BP announced today that a strong
operating performance across the group helped it return to profit in the
third quarter of 2010 despite an additional pre-tax charge of $7.7
billion in respect of the Gulf of Mexico spill.
Headline replacement cost profit for the third quarter
was $1.8 billion, compared with a loss of $17.0 billion in the previous
quarter and a profit of $5.0 billion in the third quarter of 2009.
On an underlying basis, after adjusting for
non-operating items, third-quarter replacement cost profit was $5.5
billion, an increase of 18 per cent on the year-ago quarter.
“These results demonstrate that BP is well on track for
recovery after the tragic accident on the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig
and subsequent oil spill,” commented group chief executive Bob Dudley.
“We have made good progress during the quarter. This strong operating
performance shows the determination of everyone at BP to move the
company forward and rebuild confidence after the terrible events of the
past six months.
“We have also begun to make important changes in the way we operate
across the Group – including creating a powerful Safety and Operational
Risk function and restructuring the upstream segment – to ensure that
safety and risk management are embedded as the absolute priority for
every operation, for every person, throughout BP.”
The company said its Exploration & Production
segment, now being restructured into separate functional Exploration,
Development and Production divisions, recorded lower production volumes
as a result of normal seasonal turnaround activities and as a
consequence of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. But its financial result
was stronger than in both the previous quarter and a year ago, thanks to
the improved price environment and lower depreciation.
Refining & Marketing recorded another good quarter, with refining
availability remaining high and petrochemicals maintaining high
production and utilisation rates. The US downstream business was
profitable for the second successive quarter.
The additional pre-tax charge of $7.7 billion for the
Gulf of Mexico spill followed a charge of $32.2 billion in the second
quarter and was due principally to higher spill response costs. This
reflected a delay in completing the relief well that finally sealed the
Macondo well in September, additional mandated costs for decontaminating
and demobilising vessels involved in the response, claims centre
administration costs and additional legal costs.
BP said the total charge of $39.9 billion for the
incident to the end of the third quarter represented its current best
estimate of those costs that can be reliably measured at this time.
The company said its previously-announced divestment programme was
making good progress, with sales agreements in place totalling around
$14 billion compared with a target of $25 to $30 billion by the end of
2011. Cash held at the end of the third quarter was nearly $13 billion.
The company described its improving financial condition
and the strength of disposal proceeds as “encouraging” and reaffirmed
the Board’s intention to review future dividends with the full-year
results in early 2011.
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