This was reported by Bloomberg News on Saturday citing people familiar with the matter.
The oil major has been more seriously discussing the feasibility and merits of a takeover with its advisers in recent weeks, the report said, adding that any final decision will likely depend on whether the rival's stock continues to slide.
For several years, BP and Shell were almost equal in size, but over the past few years Shell has grown to almost twice the size of BP, with a market value of about 149 billion pounds.
On Friday, when asked about a possible takeover bid for BP, Shell's, Chief Executive Wael Sawan told the Financial Times he would rather buy back more Shell stock. A Shell Spokesperson confirmed the comments.
When asked on an earnings call about Shell's capacity to launch sizable acquisitions, he said "we have to have our own house in order" and have "more work to do" despite progress over the last couple of years.
A takeover of its cross-town London rival would make Shell an even bigger force in the global energy industry, giving it scale to rival the likes of Exxon and Chevron. A merger would also likely certainly invite regulatory scrutiny, considering the size of the deal.
Shell this week reported strong first-quarter results surpassing profit expectations and launched a $3.5 billion share buyback.
--Reuters--