2Q17 Part 1 of 1

RNS Number : 6610M
BP PLC
01 August 2017
 

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

London 1 August 2017

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017(a)

 

For a printer friendly copy of this announcement, please click on the link below to open a PDF version:

          http://www.rns-pdf.londonstockexchange.com/rns/6610M_-2017-7-31.pdf

 

 

 

 

 

 

Highlights

Solid first half; strong operations, strong cash flow.


·   Underlying replacement cost (RC) profit* for the second quarter was $0.7 billion.

·   Second-quarter operating cash flow, excluding Gulf of Mexico oil spill payments*, was $6.9 billion. Including these payments, operating cash flow* for the quarter was $4.9 billion.

·   Dividend unchanged at 10 cents per share.

·   Second-quarter Upstream production was 10% higher than in the same period in 2016; first-half production was 6% higher.

·   Upstream major projects on track; two new projects sanctioned in quarter; significant gas discoveries in Senegal and Trinidad announced; $753 million exploration write-off, predominantly in Angola.

·   In Downstream, first-half fuels marketing earnings around 20% higher than in the first half of 2016.


 

Financial summary

Second quarter 2017

See chart on PDF

 


 



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Profit (loss) for the period(b)


144

1,449

(1,419)


1,593

(2,002)

Inventory holding (gains) losses*, net of tax


409

(37)

(828)


372

(730)

RC profit (loss)*


553

1,412

(2,247)


1,965

(2,732)

Net (favourable) unfavourable impact of








  non-operating items* and fair value








  accounting effects*, net of tax


131

98

2,967


229

3,984

Underlying RC profit


684

1,510

720


2,194

1,252

RC profit (loss) per ordinary share (cents)*


2.80

7.23

(12.03)


10.02

(14.71)

RC profit (loss) per ADS (dollars)


0.17

0.43

(0.72)


0.60

(0.88)

Underlying RC profit per ordinary share (cents)*


3.47

7.74

3.85


11.19

6.73

Underlying RC profit per ADS (dollars)


0.21

0.46

0.23


0.67

0.40

 

(a)

This results announcement also represents BP's half-yearly financial report (see page 12).

(b)

Profit attributable to BP shareholders.

 

 

Bob Dudley - Group chief executive:

"We continue to position BP for the new oil price environment, with a continued tight focus on costs, efficiency and discipline in capital spending. We delivered strong operational performance in the first half of 2017 and have considerable strategic momentum coming into the rest of the year and 2018, with rising production from our new Upstream projects and marketing growth in the Downstream."

 

Brian Gilvary - Chief financial officer:

"Cash flow was strong in the first half - organic cash flow* exceeded organic capital expenditure* and dividends paid. While net debt* rose primarily due to Gulf of Mexico payments, we expect this will improve over the second half as these payments decline and divestment proceeds come in towards the end of the year."

 

 

* See definitions in the Glossary on page 32. RC profit (loss), underlying RC profit, cash flow excluding Gulf of Mexico oil spill payments, organic capital expenditure and net debt are non-GAAP measures.

 

The commentary above and following should be read in conjunction with the cautionary statement on page 35.

 

 

Top of page 2

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Group headlines

Earnings

BP's profit for the second quarter and half year was $144 million and $1,593 million respectively, compared with a loss of $1,419 million and a loss of $2,002 million for the same periods in 2016.

 

The second-quarter replacement cost (RC) profit was $553 million, compared with a loss of $2,247 million for the same period in 2016. After adjusting for a net charge for non-operating items of $215 million and net favourable fair value accounting effects of $84 million (both on a post-tax basis), underlying RC profit for the second quarter was $684 million, compared with $720 million for the same period in 2016.

 

For the half year, RC profit was $1,965 million, compared with a loss of $2,732 million a year ago. After adjusting for a net charge for non-operating items of $520 million and net favourable fair value accounting effects of $291 million (both on a post-tax basis), underlying RC profit for the half year was $2,194 million, compared with $1,252 million for the same period in 2016.

 

See further information on page 3.

 

Non-operating items

Non-operating items amounted to a charge of $359 million pre-tax and $215 million post-tax for the quarter and a charge of $912 million pre-tax and $520 million post-tax for the half year.

 

The Gulf of Mexico oil spill charge before interest and tax for the second quarter was $347 million to reflect the latest estimate for claims, including business economic loss claims, and associated administration costs. In addition, the half year also reflects an impairment charge in the first quarter due to the divestment of certain Upstream assets.

 

Effective tax rate

The effective tax rate (ETR) on RC profit or loss* for the second quarter and half year was 63% and 43% respectively, compared with 51% and 49% for the same periods in 2016. Adjusting for non-operating items and fair value accounting effects, the adjusted ETR* for the second quarter and half year was 60% and 45% respectively, compared with 21% and 20% for the same periods in 2016.

 

The adjusted ETR for the second quarter and half year is higher than a year ago mainly due to the exploration write-offs and changes in the mix of profits, notably the impact of the renewal of our interest in the Abu Dhabi onshore oil concession. We now expect the full year adjusted ETR to be above 40%.

 

 

Dividend

BP today announced a quarterly dividend of 10.00 cents per ordinary share ($0.600 per ADS), which is expected to be paid on 22 September 2017. The corresponding amount in sterling will be announced on 12 September 2017. See page 24 for further information.

 

Operating cash flow*

Excluding post-tax amounts related to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, operating cash flow* for the second quarter and half year was $6.9 billion and $11.3 billion respectively, compared with $5.3 billion and $8.3 billion for the same periods in 2016. Including amounts relating to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, operating cash flow for the second quarter and half year was $4.9 billion and $7.0 billion respectively, compared with $3.9 billion and $5.8 billion for the same periods in 2016.

 

Capital expenditure*

Organic capital expenditure* for the second quarter and half year was $4.3 billion and $7.9 billion respectively, compared with $4.2 billion and $8.7 billion for the same periods in 2016.

 

Inorganic capital expenditure* for the second quarter and half year was $0.1 billion and $0.7 billion respectively, compared with $0.3 billion for both periods in 2016.

 

Organic and inorganic capital expenditure are non-GAAP measures. See page 26 for further information.

 

Divestment proceeds*

Divestment proceeds were $0.5 billion for the second quarter and $0.7 billion for the half year, compared with $0.4 billion and $1.6 billion for the same periods in 2016.

 

Net debt*

Net debt at 30 June 2017 was $39.8 billion, compared with $30.9 billion a year ago. The net debt ratio* at 30 June 2017 was 28.8%, compared with 24.7% a year ago. Net debt and the net debt ratio are non-GAAP measures. See page 25 for more information.

 

 

 

 

 

Top of page 3

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Analysis of underlying RC profit before interest and tax



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Underlying RC profit before interest and tax*








    Upstream


710

1,370

29


2,080

(718)

    Downstream


1,413

1,742

1,513


3,155

3,326

    Rosneft


279

99

246


378

312

    Other businesses and corporate


(366)

(440)

(376)


(806)

(554)

    Consolidation adjustment - UPII*


135

(68)

(121)


67

(81)

Underlying RC profit before interest and tax


2,171

2,703

1,291


4,874

2,285

Finance costs and net finance expense relating to








  pensions and other post-retirement benefits


(420)

(387)

(337)


(807)

(654)

Taxation on an underlying RC basis


(1,055)

(763)

(205)


(1,818)

(325)

Non-controlling interests


(12)

(43)

(29)


(55)

(54)

Underlying RC profit attributable to BP








  shareholders


684

1,510

720


2,194

1,252

 

Reconciliations of underlying RC profit or loss to the nearest equivalent IFRS measure are provided on page 1 for the group and on pages 6-11 for the segments.

 

Analysis of RC profit (loss) before interest and tax and reconciliation to

profit (loss) for the period



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

RC profit (loss) before interest and tax*








  Upstream


795

1,256

(109)


2,051

(1,314)

  Downstream


1,567

1,706

1,405


3,273

3,285

  Rosneft


279

99

246


378

312

  Other businesses and corporate(a)


(721)

(431)

(5,525)


(1,152)

(6,599)

  Consolidation adjustment - UPII


135

(68)

(121)


67

(81)

RC profit (loss) before interest and tax


2,055

2,562

(4,104)


4,617

(4,397)

Finance costs and net finance expense relating to








  pensions and other post-retirement benefits


(541)

(513)

(460)


(1,054)

(900)

Taxation on a RC basis


(949)

(594)

2,346


(1,543)

2,619

Non-controlling interests


(12)

(43)

(29)


(55)

(54)

RC profit (loss) attributable to BP shareholders


553

1,412

(2,247)


1,965

(2,732)

Inventory holding gains (losses)


(586)

66

1,188


(520)

1,056

Taxation (charge) credit on inventory holding








  gains and losses


177

(29)

(360)


148

(326)

Profit (loss) for the period attributable to








  BP shareholders


144

1,449

(1,419)


1,593

(2,002)

 

(a)

Includes costs related to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. See page 11 and also Note 2 from page 19 for further information on the accounting for the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

 

 



 

Top of page 4

 

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Strategic progress

 

Upstream

Upstream operating performance was strong in the first half, underpinned by 6% production growth and an 18% reduction in unit production costs.

 

BP's major projects programme is on track to deliver 800,000boe/d of new production by 2020. Three projects have already come online in 2017, Persephone in Australia and Juniper in Trinidad are in final commissioning, and Khazzan Phase 1 in Oman and Zohr in Egypt are expected online before year end. In the second quarter, BP sanctioned development of two new major gas projects: 'R-Series' in India and Angelin in Trinidad.

 

BP announced four gas discoveries in the first half. One in Egypt and two in Trinidad may support future developments and the major Yakaar discovery offshore Senegal marked a further step in building BP's new business in Mauritania and Senegal. BP decided to exit some exploration assets in Angola, leading to higher exploration write-offs in the second quarter.

 

Downstream

BP's fuels marketing business continues to make good strategic progress; first-half earnings were around 20% higher than in the first half of 2016.

 

Premium fuel volumes continue to grow and around 90 new convenience partnership sites have been added so far this year. In lubricants, BP signed an agreement to be the exclusive premium brand sold by Kroger, the largest supermarket chain in the US.

 

In refining, BP increased the level of advantaged feedstock processed in the US and, in petrochemicals, BP's industry-leading PTA technology is now operational at all its key PTA sites.

 

 

Financial framework

 

Operating cash flow, excluding Gulf of Mexico payments*, in the first half of 2017 was $11.3 billion, with $6.9 billion in the second quarter. This compares with $8.3 billion for the first half of 2016.

 

Organic capital expenditure* of $4.3 billion in the second quarter brought the total for the first half of 2017 to $7.9 billion. BP continues to intend to keep annual organic capital expenditure in the range $15-17 billion.

 

In the first half of 2017, operating cash flow, excluding Gulf of Mexico payments, exceeded organic capital expenditure and cash dividend payments by $0.6 billion.

 

BP expects divestments of $4.5-5.5 billion in 2017, with proceeds weighted to the second half of the year. Divestment proceeds for the first half of 2017 were $0.7 billion.

 

Gulf of Mexico oil spill payments were $2.0 billion in the second quarter and $4.3 billion in the first half of 2017. Payments are expected to be considerably lower in the second half, and the 2017 full-year estimate is unchanged at $4.5-5.5 billion. The additional charge in the second quarter is not expected to have any significant effect on forecast cash flows in the second half of 2017.

 

BP continues to target a gearing* range of 20-30%. At the end of the second quarter, gearing was 28.8%.

 

Operating

metrics


First half 2017
(vs. First half 2016)


Financial

metrics


First half 2017
(vs. First half 2016)

Safety
Tier 1 process safety events*


11

(+2)


Underlying RC profit


$2.2bn

(+$0.9bn)

Safety
Reported recordable injury frequency*


0.22

(-3%)


Operating cash flow excluding Gulf of Mexico oil spill payments


$11.3bn

(+$3bn)

Group production


3,544mboe/d

(+8%)


Organic capital expenditure


$7.9bn

(-$0.8bn)

Upstream production excluding Rosneft segment


2,410mboe/d

(+6%)


Gulf of Mexico oil spill payments


$4.3bn

(+$1.8bn)

Upstream unit production costs*


$7.20/boe

(-18%)


Divestment proceeds


$0.7bn

(-$0.9bn)

BP-operated Upstream operating efficiency*(a)


81.4%

 


Net debt ratio (gearing)


28.8%

(+4.1)

Refining availability*


94.8%

(-0.5)


Dividend per ordinary share


10.00 cents

(-)

 

(a)

Reported on a one-quarter lagged basis and represents 1Q 2017 actuals only.

 

The commentary above contains forward-looking statements and should be read in conjunction with the cautionary statement on page 35.

 

 

 

Top of page 5

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

 

 

 

 

INTENTIONALLY BLANK

 

 

 

 

 

 

Top of page 6

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Upstream



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Profit (loss) before interest and tax


796

1,250

(24)


2,046

(1,260)

Inventory holding (gains) losses*


(1)

6

(85)


5

(54)

RC profit (loss) before interest and tax


795

1,256

(109)


2,051

(1,314)

Net (favourable) unfavourable impact of








  non-operating items* and fair value








  accounting effects*


(85)

114

138


29

596

Underlying RC profit (loss) before interest








  and tax*(a)


710

1,370

29


2,080

(718)

 

(a)

See page 7 for a reconciliation to segment RC profit before interest and tax by region.

 

Financial results

The replacement cost profit before interest and tax for the second quarter and half year was $795 million and $2,051 million respectively, compared with a loss of $109 million and $1,314 million for the same periods in 2016. The second quarter and half year included a net non-operating charge of $21 million and $381 million respectively, compared with a net non-operating gain of $7 million and a charge of $348 million for the same periods in 2016. Fair value accounting effects in the second quarter and half year had a favourable impact of $106 million and $352 million respectively, compared with an unfavourable impact of $145 million and $248 million in the same periods of 2016.

 

After adjusting for non-operating items and fair value accounting effects, the underlying replacement cost profit before interest and tax for the second quarter and half year was $710 million and $2,080 million respectively, compared with a profit of $29 million and a loss of $718 million for the same periods in 2016. The result for the second quarter and half year mainly reflected higher liquids and gas realizations, and higher production including the impact of the Abu Dhabi concession renewal and major project start-ups, partly offset by higher exploration write-offs largely in Angola and higher depreciation, depletion and amortization.

 

Production

Production for the quarter was 2,431mboe/d, 9.9% higher than the second quarter of 2016. Underlying production* for the quarter increased by 7.0%, due to the ramp-up of major projects. For the first half, production was 2,410mboe/d, 6.4% higher than in the same period of 2016. First-half underlying production was 5% higher than the same period of 2016 due to major project start-ups.

 

Key events

On 8 May, BP along with joint venture partner Kosmos Energy announced the Yakaar gas discovery located at Cayar Offshore Profond block offshore Senegal (BP 60% (following completion on 3 July of the acquisition by BP of Timis Corp's working interest), Kosmos 30%, and Petrosen 10%).

 

On 10 May, BP announced the start of gas production from the first two fields, Taurus and Libra, of the West Nile Delta development in Egypt (BP operator 82.75 % and DEA Deutsche Erdoel AG 17.25%).

 

On 22 May, BP announced first oil from the redeveloped Schiehallion Area, following completion of the Quad 204 project in the west of Shetland region, offshore UK (BP operator 36%, Shell 54%, and Siccar Point Energy 10%).

On 2 June, BP Trinidad and Tobago LLC (bpTT) announced the sanction for the development of its Angelin offshore gas project. On the same day, bpTT also announced that it has made two significant gas discoveries with the Savannah and Macadamia exploration wells.

 

On 15 June, BP and Reliance Industries Limited (RIL) announced the development of the R-Series project in Block KG D6 off the east coast of India (RIL operator 60%, BP 30%, and NIKO 10%).

 

This builds on the progress announced in our first-quarter results, which comprised the following: BP's previously announced transaction with Kosmos Energy in Senegal was approved by the Senegal Minister of Energy and of Development of Renewable Energies; BP completed the purchase of a 10% interest from Eni (operator, 90%) in the Shorouk concession offshore Egypt; BP announced its third gas discovery in the North Damietta Offshore Concession (BP 100%) in the East Nile Delta, Egypt; BP announced that it had agreed to sell its Forties Pipeline System (FPS) business and other associated interests and facilities to INEOS; and bpTT announced the start-up of the Trinidad onshore compression project.

 

Outlook

Looking ahead, we expect third-quarter reported production to be broadly flat with the second quarter with the continued ramp-up of major projects offset by seasonal turnaround and maintenance activities.

 

 

The commentary above contains forward-looking statements and should be read in conjunction with the cautionary statement on page 35.

 

 

Top of page 7

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Upstream (continued)



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Underlying RC profit (loss) before interest and tax








US


179

166

(305)


345

(972)

Non-US


531

1,204

334


1,735

254



710

1,370

29


2,080

(718)

Non-operating items








US


(34)

(12)

(57)


(46)

(220)

Non-US(a)


13

(348)

64


(335)

(128)



(21)

(360)

7


(381)

(348)

Fair value accounting effects








US


92

192

(57)


284

(90)

Non-US


14

54

(88)


68

(158)



106

246

(145)


352

(248)

RC profit (loss) before interest and tax








US


237

346

(419)


583

(1,282)

Non-US


558

910

310


1,468

(32)



795

1,256

(109)


2,051

(1,314)

Exploration expense








US


25

40

48


65

160

Non-US(b)


825

372

302


1,197

444



850

412

350


1,262

604

Of which: Exploration expenditure written off(b)


753

261

260


1,014

421

Production (net of royalties)(c)








Liquids*(d) (mb/d)








US


418

448

401


433

402

Europe


122

115

117


118

122

Rest of World(d)


812

827

706


819

737



1,352

1,389

1,224


1,371

1,261

Natural gas (mmcf/d)








US


1,576

1,594

1,666


1,585

1,634

Europe


274

263

238


269

263

Rest of World


4,410

3,934

3,829


4,173

3,924



6,260

5,791

5,733


6,026

5,822

Total hydrocarbons*(d) (mboe/d)








US


689

723

688


706

684

Europe


169

160

158


165

168

Rest of World(d)


1,572

1,505

1,366


1,539

1,413



2,431

2,388

2,212


2,410

2,265

Average realizations*(e)








Total liquids(d)(f) ($/bbl)


46.27

49.87

39.68


48.09

34.44

Natural gas ($/mcf)


3.19

3.50

2.66


3.34

2.75

Total hydrocarbons(d) ($/boe)


33.59

37.19

28.66


35.37

26.16

 

(a)

First quarter 2017 relates primarily to an impairment charge arising following the announcement on 3 April 2017 of the agreement to sell the Forties Pipeline System business to INEOS.

(b)

Second quarter 2017 predominantly relates to the write-off of exploration well and lease costs in Angola. First quarter 2017 is mainly due to the write-off of exploration wells in Egypt.

(c)

Includes BP's share of production of equity-accounted entities in the Upstream segment.

(d)

A minor adjustment has been made to comparative periods in 2016. See page 30 for more information.

(e)

Realizations are based on sales by consolidated subsidiaries only - this excludes equity-accounted entities.

(f)

Includes condensate, natural gas liquids and bitumen.

 

Because of rounding, some totals may not agree exactly with the sum of their component parts.

 

 

Top of page 8

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Downstream



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Profit (loss) before interest and tax


988

1,804

2,463


2,792

4,246

Inventory holding (gains) losses*


579

(98)

(1,058)


481

(961)

RC profit before interest and tax


1,567

1,706

1,405


3,273

3,285

Net (favourable) unfavourable impact of








  non-operating items* and fair value








  accounting effects*


(154)

36

108


(118)

41

Underlying RC profit before interest and tax*(a)


1,413

1,742

1,513


3,155

3,326

 

(a)

See page 9 for a reconciliation to segment RC profit before interest and tax by region and by business.

 

Financial results

The replacement cost profit before interest and tax for the second quarter and first half was $1,567 million and $3,273 million respectively, compared with $1,405 million and $3,285 million for the same periods in 2016.

 

The second quarter and half year include a net non-operating gain of $138 million and $62 million respectively, compared with a net non-operating charge of $37 million and a net non-operating gain of $249 million for the same periods in 2016. Fair value accounting effects had a favourable impact of $16 million in the second quarter and $56 million for the half year, compared with an unfavourable impact of $71 million and $290 million for the same periods in 2016.

 

After adjusting for non-operating items and fair value accounting effects, the underlying replacement cost profit before interest and tax for the second quarter and half year was $1,413 million and $3,155 million respectively, compared with $1,513 million and $3,326 million for the same periods in 2016.

 

Replacement cost profit before interest and tax for fuels, lubricants and petrochemicals is set out on page 9.

 

Fuels business

The fuels business reported an underlying replacement cost profit before interest and tax of $908 million for the second quarter and $2,108 million for the half year, compared with $1,011 million and $2,327 million for the same periods in 2016, driven by higher fuels marketing and refining results which were more than offset by a significantly lower supply and trading contribution for both the quarter and half year.

 

The fuels marketing result for the quarter and half year reflects continued growth supported by the rollout of our convenience partnership sites and higher premium volumes. For the half year, the fuels marketing result was around 20% higher than the same period last year.

 

The refining result for the quarter and half year benefited from stronger refining commercial optimization, partially offset by a higher level of turnaround activity. The half year also benefited from improved industry refining margins which were partially offset by narrower North American heavy crude oil differentials.

 

In the second quarter, we signed a memorandum of understanding with Reliance Industries Limited to jointly explore options to develop differentiated retail and aviation fuels, mobility and advanced low carbon energy businesses in India.

 

On 18 July we announced that we are evaluating the formation and initial public offering of a master limited partnership to enhance shareholder value and to support BP's strategy to grow its US midstream business.

 

Lubricants business

The lubricants business reported an underlying replacement cost profit before interest and tax of $355 million for the second quarter and $748 million for the half year, compared with $412 million and $796 million for the same periods in 2016.

 

During the quarter, we announced an agreement to be the exclusive premium lubricants brand sold by Kroger, the largest supermarket chain in the US.

 

Petrochemicals business

The petrochemicals business reported an underlying replacement cost profit before interest and tax of $150 million for the second quarter and $299 million for the half year, compared with $90 million and $203 million for the same periods in 2016. The result for the second quarter and half year reflects an improved margin environment as well as lower costs reflecting the continued benefit from our simplification and efficiency programmes.

 

On 27 April, we announced our intention to divest our 50% shareholding in our Shanghai SECCO Petrochemical Company Limited joint venture in China for a consideration of $1.7 billion. This transaction is subject to regulatory approvals.

 

Outlook

In the third quarter, we expect a similar level of industry refining margins and that North American heavy crude oil differentials will remain under pressure.

 

The commentary above contains forward-looking statements and should be read in conjunction with the cautionary statement on page 35.

 

 

Top of page 9

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Downstream (continued)



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Underlying RC profit before interest and tax -








  by region








US


283

554

386


837

926

Non-US


1,130

1,188

1,127


2,318

2,400



1,413

1,742

1,513


3,155

3,326

Non-operating items








US


28

(12)

17


16

130

Non-US


110

(64)

(54)


46

119



138

(76)

(37)


62

249

Fair value accounting effects








US


10

(62)

(78)


(52)

(165)

Non-US


6

102

7


108

(125)



16

40

(71)


56

(290)

RC profit before interest and tax








US


321

480

325


801

891

Non-US


1,246

1,226

1,080


2,472

2,394



1,567

1,706

1,405


3,273

3,285

Underlying RC profit before interest and tax - 








  by business(a)(b)








Fuels


908

1,200

1,011


2,108

2,327

Lubricants


355

393

412


748

796

Petrochemicals


150

149

90


299

203



1,413

1,742

1,513


3,155

3,326

Non-operating items and fair value








  accounting effects(c)








Fuels


159

4

(93)


163

(38)

Lubricants


(2)

(3)

(3)


(5)

(4)

Petrochemicals


(3)

(37)

(12)


(40)

1



154

(36)

(108)


118

(41)

RC profit before interest and tax(a)(b)








Fuels


1,067

1,204

918


2,271

2,289

Lubricants


353

390

409


743

792

Petrochemicals


147

112

78


259

204



1,567

1,706

1,405


3,273

3,285









BP average refining marker margin (RMM)* ($/bbl)


13.8

11.7

13.8


12.8

12.2

Refinery throughputs (mb/d)








US


708

694

668


702

683

Europe


782

801

805


791

806

Rest of World


198

181

231


189

235



1,688

1,676

1,704


1,682

1,724

Refining availability* (%)


94.5

95.2

95.7


94.8

95.3

Marketing sales of refined products (mb/d)








US


1,177

1,116

1,115


1,146

1,093

Europe


1,153

1,069

1,170


1,111

1,157

Rest of World


497

512

515


505

502



2,827

2,697

2,800


2,762

2,752

Trading/supply sales of refined products


2,996

2,959

2,875


2,978

2,843

Total sales volumes of refined products


5,823

5,656

5,675


5,740

5,595

Petrochemicals production (kte)








US


672

498

558


1,170

1,454

Europe


1,365

1,253

909


2,618

1,901

Rest of World


2,001

2,073

1,967


4,074

3,876



4,038

3,824

3,434


7,862

7,231

 

(a)

Segment-level overhead expenses are included in the fuels business result.

(b)

BP's share of income from petrochemicals at our Gelsenkirchen and Mülheim sites in Germany is reported in the fuels business.

(c)

For Downstream, fair value accounting effects arise solely in the fuels business.

 

 

Top of page 10

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Rosneft



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017(a)

2017

2016


2017(a)

2016

Profit before interest and tax(b)


271

73

291


344

353

Inventory holding (gains) losses*


8

26

(45)


34

(41)

RC profit before interest and tax


279

99

246


378

312

Net charge (credit) for non-operating items*


-

-

-


-

-

Underlying RC profit before interest and tax*


279

99

246


378

312

 

Financial results

 

Replacement cost profit before interest and tax and underlying replacement cost profit before interest and tax for the second quarter and half year was $279 million and $378 million respectively, compared with $246 million and $312 million for the same periods in 2016. There were no non-operating items in the second quarter and half year of either year.

 

Compared with the same periods in 2016, the result for the second quarter was primarily affected by higher oil prices and adverse duty lag effects. For the half year, the result was primarily affected by higher oil prices, adverse foreign exchange and adverse duty lag effects.

 

BP's two nominees, Bob Dudley and Guillermo Quintero, were re-elected to Rosneft's board by the annual general meeting (AGM) on 22 June. The AGM also adopted a resolution to pay dividends of 5.98 roubles per ordinary share. In July BP received a dividend in relation to the 2016 annual results of $190 million, after the deduction of withholding tax.

 

Key events

 

In April Rosneft completed the acquisition of a 100% interest in the Kondaneft project that is developing four licence areas in the Khanty-Mansiysk Autonomous District in West Siberia. The acquisition price was approximately $700 million.

 

On 29 June Rosneft completed the transaction for the sale of a 20% interest in its Verkhnechonskneftegaz subsidiary to the Beijing Gas Group, for around $1.1 billion.

 

 



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half



2017(a)

2017

2016


2017(a)

2016

Production (net of royalties) (BP share)








Liquids* (mb/d)


902

912

812


907

810

Natural gas (mmcf/d)


1,302

1,334

1,266


1,318

1,274

Total hydrocarbons* (mboe/d)


1,126

1,142

1,030


1,134

1,029

 

(a)

The operational and financial information of the Rosneft segment for the second quarter and first half of the year is based on preliminary operational and financial results of Rosneft for the six months ended 30 June 2017. Actual results may differ from these amounts.

(b)

The Rosneft segment result includes equity-accounted earnings arising from BP's 19.75% shareholding in Rosneft as adjusted for the accounting required under IFRS relating to BP's purchase of its interest in Rosneft and the amortization of the deferred gain relating to the divestment of BP's interest in TNK-BP. These adjustments have increased the reported profit before interest and tax for the second quarter and first half 2017, as shown in the table above, compared with the equivalent amount in Russian roubles that we expect Rosneft to report in its own financial statements under IFRS. BP's share of Rosneft's profit before interest and tax for each year-to-date period is calculated by translating the amounts reported in Russian roubles into US dollars using the average exchange rate for the year to date. BP's share of Rosneft's earnings after finance costs, taxation and non-controlling interests, as adjusted, is included in the BP group income statement within profit before interest and taxation.

 

 

Top of page 11

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Other businesses and corporate



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Profit (loss) before interest and tax








Gulf of Mexico oil spill


(347)

(35)

(5,106)


(382)

(5,900)

Other


(374)

(396)

(419)


(770)

(699)

Profit (loss) before interest and tax


(721)

(431)

(5,525)


(1,152)

(6,599)

Inventory holding (gains) losses*


-

-

-


-

-

RC profit (loss) before interest and tax


(721)

(431)

(5,525)


(1,152)

(6,599)

Net charge (credit) for non-operating items*








Gulf of Mexico oil spill


347

35

5,106


382

5,900

Other


8

(44)

43


(36)

145

Net charge (credit) for non-operating items


355

(9)

5,149


346

6,045

Underlying RC profit (loss) before interest and








  tax*


(366)

(440)

(376)


(806)

(554)

Underlying RC profit (loss) before interest and








  tax








US


(104)

(197)

(109)


(301)

(219)

Non-US


(262)

(243)

(267)


(505)

(335)



(366)

(440)

(376)


(806)

(554)

Non-operating items








US


(350)

(38)

(5,136)


(388)

(5,984)

Non-US


(5)

47

(13)


42

(61)



(355)

9

(5,149)


(346)

(6,045)

RC profit (loss) before interest and tax








US


(454)

(235)

(5,245)


(689)

(6,203)

Non-US


(267)

(196)

(280)


(463)

(396)



(721)

(431)

(5,525)


(1,152)

(6,599)

 

Other businesses and corporate comprises our alternative energy business, shipping, treasury, corporate activities including centralized functions, and the costs of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

 

Financial results

The replacement cost loss before interest and tax for the second quarter and half year was $721 million and $1,152 million respectively, compared with $5,525 million and $6,599 million for the same periods in 2016.

 

The results included a net non-operating charge of $355 million for the second quarter and $346 million for the half year, compared with a net non-operating charge of $5,149 million and $6,045 million for the same periods in 2016.

 

After adjusting for non-operating items, the underlying replacement cost loss before interest and tax for the second quarter and half year was $366 million and $806 million respectively, compared with $376 million and $554 million for the same periods in 2016. The underlying charge for the half year was impacted by adverse foreign exchange effects, which had a favourable effect in the same period in 2016.

 

Alternative energy - biofuels, wind

The net ethanol-equivalent production (which includes ethanol and sugar) for the second quarter was 227 million litres, compared with 283 million litres for the same period in 2016.

 

Net wind generation capacity*(a) was 1,432MW at 30 June 2017 compared with 1,477MW at 30 June 2016. BP's net share of wind generation for the second quarter and half year was 1,053GWh and 2,212GWh respectively, compared with 1,060GWh and 2,407GWh for the same periods in 2016.

 

(a)

Capacity figures for 2016 include 23MW in the Netherlands managed by our Downstream segment.

 

 

Top of page 12

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Half-yearly financial report

This results announcement also represents BP's half-yearly financial report for the purposes of the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules made by the UK Financial Conduct Authority. In this context: (i) the condensed set of financial statements can be found on pages 14-25; (ii) pages 1-11, and 26-35 comprise the interim management report; and (iii) the directors' responsibility statement and auditors' independent review report can be found on pages 12-13.

 

 

Statement of directors' responsibilities

The directors confirm that, to the best of their knowledge, the condensed set of financial statements on pages 14-25 has been prepared in accordance with IAS 34 'Interim Financial Reporting', and that the interim management report on pages 1-11 and 26-35 includes a fair review of the information required by the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules.

 

The directors of BP p.l.c. are listed on pages 52-57 of BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2016, with the exception of Cynthia Carroll and Andrew Shilston who retired at the 2017 Annual General Meeting on 17 May 2017, and Melody Meyer who was elected at the 2017 Annual General Meeting.

 

By order of the board

 

Bob Dudley

Brian Gilvary

Group Chief Executive

Chief Financial Officer

31 July 2017

31 July 2017

 

 

Top of page 13

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Independent review report to BP p.l.c.

 

Introduction

 

We have been engaged by the company to review the condensed set of financial statements in the half-yearly financial report for the six months ended 30 June 2017 which comprises the group income statement, group statement of comprehensive income, group statement of changes in equity, group balance sheet, condensed group cash flow statement and Notes 1 to 10. We have read the other information contained in the half-yearly financial report and considered whether it contains any apparent misstatements or material inconsistencies with the information in the condensed set of financial statements.

 

This report is made solely to the company in accordance with guidance contained in International Standard on Review Engagements 2410 (UK and Ireland) 'Review of Interim Financial Information Performed by the Independent Auditor of the Entity' issued by the Auditing Practices Board for use in the United Kingdom (ISRE 2410). To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility to anyone other than the company, for our work, for this report, or for the conclusions we have formed.

 

Directors' responsibilities

 

The half-yearly financial report is the responsibility of, and has been approved by, the directors. The directors are responsible for preparing the half-yearly financial report in accordance with the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules of the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority.

 

As disclosed in Note 1, the annual financial statements of the group are prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) and IFRS as adopted by the European Union (EU). The condensed set of financial statements included in this half-yearly financial report has been prepared in accordance with International Accounting Standard 34, 'Interim Financial Reporting', as issued by the IASB and as adopted by the EU.

 

Our responsibility

 

Our responsibility is to express to the company a conclusion on the condensed set of financial statements in the half-yearly financial report based on our review.

 

Scope of review

 

We conducted our review in accordance with ISRE 2410. A review of interim financial information consists of making enquiries, primarily of persons responsible for financial and accounting matters, and applying analytical and other review procedures. A review is substantially less in scope than an audit conducted in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK) and consequently does not enable us to obtain assurance that we would become aware of all significant matters that might be identified in an audit. Accordingly, we do not express an audit opinion.

 

Conclusion

 

Based on our review, nothing has come to our attention that causes us to believe that the condensed set of financial statements in the half-yearly financial report for the six months ended 30 June 2017 is not prepared, in all material respects, in accordance with International Accounting Standard 34 as issued by the IASB and as adopted by the EU and the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules of the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority.

 

 

Ernst & Young LLP

London

31 July 2017

 

The maintenance and integrity of the BP p.l.c. website are the responsibility of the directors; the review work carried out by the auditors does not involve consideration of these matters and, accordingly, the auditors accept no responsibility for any changes that may have occurred to the financial information since it was initially presented on the website.

 

Legislation in the United Kingdom governing the preparation and dissemination of financial statements may differ from legislation in other jurisdictions.

 

 

Top of page 14

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Financial statements

Group income statement



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016









Sales and other operating revenues (Note 4)


56,511

55,863

46,442


112,374

84,954

Earnings from joint ventures - after interest








  and tax


160

205

274


365

303

Earnings from associates - after interest and tax


371

151

380


522

522

Interest and other income


127

122

101


249

246

Gains on sale of businesses and fixed assets


197

45

79


242

417

Total revenues and other income


57,366

56,386

47,276


113,752

86,442

Purchases


42,713

41,137

32,752


83,850

59,355

Production and manufacturing expenses(a)


5,761

5,255

10,446


11,016

16,965

Production and similar taxes (Note 5)


189

306

258


495

272

Depreciation, depletion and amortization (Note 4)


3,793

3,842

3,637


7,635

7,367

Impairment and losses on sale of businesses








  and fixed assets


51

453

52


504

65

Exploration expense


850

412

350


1,262

604

Distribution and administration expenses


2,540

2,353

2,697


4,893

5,155

Profit (loss) before interest and taxation


1,469

2,628

(2,916)


4,097

(3,341)

Finance costs(a)


487

460

414


947

808

Net finance expense relating to pensions and








  other post-retirement benefits


54

53

46


107

92

Profit (loss) before taxation


928

2,115

(3,376)


3,043

(4,241)

Taxation(a)


772

623

(1,986)


1,395

(2,293)

Profit (loss) for the period


156

1,492

(1,390)


1,648

(1,948)

Attributable to








  BP shareholders


144

1,449

(1,419)


1,593

(2,002)

  Non-controlling interests


12

43

29


55

54



156

1,492

(1,390)


1,648

(1,948)









Earnings per share (Note 6)








Profit (loss) for the period attributable to








  BP shareholders








  Per ordinary share (cents)








    Basic


0.73

7.42

(7.60)


8.12

(10.78)

    Diluted


0.72

7.38

(7.60)


8.08

(10.78)

  Per ADS (dollars)








    Basic


0.04

0.45

(0.46)


0.49

(0.65)

    Diluted


0.04

0.44

(0.46)


0.48

(0.65)

 

(a)

See Note 2 for information on the impact of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill on these income statement line items.

 

 

Top of page 15

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Group statement of comprehensive income



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016









Profit (loss) for the period


156

1,492

(1,390)


1,648

(1,948)

Other comprehensive income








Items that may be reclassified subsequently to








  profit or loss








  Currency translation differences


(103)

1,214

(35)


1,111

839

  Exchange gains (losses) on translation of








    foreign operations reclassified to gain or loss








    on sale of businesses and fixed assets


4

1

-


5

6

  Available-for-sale investments


1

2

-


3

-

  Cash flow hedges marked to market


81

48

(289)


129

(351)

  Cash flow hedges reclassified to the income








    statement


31

42

16


73

39

  Cash flow hedges reclassified to the








    balance sheet


36

39

6


75

19

  Share of items relating to equity-accounted








    entities, net of tax


72

231

197


303

487

  Income tax relating to items that may








    be reclassified


4

(125)

80


(121)

(6)



126

1,452

(25)


1,578

1,033

Items that will not be reclassified to profit or loss








  Remeasurements of the net pension and other








    post-retirement benefit liability or asset


318

727

(1,763)


1,045

(2,985)

  Income tax relating to items that will not be








    reclassified


(102)

(246)

592


(348)

994



216

481

(1,171)


697

(1,991)

Other comprehensive income


342

1,933

(1,196)


2,275

(958)

Total comprehensive income


498

3,425

(2,586)


3,923

(2,906)

Attributable to








  BP shareholders


472

3,363

(2,604)


3,835

(2,955)

  Non-controlling interests


26

62

18


88

49



498

3,425

(2,586)


3,923

(2,906)

 

 

Top of page 16

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Group statement of changes in equity



BP





shareholders'

Non-controlling

Total

$ million


equity

interests

equity






At 1 January 2017


95,286

1,557

96,843






Total comprehensive income


3,835

88

3,923

Dividends


(2,850)

(77)

(2,927)

Share-based payments, net of tax


334

-

334

Share of equity-accounted entities' change in equity, net of tax


198

-

198

Transactions involving non-controlling interests


-

90

90

At 30 June 2017


96,803

1,658

98,461








BP





shareholders'

Non-controlling

Total

$ million


equity

interests

equity






At 1 January 2016


97,216

1,171

98,387






Total comprehensive income


(2,955)

49

(2,906)

Dividends


(2,268)

(52)

(2,320)

Share-based payments, net of tax


447

-

447

Share of equity-accounted entities' change in equity, net of tax


65

-

65

Transactions involving non-controlling interests


221

214

435

At 30 June 2016


92,726

1,382

94,108

 

 

Top of page 17

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Group balance sheet



30 June

31 December

$ million


2017

2016

Non-current assets




Property, plant and equipment


130,715

129,757

Goodwill


11,395

11,194

Intangible assets


17,399

18,183

Investments in joint ventures


8,550

8,609

Investments in associates


15,408

14,092

Other investments


1,048

1,033

Fixed assets


184,515

182,868

Loans


540

532

Trade and other receivables


1,425

1,474

Derivative financial instruments


4,446

4,359

Prepayments


1,076

945

Deferred tax assets


5,114

4,741

Defined benefit pension plan surpluses


1,281

584



198,397

195,503

Current assets




Loans


268

259

Inventories


16,449

17,655

Trade and other receivables


20,350

20,675

Derivative financial instruments


2,218

3,016

Prepayments


1,222

1,486

Current tax receivable


864

1,194

Other investments


77

44

Cash and cash equivalents


23,270

23,484



64,718

67,813

Total assets


263,115

263,316

Current liabilities




Trade and other payables


36,642

37,915

Derivative financial instruments


2,295

2,991

Accruals


4,221

5,136

Finance debt


7,385

6,634

Current tax payable


1,716

1,666

Provisions


2,583

4,012



54,842

58,354

Non-current liabilities




Other payables


12,556

13,946

Derivative financial instruments


4,210

5,513

Accruals


489

469

Finance debt


55,619

51,666

Deferred tax liabilities


7,435

7,238

Provisions


20,501

20,412

Defined benefit pension plan and other post-retirement benefit plan deficits


9,002

8,875



109,812

108,119

Total liabilities


164,654

166,473

Net assets


98,461

96,843

Equity




BP shareholders' equity


96,803

95,286

Non-controlling interests


1,658

1,557

Total equity


98,461

96,843

 

 

Top of page 18

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Condensed group cash flow statement



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Operating activities








Profit (loss) before taxation


928

2,115

(3,376)


3,043

(4,241)

Adjustments to reconcile profit (loss) before








  taxation to net cash provided by operating








  activities








  Depreciation, depletion and amortization and








    exploration expenditure written off


4,546

4,103

3,897


8,649

7,788

  Impairment and (gain) loss on sale of businesses








    and fixed assets


(146)

408

(27)


262

(352)

  Earnings from equity-accounted entities,








    less dividends received


(103)

(220)

(485)


(323)

(509)

  Net charge for interest and other finance








    expense, less net interest paid


84

252

113


336

281

  Share-based payments


156

162

204


318

463

  Net operating charge for pensions and other post-








    retirement benefits, less contributions and








    benefit payments for unfunded plans


54

(73)

(56)


(19)

(24)

  Net charge for provisions, less payments


183

(177)

4,565


6

5,300

  Movements in inventories and other current and








    non-current assets and liabilities


3

(3,600)

(863)


(3,597)

(2,590)

  Income taxes paid


(815)

(856)

(89)


(1,671)

(361)

Net cash provided by operating activities


4,890

2,114

3,883


7,004

5,755

Investing activities








Expenditure on property, plant and equipment,








  intangible and other assets


(4,181)

(3,823)

(4,283)


(8,004)

(8,664)

Acquisitions, net of cash acquired


(123)

(42)

-


(165)

-

Investment in joint ventures


(10)

(20)

(8)


(30)

(12)

Investment in associates


(174)

(183)

(196)


(357)

(289)

Total cash capital expenditure


(4,488)

(4,068)

(4,487)


(8,556)

(8,965)

Proceeds from disposal of fixed assets


312

188

153


500

391

Proceeds from disposal of businesses, net of








  cash disposed


140

73

291


213

1,202

Proceeds from loan repayments


19

14

6


33

52

Net cash used in investing activities


(4,017)

(3,793)

(4,037)


(7,810)

(7,320)

Financing activities








Proceeds from long-term financing


1,720

3,713

2,710


5,433

5,448

Repayments of long-term financing


(1,463)

(917)

(1,318)


(2,380)

(4,877)

Net increase (decrease) in short-term debt


(299)

315

300


16

188

Net increase (decrease) in non-controlling interests


51

30

368


81

438

Dividends paid

- BP shareholders


(1,546)

(1,304)

(1,169)


(2,850)

(2,268)


- non-controlling interests


(62)

(15)

(43)


(77)

(52)

Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities


(1,599)

1,822

848


223

(1,123)

Currency translation differences relating to cash








  and cash equivalents


202

167

(226)


369

(184)

Increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents


(524)

310

468


(214)

(2,872)

Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period


23,794

23,484

23,049


23,484

26,389

Cash and cash equivalents at end of period


23,270

23,794

23,517


23,270

23,517

 

 

Top of page 19

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Notes

Note 1. Basis of preparation

 

The interim financial information included in this report has been prepared in accordance with IAS 34 'Interim Financial Reporting'.

 

The results for the interim periods are unaudited and, in the opinion of management, include all adjustments necessary for a fair presentation of the results for each period. All such adjustments are of a normal recurring nature. This report should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements and related notes for the year ended 31 December 2016 included in BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2016.

 

The directors have made an assessment of the group's ability to continue as a going concern and consider it appropriate to adopt the going concern basis of accounting in preparing these interim financial statements.

 

BP prepares its consolidated financial statements included within BP Annual Report and Form 20-F on the basis of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB), IFRS as adopted by the European Union (EU) and in accordance with the provisions of the UK Companies Act 2006. IFRS as adopted by the EU differs in certain respects from IFRS as issued by the IASB. The differences have no impact on the group's consolidated financial statements for the periods presented.

 

The financial information presented herein has been prepared in accordance with the accounting policies expected to be used in preparing BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2017, which do not differ significantly from those used in BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2016.

 

 

Note 2. Gulf of Mexico oil spill

 

(a) Overview

 

The information presented in this note should be read in conjunction with BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2016 - Financial statements - Note 2 and Legal proceedings on page 261.

 

The group income statement includes a pre-tax charge for the second quarter of $347 million to reflect the latest estimate for claims, including business economic loss claims, and associated administration costs, and $121 million for finance costs relating to the unwinding of discounting effects. The equivalent amounts for the half year were $382 million and $247 million respectively. The cumulative pre-tax income statement charge since the incident, in April 2010, amounts to $63,214 million.

 

The amounts set out below reflect the impacts on the financial statements of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill for the periods presented. The income statement, balance sheet and cash flow statement impacts are included within the relevant line items in those statements as set out below.

 

 



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Income statement








Production and manufacturing expenses


347

35

5,106


382

5,900

Profit (loss) before interest and taxation


(347)

(35)

(5,106)


(382)

(5,900)

Finance costs


121

126

123


247

246

Profit (loss) before taxation


(468)

(161)

(5,229)


(629)

(6,146)

Taxation


154

48

2,533


202

2,784

Profit (loss) for the period


(314)

(113)

(2,696)


(427)

(3,362)

 

 

Top of page 20

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Note 2. Gulf of Mexico oil spill (continued)



30 June

31 December

$ million


2017

2016

Balance sheet




Current assets




  Trade and other receivables


172

194

Current liabilities




  Trade and other payables


(2,202)

(3,056)

  Provisions


(955)

(2,330)

Net current assets (liabilities)


(2,985)

(5,192)

Non-current assets




  Deferred tax assets


3,001

2,973

Non-current liabilities




  Other payables


(12,151)

(13,522)

  Provisions


-

(112)

  Deferred tax liabilities


5,294

5,119

Net non-current assets (liabilities)


(3,856)

(5,542)

Net assets (liabilities)


(6,841)

(10,734)

 

 



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Cash flow statement - Operating activities








Profit (loss) before taxation


(468)

(161)

(5,229)


(629)

(6,146)

Adjustments to reconcile profit (loss) before








  taxation to net cash provided by








  operating activities








Net charge for interest and other finance








  expense, less net interest paid


121

126

123


247

246

Net charge for provisions, less payments


298

(5)

4,466


293

5,223

Movements in inventories and other current








  and non-current assets and liabilities


(1,976)

(2,254)

(971)


(4,230)

(2,059)

Pre-tax cash flows


(2,025)

(2,294)

(1,611)


(4,319)

(2,736)

 

Cash outflows in 2016 and 2017 include payments made under the 2012 agreement with the US government to resolve all federal criminal claims arising from the incident and the 2016 consent decree and settlement agreement with the United States and the five Gulf coast states. Included in the current quarter cash outflow are payments of $379 million and $490 million relating to Clean Water Act penalties and natural resource damages settlements respectively. Net cash from operating activities relating to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, on a post-tax basis, amounted to an outflow of $2,025 million and $4,319 million in the second quarter and first half of 2017 respectively. For the same periods in 2016, the amount was an outflow of $1,398 million and $2,523 million respectively.

 

 

Top of page 21

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Note 2. Gulf of Mexico oil spill (continued)

 

(b) Provisions and other payables

 

Provisions

 

Movements in the remaining provision, which relates to litigation and claims, are shown in the table below.

 

$ million 


At 1 April 2017


1,350

Net increase in provision


337

Reclassified to other payables


(94)

Utilization


(638)

At 30 June 2017


955

 

Movements in the remaining provision during the first half are shown in the table below.

 

$ million 


At 1 January 2017


2,442

Net increase in provision


362

Reclassified to other payables


(690)

Utilization


(1,159)

At 30 June 2017


955

 

The provision includes amounts for the future cost of resolving claims by individuals and businesses for damage to real or personal property, lost profits or impairment of earning capacity and loss of subsistence use of natural resources.

 

PSC settlement

The provision for the cost associated with the 2012 Plaintiffs' Steering Committee (PSC) settlement has been increased in the second quarter to reflect the latest estimate for claims, including business economic loss claims and associated administration costs. However, the amounts ultimately payable may differ from the amount provided and the timing of payments is uncertain.

 

A significant number of claims determined by the settlement programme have been and may be appealed by BP and/or the claimants. Depending upon the resolution of these claims, the amount payable may differ from what is currently provided for. There is additional uncertainty in relation to the impact of the recent Fifth Circuit decision (on the policy addressing the matching of revenue with expenses in relation to business economic loss claims), including on those business economic loss claims that have not yet been determined and those that are under appeal within the settlement programme (see Legal proceedings on page 35 for further details on the Fifth Circuit decision).

 

Amounts to resolve remaining claims under the PSC settlement are now expected to be substantially paid by the end of 2018. The timing of payments is uncertain, and in particular, will be impacted by how long it takes to resolve claims that have been appealed and may be appealed in the future.

 

Other payables

 

Other payables include amounts payable under the 2012 agreement with the US government to resolve all federal criminal claims arising from the incident, amounts payable under the consent decree and settlement agreement with the United States and the five Gulf coast states for natural resource damages, state claims and Clean Water Act penalties, BP's remaining commitment to fund the Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative, and amounts payable for certain economic loss and property damage claims.

 

Further information on provisions, other payables, and contingent liabilities is provided in BP Annual Report and Form

20-F 2016 - Financial statements - Note 2.

 

 

Top of page 22

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Note 3. Analysis of replacement cost profit (loss) before interest and tax and

reconciliation to profit (loss) before taxation



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Upstream


795

1,256

(109)


2,051

(1,314)

Downstream


1,567

1,706

1,405


3,273

3,285

Rosneft


279

99

246


378

312

Other businesses and corporate(a)


(721)

(431)

(5,525)


(1,152)

(6,599)



1,920

2,630

(3,983)


4,550

(4,316)

Consolidation adjustment - UPII*


135

(68)

(121)


67

(81)

RC profit (loss) before interest and tax*


2,055

2,562

(4,104)


4,617

(4,397)

Inventory holding gains (losses)*








  Upstream


1

(6)

85


(5)

54

  Downstream


(579)

98

1,058


(481)

961

  Rosneft (net of tax)


(8)

(26)

45


(34)

41

Profit (loss) before interest and tax


1,469

2,628

(2,916)


4,097

(3,341)

Finance costs


487

460

414


947

808

Net finance expense relating to pensions and








  other post-retirement benefits


54

53

46


107

92

Profit (loss) before taxation


928

2,115

(3,376)


3,043

(4,241)









RC profit (loss) before interest and tax








US


302

513

(5,394)


815

(6,650)

Non-US


1,753

2,049

1,290


3,802

2,253



2,055

2,562

(4,104)


4,617

(4,397)

 

(a)

Includes costs related to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. See Note 2 for further information.

 

 

Top of page 23

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Note 4. Segmental analysis

Sales and other operating revenues


Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

By segment








Upstream


10,493

11,327

8,176


21,820

15,607

Downstream


52,195

50,080

42,809


102,275

77,361

Other businesses and corporate


326

285

422


611

818



63,014

61,692

51,407


124,706

93,786









Less: sales and other operating revenues








  between segments








Upstream


6,161

5,777

4,301


11,938

7,934

Downstream


208

(86)

475


122

593

Other businesses and corporate


134

138

189


272

305



6,503

5,829

4,965


12,332

8,832









Third party sales and other operating revenues








Upstream


4,332

5,550

3,875


9,882

7,673

Downstream


51,987

50,166

42,334


102,153

76,768

Other businesses and corporate


192

147

233


339

513

Total sales and other operating revenues


56,511

55,863

46,442


112,374

84,954









By geographical area








US


21,577

21,152

17,701


42,729

31,277

Non-US


41,103

40,020

32,482


81,123

59,628



62,680

61,172

50,183


123,852

90,905

Less: sales and other operating revenues








  between areas


6,169

5,309

3,741


11,478

5,951



56,511

55,863

46,442


112,374

84,954

 

 

Depreciation, depletion and amortization


Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Upstream








US


1,133

1,237

1,064


2,370

2,153

Non-US


2,090

2,054

1,993


4,144

4,097



3,223

3,291

3,057


6,514

6,250

Downstream








US


219

216

210


435

420

Non-US


274

279

279


553

546



493

495

489


988

966

Other businesses and corporate








US


16

16

20


32

35

Non-US


61

40

71


101

116



77

56

91


133

151

Total group


3,793

3,842

3,637


7,635

7,367

 

 

Note 5. Production and similar taxes



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

US


41

36

67


77

85

Non-US


148

270

191


418

187



189

306

258


495

272

 

 

Top of page 24

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Note 6. Earnings per share and shares in issue

 

Basic earnings per ordinary share (EpS) amounts are calculated by dividing the profit for the period attributable to ordinary shareholders by the weighted average number of ordinary shares outstanding during the period.

 

The calculation of EpS is performed separately for each discrete quarterly period, and for the year-to-date period. As a result, the sum of the discrete quarterly EpS amounts in any particular year-to-date period may not be equal to the EpS amount for the year-to-date period.

 

For the diluted EpS calculation the weighted average number of shares outstanding during the period is adjusted for the number of shares that are potentially issuable in connection with employee share-based payment plans using the treasury stock method.

 



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Results for the period








Profit (loss) for the period attributable to








  BP shareholders


144

1,449

(1,419)


1,593

(2,002)

Less: preference dividend


1

-

1


1

1

Profit (loss) attributable to BP ordinary








  shareholders


143

1,449

(1,420)


1,592

(2,003)









Number of shares (thousand)(a)(b)








Basic weighted average number of








  shares outstanding


19,686,613

19,518,500

18,685,199


19,602,785

18,577,135

ADS equivalent


3,281,102

3,253,083

3,114,200


3,267,130

3,096,189









Weighted average number of shares








  outstanding used to calculate








  diluted earnings per share


19,783,548

19,621,566

18,685,199


19,713,151

18,577,135

ADS equivalent


3,297,258

3,270,261

3,114,200


3,285,525

3,096,189









Shares in issue at period-end


19,738,566

19,664,528

18,777,156


19,738,566

18,777,156

ADS equivalent


3,289,761

3,277,421

3,129,526


3,289,761

3,129,526

 

(a)

Excludes treasury shares and includes certain shares that will be issued in the future under employee share-based payment plans.

(b)

If the inclusion of potentially issuable shares would decrease loss per share, the potentially issuable shares are excluded from the weighted average number of shares outstanding used to calculate diluted earnings per share.

 

 

Note 7. Dividends

 

Dividends payable

BP today announced an interim dividend of 10.00 cents per ordinary share which is expected to be paid on 22 September 2017 to shareholders and American Depositary Share (ADS) holders on the register on 11 August 2017. The corresponding amount in sterling is due to be announced on 12 September 2017, calculated based on the average of the market exchange rates for the four dealing days commencing on 6 September 2017. Holders of ADSs are expected to receive $0.600 per ADS (less applicable fees). A scrip dividend alternative is available, allowing shareholders to elect to receive their dividend in the form of new ordinary shares and ADS holders in the form of new ADSs. Details of the second quarter dividend and timetable are available at bp.com/dividends and details of the scrip dividend programme are available at bp.com/scrip.

 



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half



2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Dividends paid per ordinary share








  cents


10.000

10.000

10.000


20.000

20.000

  pence


7.756

8.159

6.917


15.915

13.929

Dividends paid per ADS (cents)


60.00

60.00

60.00


120.00

120.00

Scrip dividends








Number of shares issued (millions)


70.1

115.1

134.4


185.2

288.8

Value of shares issued ($ million)


420

642

695


1,062

1,434

 

 

Top of page 25

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Note 8. Net Debt*

Net debt ratio *


Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Gross debt


63,004

61,832

55,727


63,004

55,727

Fair value (asset) liability of hedges related








  to finance debt(a)


60

597

(1,279)


60

(1,279)



63,064

62,429

54,448


63,064

54,448

Less: cash and cash equivalents


23,270

23,794

23,517


23,270

23,517

Net debt


39,794

38,635

30,931


39,794

30,931

Equity


98,461

99,282

94,108


98,461

94,108

Net debt ratio


28.8%

28.0%

24.7%


28.8%

24.7%

 

 

Analysis of changes in net debt


Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Opening balance








Finance debt


61,832

58,300

54,012


58,300

53,168

Fair value (asset) liability of hedges related to








  finance debt(a)


597

697

(967)


697

379

Less: cash and cash equivalents


23,794

23,484

23,049


23,484

26,389

Opening net debt


38,635

35,513

29,996


35,513

27,158

Closing balance








Finance debt


63,004

61,832

55,727


63,004

55,727

Fair value (asset) liability of hedges related to








  finance debt(a)


60

597

(1,279)


60

(1,279)

Less: cash and cash equivalents


23,270

23,794

23,517


23,270

23,517

Closing net debt


39,794

38,635

30,931


39,794

30,931

Decrease (increase) in net debt


(1,159)

(3,122)

(935)


(4,281)

(3,773)

Movement in cash and cash equivalents








  (excluding exchange adjustments)


(726)

143

694


(583)

(2,688)

Net cash outflow (inflow) from financing








  (excluding share capital and dividends)


42

(3,111)

(1,692)


(3,069)

(759)

Other movements


(13)

(66)

36


(79)

395

Movement in net debt before exchange effects


(697)

(3,034)

(962)


(3,731)

(3,052)

Exchange adjustments


(462)

(88)

27


(550)

(721)

Decrease (increase) in net debt


(1,159)

(3,122)

(935)


(4,281)

(3,773)

 

(a)

Derivative financial instruments entered into for the purpose of managing interest rate and foreign currency exchange risk associated with net debt with a fair value liability position of $1,167 million (first quarter 2017 liability of $1,746 million and second quarter 2016 liability of $1,440 million) are not included in the calculation of net debt shown above as hedge accounting is not applied for these instruments.

 

 

Note 9. Inventory valuation

 

A provision of $635 million was held at 30 June 2017 ($499 million at 31 March 2017 and $689 million at 30 June 2016) to write inventories down to their net realizable value. The net movement charged to the income statement during the second quarter 2017 was $132 million (first quarter 2017 was a credit of $4 million and second quarter 2016 was a charge of $12 million).

 

 

Note 10. Statutory accounts

 

The financial information shown in this publication, which was approved by the Board of Directors on 31 July 2017, is unaudited and does not constitute statutory financial statements. Audited financial information will be published in BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2017. BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2016 has been filed with the Registrar of Companies in England and Wales. The report of the auditor on those accounts was unqualified and did not contain a statement under section 498(2) or section 498(3) of the UK Companies Act 2006.

 

 

Top of page 26

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Additional information

Capital expenditure*



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Capital expenditure on a cash basis








Organic capital expenditure*


4,348

3,538

4,205


7,886

8,683

Inorganic capital expenditure*(a)


140

530

282


670

282



4,488

4,068

4,487


8,556

8,965

 

 



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Organic capital expenditure by segment








Upstream








US


805

641

948


1,446

2,195

Non-US


3,005

2,339

2,769


5,344

5,578



3,810

2,980

3,717


6,790

7,773

Downstream








US


149

152

193


301

312

Non-US


316

320

257


636

526



465

472

450


937

838

Other businesses and corporate








US


3

21

4


24

4

Non-US


70

65

34


135

68



73

86

38


159

72



4,348

3,538

4,205


7,886

8,683

Organic capital expenditure by geographical area








US


957

814

1,145


1,771

2,511

Non-US


3,391

2,724

3,060


6,115

6,172



4,348

3,538

4,205


7,886

8,683

 

(a)

First quarter and first half 2017 include amounts paid to purchase an interest in the Zohr gas field in Egypt and in exploration blocks in Senegal.

 

 

Top of page 27

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Non-operating items*



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Upstream








Impairment and gain (loss) on sale of businesses








  and fixed assets(a)


(18)

(382)

-


(400)

4

Environmental and other provisions


-

-

-


-

-

Restructuring, integration and rationalization costs


(19)

2

(3)


(17)

(266)

Fair value gain (loss) on embedded derivatives


5

25

28


30

41

Other


11

(5)

(18)


6

(127)



(21)

(360)

7


(381)

(348)

Downstream








Impairment and gain (loss) on sale of businesses








  and fixed assets


156

(11)

23


145

344

Environmental and other provisions


-

-

(3)


-

(3)

Restructuring, integration and rationalization costs


(18)

(65)

(54)


(83)

(89)

Fair value gain (loss) on embedded derivatives


-

-

-


-

-

Other


-

-

(3)


-

(3)



138

(76)

(37)


62

249

Rosneft








Impairment and gain (loss) on sale of businesses








  and fixed assets


-

-

-


-

-

Environmental and other provisions


-

-

-


-

-

Restructuring, integration and rationalization costs


-

-

-


-

-

Fair value gain (loss) on embedded derivatives


-

-

-


-

-

Other


-

-

-


-

-



-

-

-


-

-

Other businesses and corporate








Impairment and gain (loss) on sale of businesses








  and fixed assets


8

(15)

4


(7)

4

Environmental and other provisions


(3)

-

(35)


(3)

(35)

Restructuring, integration and rationalization costs


(23)

(8)

(11)


(31)

(59)

Fair value gain (loss) on embedded derivatives


-

-

-


-

-

Gulf of Mexico oil spill(b)


(347)

(35)

(5,106)


(382)

(5,900)

Other


10

67

(1)


77

(55)



(355)

9

(5,149)


(346)

(6,045)

Total before interest and taxation


(238)

(427)

(5,179)


(665)

(6,144)

Finance costs(b)


(121)

(126)

(123)


(247)

(246)

Total before taxation


(359)

(553)

(5,302)


(912)

(6,390)

Taxation credit (charge)


144

248

2,483


392

2,793

Total after taxation for period


(215)

(305)

(2,819)


(520)

(3,597)

 

(a)

First quarter and first half 2017 relate primarily to an impairment charge arising following the announcement on 3 April 2017 of the agreement to sell the Forties Pipeline System business to INEOS.

(b)

See Note 2 for further details regarding costs relating to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

 

 

Top of page 28

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Non-GAAP information on fair value accounting effects



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Favourable (unfavourable) impact relative to








  management's measure of performance








Upstream


106

246

(145)


352

(248)

Downstream


16

40

(71)


56

(290)



122

286

(216)


408

(538)

Taxation credit (charge)


(38)

(79)

68


(117)

151



84

207

 

(148)


291

(387)

 

 

BP uses derivative instruments to manage the economic exposure relating to inventories above normal operating requirements of crude oil, natural gas and petroleum products. Under IFRS, these inventories are recorded at historical cost. The related derivative instruments, however, are required to be recorded at fair value with gains and losses recognized in the income statement. This is because hedge accounting is either not permitted or not followed, principally due to the impracticality of effectiveness-testing requirements. Therefore, measurement differences in relation to recognition of gains and losses occur. Gains and losses on these inventories are not recognized until the commodity is sold in a subsequent accounting period. Gains and losses on the related derivative commodity contracts are recognized in the income statement, from the time the derivative commodity contract is entered into, on a fair value basis using forward prices consistent with the contract maturity.

 

BP enters into physical commodity contracts to meet certain business requirements, such as the purchase of crude for a refinery or the sale of BP's gas production. Under IFRS these physical contracts are treated as derivatives and are required to be fair valued when they are managed as part of a larger portfolio of similar transactions. In addition, derivative instruments are used to manage the price risk associated with certain future natural gas sales. Gains and losses arising are recognized in the income statement from the time the derivative commodity contract is entered into.

 

IFRS require that inventory held for trading is recorded at its fair value using period-end spot prices, whereas any related derivative commodity instruments are required to be recorded at values based on forward prices consistent with the contract maturity. Depending on market conditions, these forward prices can be either higher or lower than spot prices, resulting in measurement differences.

 

BP enters into contracts for pipelines and storage capacity, oil and gas processing and liquefied natural gas (LNG) that, under IFRS, are recorded on an accruals basis. These contracts are risk-managed using a variety of derivative instruments that are fair valued under IFRS. This results in measurement differences in relation to recognition of gains and losses.

 

The way that BP manages the economic exposures described above, and measures performance internally, differs from the way these activities are measured under IFRS. BP calculates this difference for consolidated entities by comparing the IFRS result with management's internal measure of performance. Under management's internal measure of performance the inventory and capacity contracts in question are valued based on fair value using relevant forward prices prevailing at the end of the period. The fair values of certain derivative instruments used to risk manage certain LNG and oil and gas contracts and gas sales contracts, are deferred to match with the underlying exposure and the commodity contracts for business requirements are accounted for on an accruals basis. We believe that disclosing management's estimate of this difference provides useful information for investors because it enables investors to see the economic effect of these activities as a whole. The impacts of fair value accounting effects, relative to management's internal measure of performance, are shown in the table above. A reconciliation to GAAP information is set out below.

 



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half

$ million


2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Upstream








Replacement cost profit (loss) before interest and








  tax adjusted for fair value accounting effects


689

1,010

36


1,699

(1,066)

Impact of fair value accounting effects


106

246

(145)


352

(248)

Replacement cost profit before interest and tax


795

1,256

(109)


2,051

(1,314)

Downstream








Replacement cost profit before interest and tax








  adjusted for fair value accounting effects


1,551

1,666

1,476


3,217

3,575

Impact of fair value accounting effects


16

40

(71)


56

(290)

Replacement cost profit before interest and tax


1,567

1,706

1,405


3,273

3,285

Total group








Profit (loss) before interest and tax adjusted for








  fair value accounting effects


1,347

2,342

(2,700)


3,689

(2,803)

Impact of fair value accounting effects


122

286

(216)


408

(538)

Profit (loss) before interest and tax


1,469

2,628

(2,916)


4,097

(3,341)

 

 

Top of page 29

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Readily marketable inventory* (RMI)



30 June

31 December

$ million


2017

2016

RMI at fair value


4,387

5,952

Paid-up RMI*


2,470

2,705

 

Readily marketable inventory (RMI) is oil and oil products inventory held and price risk-managed by BP's integrated supply and trading function (IST) which could be sold to generate funds if required. Paid-up RMI is RMI that BP has paid for.

 

We believe that disclosing the amounts of RMI and paid-up RMI is useful to investors as it enables them to better understand and evaluate the group's inventories and liquidity position by enabling them to see the level of discretionary inventory held by IST and to see builds or releases of liquid trading inventory.

 

See the Glossary on page 32 for a more detailed definition of RMI. RMI, RMI at fair value and paid-up RMI are non-GAAP measures. A reconciliation of total inventory as reported on the group balance sheet to paid-up RMI is provided below.

 



30 June

31 December

$ million


2017

2016

Reconciliation of total inventory to paid-up RMI




Inventories as reported on the group balance sheet


16,449

17,655

Less:  (a) inventories which are not oil and oil products and (b) oil and oil




  product inventories which are not risk-managed by IST


(12,310)

(12,131)

RMI on an IFRS basis


4,139

5,524

Plus:  difference between RMI at fair value and RMI on an IFRS basis


248

428

RMI at fair value


4,387

5,952

Less:  unpaid RMI* at fair value


(1,917)

(3,247)

Paid-up RMI


2,470

2,705

 

 

Top of page 30

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Realizations* and marker prices



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half



2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

Average realizations(a)








Liquids* ($/bbl)








US


44.65

46.34

34.89


45.51

31.82

Europe


47.79

53.28

43.62


50.50

37.46

Rest of World(b)


47.11

51.79

42.36


49.46

35.60

BP Average(b)


46.27

49.87

39.68


48.09

34.44

Natural gas ($/mcf)








US


2.32

2.50

1.53


2.41

1.55

Europe


4.48

5.40

4.64


4.93

4.46

Rest of World


3.47

3.85

3.10


3.64

3.21

BP Average


3.19

3.50

2.66


3.34

2.75

Total hydrocarbons* ($/boe)








US


32.46

34.29

24.00


33.39

22.38

Europe


41.10

46.69

39.25


43.84

34.28

Rest of World(b)


33.48

37.93

30.03


35.64

27.20

BP Average(b)


33.59

37.19

28.66


35.37

26.16

Average oil marker prices ($/bbl)








Brent


49.64

53.69

45.59


51.71

39.81

West Texas Intermediate


48.11

51.70

45.53


49.89

39.64

Western Canadian Select


38.55

38.77

33.78


38.66

28.09

Alaska North Slope


50.61

53.82

45.74


52.20

40.00

Mars


46.92

49.59

42.08


48.24

36.25

Urals (NWE - cif)


48.48

51.88

43.37


50.22

37.56

Average natural gas marker prices








Henry Hub gas price(c) ($/mmBtu)


3.19

3.32

1.95


3.25

2.02

UK Gas - National Balancing Point (p/therm)


37.83

48.19

31.37


43.14

30.90

 

 

(a)

Based on sales of consolidated subsidiaries only - this excludes equity-accounted entities.

(b)

Production volume recognition methodology for our Technical Service Contract arrangement in Iraq has been simplified to exclude the impact of oil price movements on lifting imbalances. A minor adjustment has been made to second quarter and first half 2016. There is no impact on the financial results.

(c)

Henry Hub First of Month Index.

 

 

Exchange rates



Second

First

Second


First

First



quarter

quarter

quarter


half

half



2017

2017

2016


2017

2016

$/£ average rate for the period


1.28

1.24

1.43


1.26

1.43

$/£ period-end rate


1.30

1.25

1.34


1.30

1.34









$/€ average rate for the period


1.10

1.07

1.13


1.08

1.12

$/€ period-end rate


1.14

1.07

1.11


1.14

1.11









Rouble/$ average rate for the period


57.24

58.72

65.86


57.98

70.35

Rouble/$ period-end rate


59.05

56.01

63.64


59.05

63.64

 

 

Top of page 31

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Principal risks and uncertainties

The principal risks and uncertainties affecting BP are described in the Risk factors section of BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2016 (pages 49-50) and are summarized below. There are no material changes in those risk factors for the remaining six months of the financial year.

 

The risks summarized below, separately or in combination, could have a material adverse effect on the implementation of our strategy, our business, financial performance, results of operations, cash flows, liquidity, prospects, shareholder value and returns and reputation.

 

Strategic and commercial risks

·      Prices and markets - our financial performance is subject to fluctuating prices of oil, gas, refined products, technological change, exchange rate fluctuations, and the general macroeconomic outlook.

·      Access, renewal and reserves progression - our inability to access, renew and progress upstream resources in a timely manner could adversely affect our long-term replacement of reserves.

·      Major project* delivery - failure to invest in the best opportunities or deliver major projects successfully could adversely affect our financial performance.

·      Geopolitical - we are exposed to a range of political developments and consequent changes to the operating and regulatory environment.

·      Liquidity, financial capacity and financial, including credit, exposure - failure to work within our financial framework could impact our ability to operate and result in financial loss.

·      Joint arrangements and contractors - we may have limited control over the standards, operations and compliance of our partners, contractors and sub-contractors.

·      Digital infrastructure and cybersecurity - breach of our digital security or failure of our digital infrastructure could damage our operations and our reputation.

·      Climate change and carbon pricing - public policies could increase costs and reduce future revenue and strategic growth opportunities.

·      Competition - inability to remain efficient, innovate and retain an appropriately skilled workforce could negatively impact delivery of our strategy in a highly competitive market.

·      Crisis management and business continuity - potential disruption to our business and operations could occur if we do not address an incident effectively.

·      Insurance - our insurance strategy could expose the group to material uninsured losses.

 

Safety and operational risks

·      Process safety, personal safety, and environmental risks - we are exposed to a wide range of health, safety, security and environmental risks that could result in regulatory action, legal liability, increased costs, damage to our reputation and potentially denial of our licence to operate.

·      Drilling and production - challenging operational environments and other uncertainties can impact drilling and production activities.

·      Security - hostile acts against our staff and activities could cause harm to people and disrupt our operations.

·      Product quality - supplying customers with off-specification products could damage our reputation, lead to regulatory action and legal liability, and potentially impact our financial performance.

 

Compliance and control risks

·      US government settlements - failure to comply with the terms of our settlements with legal and regulatory bodies in the US announced in November 2012 in respect of certain charges related to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill may expose us to further penalties or liabilities or could result in suspension or debarment of certain BP entities.

·      Regulation - changes in the regulatory and legislative environment could increase the cost of compliance, affect our provisions and limit our access to new exploration opportunities.

·      Ethical misconduct and non-compliance - ethical misconduct or breaches of applicable laws by our businesses or our employees could be damaging to our reputation, and could result in litigation, regulatory action and penalties.

·      Treasury and trading activities - ineffective oversight of treasury and trading activities could lead to business disruption, financial loss, regulatory intervention or damage to our reputation.

·      Reporting - failure to accurately report our data could lead to regulatory action, legal liability and reputational damage.

 

 

Top of page 32

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Glossary

Non-GAAP measures are provided for investors because they are closely tracked by management to evaluate BP's operating performance and to make financial, strategic and operating decisions.

 

Adjusted effective tax rate (ETR) is a non-GAAP measure. The adjusted ETR is calculated by dividing taxation on an underlying RC basis excluding the impact of the reduction in the rate of the UK North Sea supplementary charge in the third quarter 2016 by underlying RC profit or loss before tax. Taxation on an underlying RC basis is taxation on a RC basis for the period adjusted for taxation on non-operating items and fair value accounting effects. Information on underlying RC profit or loss is provided below. BP believes it is helpful to disclose the adjusted ETR because this measure may help investors to understand and evaluate, in the same manner as management, the underlying trends in BP's operational performance on a comparable basis, period on period. The nearest equivalent measure on an IFRS basis is the ETR on profit or loss for the period.

 

Capital expenditure is total cash capital expenditure as stated in the condensed group cash flow statement.

 

Consolidation adjustment - UPII is unrealized profit in inventory arising on inter-segment transactions.

 

Divestment proceeds are disposal proceeds as per the condensed group cash flow statement.

 

Effective tax rate (ETR) on replacement cost (RC) profit or loss is a non-GAAP measure. The ETR on RC profit or loss is calculated by dividing taxation on a RC basis by RC profit or loss before tax. Information on RC profit or loss is provided below. BP believes it is helpful to disclose the ETR on RC profit or loss because this measure excludes the impact of price changes on the replacement of inventories and allows for more meaningful comparisons between reporting periods. The nearest equivalent measure on an IFRS basis is the ETR on profit or loss for the period.

 

Fair value accounting effects are non-GAAP adjustments to our IFRS profit (loss) relating to certain physical inventories, pipelines and storage capacity. Management uses a fair-value basis to value these items which, under IFRS, are accounted for on an accruals basis with the exception of trading inventories, which are valued using spot prices. The adjustments have the effect of aligning the valuation basis of the physical positions with that of any associated derivative instruments, which are required to be fair valued under IFRS, in order to provide a more representative view of the ultimate economic value. Further information is provided on page 28.

 

Gearing - See Net debt and net debt ratio definition.

 

Hydrocarbons - Liquids and natural gas. Natural gas is converted to oil equivalent at 5.8 billion cubic feet = 1 million barrels.

 

Inorganic capital expenditure is a subset of capital expenditure and is a non-GAAP measure. Inorganic capital expenditure comprises consideration in business combinations and certain other significant investments made by the group. It is reported on a cash basis. BP believes that this measure provides useful information as it allows investors to understand how BP's management invests funds in projects which expand the group's activities through acquisition. Further information and a reconciliation to GAAP information is provided on page 26.

 

Inventory holding gains and losses represent the difference between the cost of sales calculated using the replacement cost of inventory and the cost of sales calculated on the first-in first-out (FIFO) method after adjusting for any changes in provisions where the net realizable value of the inventory is lower than its cost. Under the FIFO method, which we use for IFRS reporting, the cost of inventory charged to the income statement is based on its historical cost of purchase or manufacture, rather than its replacement cost. In volatile energy markets, this can have a significant distorting effect on reported income. The amounts disclosed represent the difference between the charge to the income statement for inventory on a FIFO basis (after adjusting for any related movements in net realizable value provisions) and the charge

that would have arisen based on the replacement cost of inventory. For this purpose, the replacement cost of inventory is calculated using data from each operation's production and manufacturing system, either on a monthly basis, or separately for each transaction where the system allows this approach. The amounts disclosed are not separately reflected in the financial statements as a gain or loss. No adjustment is made in respect of the cost of inventories held as part of a trading position and certain other temporary inventory positions. See Replacement cost (RC) profit or loss definition below.

 

Liquids - Liquids for Upstream and Rosneft comprises crude oil, condensate and natural gas liquids. For Upstream, liquids also includes bitumen.

 

Major projects have a BP net investment of at least $250 million, or are considered to be of strategic importance to BP or of a high degree of complexity.

 

 

Top of page 33

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Glossary (continued)

Net debt and net debt ratio are non-GAAP measures. Net debt is calculated as gross finance debt, as shown in the balance sheet, plus the fair value of associated derivative financial instruments that are used to hedge foreign currency exchange and interest rate risks relating to finance debt, for which hedge accounting is applied, less cash and cash equivalents. The net debt ratio is defined as the ratio of net debt to the total of net debt plus shareholders' equity. All components of equity are included in the denominator of the calculation. BP believes these measures provide useful information to investors. Net debt enables investors to see the economic effect of gross debt, related hedges and cash and cash equivalents in total. The net debt ratio enables investors to see how significant net debt is relative to equity from shareholders. The derivatives are reported on the balance sheet within the headings 'Derivative financial instruments'.

 

Net wind generation capacity is the sum of the rated capacities of the assets/turbines that have entered into commercial operation, including BP's share of equity-accounted entities. The gross data is the equivalent capacity on a gross-JV basis, which includes 100% of the capacity of equity-accounted entities where BP has partial ownership.

 

Non-operating items are charges and credits included in the financial statements that BP discloses separately because it considers such disclosures to be meaningful and relevant to investors. They are items that management considers not to be part of underlying business operations and are disclosed in order to enable investors better to understand and evaluate the group's reported financial performance. Non-operating items within equity-accounted earnings are reported net of incremental income tax reported by the equity-accounted entity. An analysis of non-operating items by region is shown on pages 7, 9 and 11, and by segment and type is shown on page 27.

 

Operating cash flow is net cash provided by (used in) operating activities as stated in the condensed group cash flow statement. When used in the context of a segment rather than the group, the terms refer to the segment's share thereof.

 

Operating cash flow excluding amounts related to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill / Gulf of Mexico oil spill payments or Organic cash flow is a non-GAAP measure calculated by excluding post-tax operating cash flows relating to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill as reported in Note 2 from Net cash provided by operating activities as reported in the condensed group cash flow statement. BP believes it is helpful to disclose net cash provided by operating activities excluding amounts related to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill because this measure allows for more meaningful comparisons between reporting periods. The nearest equivalent measure on an IFRS basis is Net cash provided by operating activities.

 

Organic capital expenditure is a subset of capital expenditure and is a non-GAAP measure. Organic capital expenditure comprises capital expenditure less inorganic capital expenditure. BP believes that this measure provides useful information as it allows investors to understand how BP's management invests funds in developing and maintaining the group's assets. An analysis of organic capital expenditure by segment and region, and a reconciliation to GAAP information is provided on page 26.

 

Production-sharing agreement (PSA) is an arrangement through which an oil company bears the risks and costs of exploration, development and production. In return, if exploration is successful, the oil company receives entitlement to variable physical volumes of hydrocarbons, representing recovery of the costs incurred and a stipulated share of the production remaining after such cost recovery.

 

Readily marketable inventory (RMI) is inventory held and price risk-managed by our integrated supply and trading function (IST) which could be sold to generate funds if required. It comprises oil and oil products for which liquid markets are available and excludes inventory which is required to meet operational requirements and other inventory which is not price risk-managed. RMI is reported at fair value. Inventory held by the Downstream fuels business for the purpose of sales and marketing, and all inventories relating to the lubricants and petrochemicals businesses, are not included in RMI.

 

Paid-up RMI excludes RMI which has not yet been paid for. For inventory that is held in storage, a first-in first-out (FIFO) approach is used to determine whether inventory has been paid for or not. Unpaid RMI is RMI which has not yet been paid for by BP. RMI, Paid-up RMI and Unpaid RMI are non-GAAP measures. Further information is provided on page 29.

 

Realizations are the result of dividing revenue generated from hydrocarbon sales, excluding revenue generated from purchases made for resale and royalty volumes, by revenue generating hydrocarbon production volumes. Revenue generating hydrocarbon production reflects the BP share of production as adjusted for any production which does not generate revenue. Adjustments may include losses due to shrinkage, amounts consumed during processing, and contractual or regulatory host committed volumes such as royalties.

 

Refining availability represents Solomon Associates' operational availability, which is defined as the percentage of the year that a unit is available for processing after subtracting the annualized time lost due to turnaround activity and all planned mechanical, process and regulatory downtime.

 

 

Top of page 34

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Glossary (continued)

The Refining marker margin (RMM) is the average of regional indicator margins weighted for BP's crude refining capacity in each region. Each regional marker margin is based on product yields and a marker crude oil deemed appropriate for the region. The regional indicator margins may not be representative of the margins achieved by BP in any period because of BP's particular refinery configurations and crude and product slate.

 

Replacement cost (RC) profit or loss reflects the replacement cost of inventories sold in the period and is arrived at by excluding inventory holding gains and losses from profit or loss. RC profit or loss is the measure of profit or loss that is required to be disclosed for each operating segment under IFRS. RC profit or loss for the group is not a recognized GAAP measure. BP believes this measure is useful to illustrate to investors the fact that crude oil and product prices can vary significantly from period to period and that the impact on our reported result under IFRS can be significant. Inventory holding gains and losses vary from period to period due to changes in prices as well as changes in underlying inventory levels. In order for investors to understand the operating performance of the group excluding the impact of price changes on the replacement of inventories, and to make comparisons of operating performance between reporting periods, BP's management believes it is helpful to disclose this measure. The nearest equivalent measure on an IFRS basis is profit or loss attributable to BP shareholders.

 

RC profit or loss per share is a non-GAAP measure. Earnings per share is defined in Note 6. RC profit or loss per share is calculated using the same denominator. The numerator used is RC profit or loss attributable to BP shareholders rather than profit or loss attributable to BP shareholders. BP believes it is helpful to disclose the RC profit or loss per share because this measure excludes the impact of price changes on the replacement of inventories and allows for more meaningful comparisons between reporting periods. The nearest equivalent measure on an IFRS basis is basic earnings per share based on profit or loss for the period attributable to BP shareholders.

 

Reported recordable injury frequency measures the number of reported work-related employee and contractor incidents that result in a fatality or injury per 200,000 hours worked. This represents reported incidents occurring within BP's operational HSSE reporting boundary. That boundary includes BP's own operated facilities and certain other locations or situations.

 

Tier 1 process safety events are losses of primary containment from a process of greatest consequence - causing harm to a member of the workforce, costly damage to equipment or exceeding defined quantities. This represents reported incidents occurring within BP's operational HSSE reporting boundary. That boundary includes BP's own operated facilities and certain other locations or situations.

 

Underlying production is production after adjusting for divestments and entitlement impacts in our production-sharing agreements. 2017 underlying production does not include the Abu Dhabi onshore concession renewal.

 

Underlying RC profit or loss is RC profit or loss after adjusting for non-operating items and fair value accounting effects. Underlying RC profit or loss and adjustments for fair value accounting effects are not recognized GAAP measures. See pages 27 and 28 for additional information on the non-operating items and fair value accounting effects that are used to arrive at underlying RC profit or loss in order to enable a full understanding of the events and their financial impact. BP believes that underlying RC profit or loss is a useful measure for investors because it is a measure closely tracked by management to evaluate BP's operating performance and to make financial, strategic and operating decisions and because it may help investors to understand and evaluate, in the same manner as management, the underlying trends in BP's operational performance on a comparable basis, period on period, by adjusting for the effects of these non-operating items and fair value accounting effects. The nearest equivalent measure on an IFRS basis for the group is profit or loss attributable to BP shareholders. The nearest equivalent measure on an IFRS basis for segments is RC profit or loss before interest and taxation.

 

Underlying RC profit or loss per share is a non-GAAP measure. Earnings per share is defined in Note 6. Underlying RC profit or loss per share is calculated using the same denominator. The numerator used is underlying RC profit or loss attributable to BP shareholders rather than profit or loss attributable to BP shareholders. BP believes it is helpful to disclose the underlying RC profit or loss per share because this measure may help investors to understand and evaluate, in the same manner as management, the underlying trends in BP's operational performance on a comparable basis, period on period. The nearest equivalent measure on an IFRS basis is basic earnings per share based on profit or loss for the period attributable to BP shareholders.

 

Upstream operating efficiency is calculated as production for BP operated sites, excluding US Lower 48 and adjusted for certain items including entitlement impacts in our production-sharing agreements divided by installed production capacity for BP operated sites, excluding US Lower 48. Installed production capacity is the agreed rate achievable (measured at the export end of the system) when the installed production system (reservoir, wells, plant and export) is fully optimized and operated at full rate with no planned or unplanned deferrals.

 

Upstream unit production cost is calculated as production cost divided by units of production. Production cost does not include ad valorem and severance taxes. Units of production are barrels for liquids and thousands of cubic feet for gas. Amounts disclosed are for BP subsidiaries only and do not include BP's share of equity-accounted entities.

 

 

Top of page 35

BP p.l.c. Group results

Second quarter and half year 2017


 

Legal proceedings

The following discussion sets out the material developments in the group's material legal proceedings during the first half of 2017. For a full discussion of the group's material legal proceedings, see pages 261-265 of BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2016.

 

Deepwater Horizon accident and oil spill (the Incident)

Plaintiffs' Steering Committee (PSC) settlements - Economic and Property Damages Settlement Agreement  The Economic and Property Damages Settlement established a court-supervised settlement claims programme to resolve certain economic and property damage claims arising from the Incident.

 

Following numerous court decisions, on 31 March 2015, the United States district court in New Orleans denied the PSC motion seeking to alter or amend a revised policy relating to business economic loss claims. Such policy required the matching of revenue with the expenses incurred by claimants to generate that revenue, even where the revenue and expenses were recorded at different times. The PSC appealed the district court decision and, on 22 May 2017, the Fifth Circuit issued an opinion upholding the policy in part and reversing the policy in part. The Fifth Circuit ordered that the portion of the policy upheld, which covers the substantial majority of the remaining business economic loss claims, be applied as the governing methodology for all applicable business economic loss claims. BP filed a petition for a rehearing which was denied on 21 June 2017. On 5 July 2017, the district court issued an order instructing the court supervised settlement programme on how to implement the Fifth Circuit's opinion. BP continues to evaluate the impact of the Fifth Circuit's decision on undetermined business economic loss claims, and claims under appeal within the programme, and is considering its next steps in relation to this order. See Note 2 on page 19 for further information.

 

Cautionary statement

In order to utilize the 'safe harbor' provisions of the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (the 'PSLRA'), BP is providing the following cautionary statement: The discussion in this results announcement contains certain forecasts, projections and forward-looking statements - that is, statements related to future, not past events - with respect to the financial condition, results of operations and businesses of BP and certain of the plans and objectives of BP with respect to these items. These statements may generally, but not always, be identified by the use of words such as 'will', 'expects', 'is expected to', 'aims', 'should', 'may', 'objective', 'is likely to', 'intends', 'believes', 'anticipates', 'plans', 'we see' or similar expressions. In particular, among other statements, expectations regarding the expected quarterly dividend payment and timing of such payment; expectations regarding 2017 net debt, organic capital expenditure and divestment proceeds; expectations regarding the adjusted effective tax rate in 2017; expectations regarding Upstream third-quarter 2017 reported production; expectations regarding Downstream third-quarter 2017 refining margins and North American heavy crude oil differentials; plans and expectations with respect to the start-up of new Upstream projects; expectations with respect to new Upstream production through 2020; expectations regarding Rosneft operational and financial information for the first half of 2017; expectations with respect to the timing and amount of future payments relating to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill; and expectations that claims arising under the 2012 PSC settlement will be substantially paid by the end of 2018; are all forward looking in nature.  By their nature, forward-looking statements involve risk and uncertainty because they relate to events and depend on circumstances that will or may occur in the future and are outside the control of BP. Actual results may differ materially from those expressed in such statements, depending on a variety of factors, including: the specific factors identified in the discussions accompanying such forward-looking statements; the receipt of relevant third party and/or regulatory approvals; the timing and level of maintenance and/or turnaround activity; the timing and volume of refinery additions and outages; the timing of bringing new fields onstream; the timing, quantum and nature of certain divestments; future levels of industry product supply, demand and pricing, including supply growth in North America; OPEC quota restrictions; PSA effects; operational and safety problems; potential lapses in product quality; economic and financial market conditions generally or in various countries and regions; political stability and economic growth in relevant areas of the world; changes in laws and governmental regulations; regulatory or legal actions including the types of enforcement action pursued and the nature of remedies sought or imposed; the actions of prosecutors, regulatory authorities and courts; delays in the processes for resolving claims; exchange rate fluctuations; development and use of new technology; recruitment and retention of a skilled workforce; the success or otherwise of partnering; the actions of competitors, trading partners, contractors, subcontractors, creditors, rating agencies and others; our access to future credit resources; business disruption and crisis management; the impact on our reputation of ethical misconduct and non-compliance with regulatory obligations; trading losses; major uninsured losses; decisions by Rosneft's management and board of directors; the actions of contractors; natural disasters and adverse weather conditions; changes in public expectations and other changes to business conditions; wars and acts of terrorism; cyber-attacks or sabotage; and other factors discussed elsewhere in this report and under "Risk factors" in BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2016 as filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

 

 

Contacts


London

Houston




Press Office

David Nicholas

Brett Clanton


+44 (0)20 7496 4708

+1 281 366 8346




Investor Relations

Jessica Mitchell

Brian Sullivan

bp.com/investors

+44 (0)20 7496 4962

+1 281 892 3421

 

 


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