Daily Mail

BP urged to scale back its green agenda

Investor blasts oil giant’s ‘irrational’ climate targets

- By Jessica Clark

An activist investor has urged BP to ditch its green strategy and continue to cash in on oil and gas.

Bluebell Capital Partners wrote to the energy giant’s chairman Helge Lund with concerns about how the FTSE 100 energy giant is run.

The London-based hedge fund blasted BP’s green transition plan as ‘irrational’ and said the strategy has depressed its share price.

Investors are concerned that BP is underperfo­rming compared with rival Shell and US energy giants Exxon Mobil and Chevron.

Shell has scaled back its net zero transition strategy under the leadership of chief executive Wael Sawan. And American energy firms have doubled down on oil and gas production.

But new BP chief executive Murray Auchinclos­s ( pictured) has vowed to press ahead with the green strategy laid out by his predecesso­r Bernard Looney.

BP was left reeling by the shock exit of Looney in September.

He was forced to resign after failing to be ‘fully transparen­t’ about personal relationsh­ips with colleagues. The Irish businessma­n was found guilty of serious misconduct and stripped of £32 m in pay, bonuses, share awards and other benefits.

Bluebell’s letter was sent in October, after Looney’s departure while Auchinclos­s was still interim chief.

The former finance chief was this month confirmed as Looney’s permanent replacemen­t.

Some investors were disappoint­ed in the selection of a ‘continuity candidate’ and Auchinclos­s promptly reiterated his support for the green agenda.

In the letter, which came to light yesterday and was also addressed to Auchinclos­s, the fund said it would have called for Looney’s resignatio­n had he not already stepped down.

BP should scrap its pledge to cut oil and gas output by 25 pc by 2030 compared to 2019 levels, Bluebell said.

Instead, it said BP should increase oil and gas investment and production targets, while slashing spending on renewables.

‘This irrational strategy has, quite understand­ably, depressed the value of BP’s share price, leading to an approximat­e 40 pc discount vs its best- in- class-peers,’ Bluebell said, citing US giants ExxonMobil and Chevron.

The share price is ‘clearly indicating that the stock market sees BP’s current strategy as unappealin­g and value destructiv­e’, the letter added.

Bluebell did not reveal the size of its stake in the oil and gas major. A BP spokesman said: ‘BP welcomes constructi­ve engagement with our shareholde­rs. We have met with most of our major shareholde­rs recently and continue to receive support for our strategy.

‘We continue to make significan­t progress, remain focused on delivery, and are confident the strategy will grow the value of BP and deliver sustainabl­e long-term value for shareholde­rs.’

Bluebell, a small activist investor focused on European stocks, was involved in the removal of the chief executive of French consumer goods company Danone in 2021. It unsuccessf­ully pressured mining giant Glencore to spin off its thermal coal business, before selling its stake in the company.

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