Edmonton Journal

BP FEELS THE PINCH

Profits tumble by 96% in Q3

- DANICA KIRKA

LONDON Oil giant BP reported a 96-per cent drop in third-quarter profit Tuesday and announced further efforts to curtail spending as it prepares for a prolonged period of low oil prices.

The London-based company said net income fell to $46 million from $1.29 billion in the third quarter of 2014. So-called underlying replacemen­t cost profit, BP’s preferred measure of performanc­e, fell 40 per cent to $1.82 billion.

BP also said it plans to cut costs by $6 billion through 2017 — $3 billion more than already achieved — forecastin­g oil prices at around $60 a barrel by that time. Brent crude, the benchmark for North Sea oil, averaged $50.26 a barrel in the third quarter, down 51 per cent from a year earlier.

The company also expects to sell as much as $5 billion of assets next year.

“BP has successful­ly adapted to changing circumstan­ces many times in its history and, in a hard time for the entire industry, I believe we will once again successful­ly take on today’s challenges,” chief executive Bob Dudley said in a statement.

Oil prices dropped to a six-year low in August and haven’t rebounded much. That is prompting oil companies to cut production.

BP is trying to protect dividends as it charts a course through to an eventual price recovery.

Dudley said the cost savings announced Tuesday underpin “our strong priority of sustaining our dividend and then growing free cash flow and shareholde­r distributi­ons over the long term.”

Some analysts believe BP’s cost-cutting efforts are beginning to pay off. Three of 12 analysts tracked by Hargreaves Lansdown, a London-based stockbroke­r, upgraded their recommenda­tions on the company last month.

BP took a further charge for $426 million for costs related to the Deepwater Horizon spill, pushing total charges to $55 billion. In July, the U.S. Justice Department and five states agreed to a final settlement of environmen­tal damage claims arising from the 2010 oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

Once approved by a judge, the deal would resolve all civil claims against BP and end five years of legal fighting over a 134 million-gallon spill that affected 1,300 miles of shoreline. BP would also commit to a massive cleanup project in the Gulf Coast area aimed at restoring wildlife, habitat and water quality.

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Bob Dudley

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