BP PLC
05 February 2008
February 5, 2008
BP DELIVERS DIVIDEND BOOST AND AGAIN REPLACES OIL
AND GAS RESERVES BY MORE THAN 100 PER CENT
BP today announced an increase of 25 per cent in its quarterly dividend, taking
it to a level 31 per cent higher than a year ago. Chief Executive Tony Hayward
said the rise reflected the company's increasingly robust view of the future and
greater confidence in its ability to deliver sustained dividend income to
shareholders.
The move also marks a shift in the balance between dividends and buybacks as a
means of returning value to shareholders. BP said the repurchase of its own
stock over the past eight years had shrunk its equity base by some 16 per cent,
making a higher dividend more affordable. Hayward said the company would
continue to buy back its shares, as appropriate.
BP again replenished its oil and gas reserves by more than its annual
production, the 14th consecutive year it has reported reserves replacement in
excess of 100 per cent, excluding acquisitions and divestments, a track record
described by Hayward as 'among the very best in our industry'. The company said
it had also lifted its crude price assumption from $40 to some $60 a barrel for
planning purposes but would continue to benchmark projects to be robust at lower
prices.
BP reported replacement cost profits, excluding non-operating items, of some $4
billion for the final quarter of 2007, a fall of one per cent on the
corresponding quarter of 2006, bringing results for the year as a whole to $17.6
billion.
'Although our fourth-quarter profits were very disappointing in refining and
marketing in particular, we made good, step-by-step progress in bringing new oil
and gas fields on stream and rebuilding refining capacity during the period,'
Hayward said.
'Output is now ramping up from those fields and refineries and we anticipate
that will feed through to the bottom line in the course of the year. We expect
BP's overall oil and gas production to grow in 2008, although our exact net
volumes will depend on how the crude price affects entitlements from
production-sharing agreements.'
To support growth, Hayward said Group capital spending was expected to increase
from some $19 billion in 2007 to between $21 billion and $22 billion this year
and, assuming a $60 price per barrel going forward, BP production would be over
four million barrels of oil equivalent a day in 2009, rising to some 4.3 million
barrels a day in 2012.
Reporting on the measures announced in October to cut BP's costs by slimming
management and infrastructure and strengthtening central control of spending, he
said he was now confident of reducing corporate overheads by 15 - 20 per cent.
'The steps we have already initiated will cut BP's headcount by some 5,000 by
the middle of next year. This is in addition to the 9,500 jobs that will move
off the payroll as a result of franchising our US convenience retail business.'
He said that resulting restructuring costs were some $350 million in the fourth
quarter of last year and expected to total around a further $1 billion in 2008,
with material benefits feeding through in 2009.
Hayward described the competitive financial performance of refining and
marketing as 'very poor - despite the fact that we have a strong set of assets.
The principal reason is poor reliability in some of our US refineries, which is
compounded by the complexity and overhead structure of the business segment.
'But there is far more to do than merely restoring US refining reliability. We
are absolutely determined to transform our downstream business as a whole. It
will not happen overnight, but we believe that the performance gap with our
competitors can be progressively narrowed in the next few years.'
Hayward said operations had made steady progress in the fourth quarter, with the
start-up of six new exploration and production projects adding an extra 250,000
barrels a day to BP's output of oil and gas. Refining capacity recovered to
300,000 barrels a day at Whiting and Texas City is on track to restore most of
its economic capability by mid-year.
Hayward said BP's upstream business had secured access to major new sources of
oil and gas in Oman, Libya and Canada, underpinning confidence in future growth.
Further information: BP Press Office London, tel: +44 (0)207 496 4076
- ENDS -
This information is provided by RNS
The company news service from the London Stock Exchange
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