英国石油公司削减季度支出,降低石油产量

英国石油公司首席执行官伯纳德·卢尼 - 图片来源:BP
英国石油公司首席执行官伯纳德·卢尼 - 图片来源:BP

面对冠状病毒爆发引发的油价暴跌,英国石油公司周三将2020年支出计划削减25%,并将减少其美国页岩油气业务的产量。

由于冠状病毒危机以及主要出口国沙特阿拉伯和俄罗斯之间的价格战,需求下滑导致油价暴跌,英国石油公司和其他大型石油和天然气公司不得不大幅控制支出。

首席执行官伯纳德·卢尼在一份声明中表示:“这可能是石油和天然气企业几十年来最残酷的环境。”

该公司表示,今年计划支出 120 亿美元,加入竞争对手的行列,宣布平均每年削减约 20% 的支出。英国石油公司此前曾表示,其 2020 年支出将处于 15 至 170 亿美元范围内的“较低端”。

这将包括减少对其页岩业务(即 BPX)的投资 10 亿美元,该业务的生产可以相对较快地启动和关闭,较 2019 年的投资水平下降 50%。

2018 年底,BP 以 105 亿美元收购必和必拓美国陆上资产,成为领先的页岩油生产商。

2020 年,BPX 产量将减少约 70,000 桶油当量/日 (boepd),比 2019 年的 499,000 boepd 产量下降约 14%。BP的整体石油和天然气产量预计也将下降。BP 还将减少其炼油和营销或下游业务的资本支出 10 亿美元。

截至格林威治标准时间 1040 年,英国石油公司 (BP) 股价下跌 0.4%,而欧洲能源板块整体下跌 1.3%。 

为遏制新冠病毒传播而对全球数十亿人实施行动限制,导致需求大幅下降,导致第一季度油价下跌 65%。 

顶级石油生产国沙特阿拉伯和俄罗斯之间的价格战加剧了价格压力,两国增加供应以试图赢得市场份额。

BP 还计划到 2021 年底通过业务数字化和整合节省 25 亿美元的成本。卢尼表示,英国石油公司在未来三个月内不会裁员。

该公司表示,到 2021 年中期的 150 亿美元资产处置计划仍在按计划进行,但已宣布的交易(包括以 56 亿美元的价格向 Hilcorp 出售 BP 阿拉斯加资产)的完成可能会面临延迟。

英国石油公司表示,其拥有 320 亿美元的现金和未提取的信贷额度。

信用机构穆迪周三将英国石油公司的前景从“稳定”下调至“负面”,但维持其 A1 评级。

桑坦德银行泛欧石油和天然气研究主管贾森·肯尼表示,目前BP可以维持去年约80亿美元的股息支付。

肯尼说:“在接下来的六个月中,资本和运营支出将转向支付股息。”

今年第一季度,BP预计将计提10亿美元的减值费用,而石油和天然气产量预计较上一季度下降2.55-260万桶/日。

为了应对冠状病毒的爆发,英国石油公司正在减少项目的非必要活动和人员配备水平。

(罗恩·布索报道;杰森·尼利和芭芭拉·刘易斯编辑)

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原文链接/oedigital

BP Cuts Spending by Quarter, Lowers Oil production

BP CEO Bernard Looney - Credit: BP
BP CEO Bernard Looney - Credit: BP

BP on Wednesday cut its 2020 spending plans by 25% and will reduce output from its U.S. shale oil and gas business in the face of the collapse in oil prices triggered by the coronavirus outbreak.

BP and other big oil and gas companies are having to rein in spending sharply following the collapse in oil prices driven by a slump in demand because of the coronavirus crisis and a price war between top exporters Saudi Arabia and Russia.

"This may be the most brutal environment for oil and gas businesses in decades," CEO Bernard Looney said in a statement.

The company said it planned to spend $12 billion this year, joining rivals that have announced cuts of around 20% in annual spending on average. BP had previously said its 2020 spending would be "at the lower end" of a $15 to $17 billion range.

That will include a $1 billion reduction in investment in its shale business, known as BPX, where production can be switched on and off relatively quickly, representing a 50% drop from 2019 investment levels.

BP became a leading shale producer following the $10.5 billion acquisition of BHP's onshore U.S. assets in late 2018.

BPX output will drop by around 70,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boepd) in 2020, around 14% lower than its 2019 output of 499,000 boepd. BP's overall oil and gas production is also expected to fall. BP will also reduce capital spending on its refining and marketing, or downstream, business by $1 billion.

BP shares were down 0.4% by 1040 GMT, compared with a 1.3% decline in broader European energy sector. 

Oil prices dropped by 65% in the first quarter as a result of a big fall in demand following movement restrictions imposed on billions of people around the world to limit the spread of the coronavirus. 

The price war between top oil producers Saudi Arabia and Russia added to pressure on prices as the two countries boosted supply to try to win market share.

BP also plans to introduce $2.5 billion of cost savings by the end of 2021 through the digitalization and integration of its businesses. Looney said BP would not cut jobs in the next three months.

The company's $15 billion asset disposal program targeted by mid-2021 remains on track, but completion of deals already announced, including the $5.6 billion sale of BP's Alaska assets to Hilcorp, may face delays, it said.

BP said it has $32 billion of cash and undrawn credit facilities.

Credit agency Moody's on Wednesday cut BP's outlook from "stable" to "negative" but maintained its A1 rating.

Jason Kenney, head of pan-European oil and gas research at Banco Santander, said that for now BP could maintain its dividend payments, which reached around $8 billion last year.

"In the next six months, capital and operating expenditure will be redirected towards paying the dividend," Kenney said.

For the first quarter of the year, BP expects to take an impairment charge of $1 billion, while oil and gas output is expected to decline from the previous quarter by a range of 2.55-2.6 million boepd.

In response to the coronavirus outbreak, BP is reducing non-essential activity and manning levels at projects.

(Reporting by Ron Bousso; editing by Jason Neely and Barbara Lewis)

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