impact in accelerating the transition to a low-carbon future.
Overview
The time is now for corporations and organizations to take bold action and adopt clean energy. Executing a full corporate energy transition is a top-to-bottom company commitment that requires an integrated approach and a holistic strategy. Leveraging their relationship, Shell Energy and Wells Fargo will discuss their respective renewable energy adoption strategies, and highlight how two leading brands are making an impact in accelerating the transition to a low-carbon future. Pulling from both Shell’s own internal transition experience to its work with customers like Wells Fargo, Shell is uniquely positioned to speak from both perspectives – giving attendees a holistic POV. As one of the nation’s largest lenders and investors to the renewable energy sector and one of the biggest buyers of renewables to power its operations, Wells Fargo brings another important voice to the conversation.
Working hand-in-hand with Wells Fargo to help the bank reach its clean energy goals through a customized structured renewable energy agreements, Shell Energy was able to secure approximately 150,000 megawatt-hours of renewable energy annually for the financial institution. In parallel to its work as an energy provider, on a corporate-level Shell has embraced the strategic ambition of thriving through the current energy transition moving towards a low-carbon energy system and is distinctively suited to meet the energy needs of customers today and tomorrow.
What You Will Learn
In this webinar, attendees will be presented with these takeaways:
- Best practices and considerations when adopting a renewable energy strategy
- Lessons learned while evolving their internal processes/business model with the adoption of renewable energy
- How corporations, both large and small, can contribute to society’s energy transition to lower carbon emissions