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BP ups spill cost estimate by US$8 bln, profits dive
BP lifted its estimate of the likely cost of its Gulf of Mexico oil spill by US$7.7 billion to US$39.9 billion today, pushing its profits down sharply in spite of higher oil and gas prices.
BP, the world's biggest non-government controlled oil company by production last year, said delays in capping its blown out well prompted the increased charge for ending the leak, cleaning up the damage and compensating those affected.
BP said third-quarter replacement cost profit, which strips out unrealized gains or losses related to changes in the value of fuel inventories, fell 63 percent to US$1.8 billion.
Stripping out one-offs, including the oil spill costs, the underlying results rose 18 percent, compared to the same period in 2009, to US$5.53 billion, well ahead of an average forecast US$4.60 billion from a Reuters poll of seven analysts.
BP's result compares with an 88 percent rise in underlying net profit at rival Royal Dutch Shell Plc, and a 55 percent rise in net income at the largest western oil major by market value Exxon Mobil.
The final cost of the oil spill could be far larger, or smaller, than the US$40 billion charge BP has taken.
Anadarko Petroleum and Japan's Mitsui own 35 percent of the blown out well and they are contractually obliged to share the costs. However, they are claiming that this obligation is void because BP was grossly negligent.
Accounting rules require BP to ignore any recoverable payments that are not certain so it is possible that the partners do, in the end, pay up to 35 percent of the total cost.
However, if gross negligence is proven, then BP will face the entire US$40 billion bill alone, and will face additional federal fines of around US$17 billion.
BP, the world's biggest non-government controlled oil company by production last year, said delays in capping its blown out well prompted the increased charge for ending the leak, cleaning up the damage and compensating those affected.
BP said third-quarter replacement cost profit, which strips out unrealized gains or losses related to changes in the value of fuel inventories, fell 63 percent to US$1.8 billion.
Stripping out one-offs, including the oil spill costs, the underlying results rose 18 percent, compared to the same period in 2009, to US$5.53 billion, well ahead of an average forecast US$4.60 billion from a Reuters poll of seven analysts.
BP's result compares with an 88 percent rise in underlying net profit at rival Royal Dutch Shell Plc, and a 55 percent rise in net income at the largest western oil major by market value Exxon Mobil.
The final cost of the oil spill could be far larger, or smaller, than the US$40 billion charge BP has taken.
Anadarko Petroleum and Japan's Mitsui own 35 percent of the blown out well and they are contractually obliged to share the costs. However, they are claiming that this obligation is void because BP was grossly negligent.
Accounting rules require BP to ignore any recoverable payments that are not certain so it is possible that the partners do, in the end, pay up to 35 percent of the total cost.
However, if gross negligence is proven, then BP will face the entire US$40 billion bill alone, and will face additional federal fines of around US$17 billion.
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