SR

Steve Rogers

Executive General Manager, B2b Retail at Shell Energy Australia

Steve Rogers is an experienced professional who has held various leadership roles in the energy retail industry. Steve is currently the Executive General Manager Retail and Energy Solutions at Shell Energy Australia, overseeing the electricity and gas retailing business as well as energy solutions. With a background in market risk management and accounting, Steve has also served as a Non-Executive Director in companies like 1st Energy and Energy Locals. Steve holds a degree in Commerce from The University of Queensland and attended Brisbane Grammar School.

Location

Brisbane, Australia

Links

Previous companies


Org chart


Teams

This person is not in any teams


Offices


Shell Energy Australia

11 followers

Shell Energy is Shell’s renewables and energy solutions business in Australia, helping its customers to decarbonise and reduce their environmental footprint. The company combines deep expertise, innovation and investment to lead the change, and energise tomorrow. Shell Energy delivers business energy solutions and innovation across a portfolio of electricity, gas, environmental products and energy productivity for commercial and industrial customers, while our residential energy retailing business Powershop, serves households and small business customers across Victoria, New South Wales, South Australia and South East Queensland. As the second largest electricity provider to commercial and industrial businesses in Australia, Shell Energy offers integrated solutions and market-leading customer satisfaction, built on industry expertise and personalised relationships. We’re helping to shape Australia’s renewable energy landscape by building a diverse and integrated portfolio which includes interests in solar, wind and battery energy storage systems. Our generation assets include the 120-megawatt Gangarri solar farm in Queensland, and 662 megawatts of gas-fired peaking power stations in Western Australia and Queensland, supporting the transition to renewables.


Employees

501-1,000

Links