Guernsey Press

BP posts £2bn quarterly profit but falls below expectations

The figure compares with a £6.6bn profit over the same period last year, when it was boosted by a surge in oil and gas prices.

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Oil giant BP has revealed that profits tumbled by more than two-thirds over the latest quarter, falling below expectations.

The company said on Tuesday that it will hand more cash to investors through higher dividends and a further share buyback despite the weaker performance.

The FTSE 100 giant posted underlying replacement cost profit – the firm’s preferred measure – of 2.59 billion US dollars (£2 billion) for the second quarter of 2023.

That compares with an 8.45 billion dollar (£6.6 billion) profit over the same period last year, when it was boosted by a surge in oil and gas prices.

It comes a week after rival oil major Shell also delivered weaker-than-expected profits for its latest quarter.

BP said the performance takes its total profits for the first half of 2023 to 7.5 billion dollars (£5.9 billion).

The company added that its North Sea business paid 970 million dollars (£755 million) in tax over the half-year, with 460 million dollars (£358 million) due to the energy profit levy windfall tax.

The update comes a day after Prime Minister Rishi Sunak insisted he wants to “max out” developments in the North Sea and claimed Labour’s refusal to support new oil and gas fields would be “bad for the British economy”.

“Our underlying performance was resilient with good cash delivery during a period of significant turnaround activity and weaker margins in our refining business.

“We’re delivering our strategy at pace – we’ve started up two major oil and gas projects to help keep energy flowing today and we’re accelerating our transformation through our five transition growth engines.

“And we’re delivering for shareholders, growing our dividend and announcing a further share buyback.”

BP boss Bernard Looney
Chief executive Bernard Looney said BP is ‘performing while transforming’ (Niall Carson/PA)

“Meanwhile, the drop in wholesale gas and oil prices is yet to make any material difference to the nation’s bills, which are projected to remain high for some time to come.

“This means millions more are likely to struggle through bitterly cold temperatures in homes they can’t afford to heat when winter rolls around.”

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