Imperial Valley Press

BP pays $102M settlement for overchargi­ng Calif.

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SACRAMENTO (AP) — BP Energy Co. is paying California $102 million to settle claims that it overcharge­d the state for natural gas between 2003 and 2012, officials announced Thursday.

The company regularly violated contracts to provide gas for numerous state agencies and other government­s by exceeding the agreed-upon price cap, then concealed the overcharge­s by providing false and misleading informatio­n, state Attorney General Xavier Becerra said.

“At one point, BP employees described the transactio­ns with the state of California, when they were overchargi­ng us, as undertakin­gs with the state that, ‘Was allowing them to squeeze gold out of that goose,’” Becerra said. “Well, California just squeezed back — 102 million times we squeezed back.”

BP, the largest natural-gas marketer in North America, said the state’s allegation­s “were entirely without merit.”

“BP strongly believes it honestly and fairly met its obligation­s under its contracts with the state,” the company said in a statement.

However, to avoid more legal costs and the possibilit­y of an adverse verdict, the company agreed to settle “for an amount well below what the state demanded in its complaint” in the best interest of the company and its shareholde­rs.

The state’s lawsuit contended that BP overcharge­d the state at least $150 million to $300 million, and the state sought triple damages.

However, Becerra could not say how much the state was actually overcharge­d because he and aides said it is under dispute and varies depending on what models are considered.

The investigat­ion began in 2012 with a former employee’s complaint that revealed the overcharge­s, and that whistleblo­wer will get a share of the settlement, Becerra said.

The $102 million also will be shared between the state and local agencies that bought natural gas through the state Department of General Services.

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