Kuwait Times

BP announces $4.4bn loss as oil prices crash

-

LONDON: British energy giant BP yesterday said it slumped into a $4.4-billion net loss in the first quarter as the coronaviru­s pandemic crushed demand for oil, triggering a price crash. “Our industry has been hit by supply and demand shocks on a scale never seen before,” BP’s new chief executive Bernard Looney said in an earnings statement, having seen crude prices plunge from around $70 per barrel at the start of the year to under $20 currently. “The economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic coupled with pre-existing supply and demand factors have resulted in an exceptiona­lly challenged commodity environmen­t,” BP said, having reported profit after tax of $2.9 billion in the first-quarter of 2019. BP said it planned to reduce cash costs by $2.5 billion by the end of 2021 relative to 2019. “Some of these cost savings may have associated restructur­ing charges,” the company added. It expects also to produce less oil in the second quarter, with companies unable to store the excess crude. BP’s firstquart­er output dropped 2.8 percent to 3.7 million barrels per day.

Crude futures plunged to record lows this month, with US prices sinking briefly into negative territory, also following a vicious price-war between major oil producers Saudi Arabia and Russia.

BP yesterday added that its underlying replacemen­t cost profit-a widely-watched measure stripping out exceptiona­l items and changes in the value of oil inventorie­s-stood at $800 million in the first quarter, compared with $2.4 billion for the same period a year earlier.

“The result reflected lower prices, demand destructio­n in the downstream particular­ly in March, a lower estimated result from (Russian partner) Rosneft and a lower contributi­on from oil trading.” BP on Monday said that crashing oil prices had prompted it to tweak the terms of a gigantic deal to sell off its Alaska operations.

Hilcorp Alaska in August agreed to purchase the assets, including operations in the mammoth Prudhoe Bay oilfield, for $5.6 billion in a move that sees BP exit the US state after a 60-year presence.

The overall price tag remains the same but the structurin­g and phasing of payments has been modified. The first quarter meanwhile saw the departure of long-time chief executive Bob Dudley, with the American leaving after a decade at the helm. Soon after starting, Irish national Looney set BP a target to achieve “net zero” carbon emissions by 2050. — AFP

 ??  ?? SOUTHGATE, Michigan: A BP gas station is seen with a sign displaying gas for $ 0.99 per gallon. With the demand of oil crashing due to restrictio­ns from coronaviru­s gas prices across the country have plummeted with some areas seeing prices fall under a dollar a gallon. — AFP
SOUTHGATE, Michigan: A BP gas station is seen with a sign displaying gas for $ 0.99 per gallon. With the demand of oil crashing due to restrictio­ns from coronaviru­s gas prices across the country have plummeted with some areas seeing prices fall under a dollar a gallon. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait