Energy firms dominate Fortune 500 Europe list’s top spots

European energy firms have bounced back, as highlighted by their dominant rankings on the first-ever Fortune 500 Europe list, published yesterday.

The Fortune 500 Europe list dispels myths about the continent and also reads like a throwback to the 20th century, when energy and automotive industries were the prime players in the global economy – and companies were led by men.

The list’s top spot is held by British energy giant Shell, with six energy companies and three automotive companies featuring in the top 10. This is starkly different to the US list, where three Big Tech companies—Amazon, Apple, and Alphabet—feature in the top 10. In Europe, the largest pure tech company is SAP, at No. 114, followed by 1990s powerhouses Ericsson (No. 141) and Nokia (No. 147).

One would have to go back to the late 1990s to find a Fortune 500 akin to what the Fortune 500 Europe looks like today. Twenty-five years ago, GM topped the US list with Ford and Chrysler not far behind, and Exxon, Mobil (and GE, to a lesser extent) representing the energy sector in the top 10.

The list of Europe’s largest companies, based on revenue, includes four Greek energy companies, Motor Oil, at No, 213, Helleniq Energy, formerly Hellenic Petroleum (ELPE), at No. 243, power utility PPC, at No. 298, and Mytilineos, at No. 444.

On the diversity front, too, Europe lags the US. Just 7 percent of Fortune 500 Europe companies are led by a woman, compared to 10 percent on the US list, a statistic that questions the continent’s progressive image.

The Fortune 500 Europe list includes companies from 24 different countries, ranging, in size, from Germany’s MTU Aero Engines, with revenues of $5.6 billion, at No. 500, to London-based oil and gas giant Shell ($386.2 billion) at No. 1.

Combined, the 500 European companies generated $13.94 trillion in revenue in the most recent fiscal year.