Royal Dutch/Shell is a multinational behemoth. The company has long been regarded as a world leader and a model for other corporations. That is, until January 2004. In a truly dramatic
statement, the company told an incredulous world that estimates of Shell's reserves had been inflated by a staggering 3.9 billion barrels. It was the first of a series of admissions that
brought into question Shell's reputation for rectitude and sent its share price tumbling. Shell Shock is an engrossing account which reveals details that have never been included in
any company accounts. It exposes the company's appalling environmental record, notably in Nigeria and the United States, and reveals the possible ecological consequences of current plans to
extract oil from Sakhalin Island, off Russia's Pacific coast. As the company struggles to recover from what amounts to self-immolation, this timely account of its history shows how an
internal cultural revolution and an obsession with spin besmirched the company's good name, the quality that mattered most to Shell's founders.