BP sees biggest profit in 14 years as energy bills soaron August 2, 2022 at 12:45 pm

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The firm’s profits between April and June more than tripled as oil and gas prices jumped.

BP logo and petrol pump nozzleImage source, Getty Images

BP has reported its biggest quarterly profit for 14 years after oil and gas prices soared.

The energy giant saw underlying profits hit $8.45bn (£6.9bn) between April and June – more than triple the amount it made in the same period last year.

It comes on the day typical household energy bills have been forecast to hit more than £3,600 a year this winter.

The bumper profits have prompted calls for the government to tax firms further to help families with rising bills.

BP’s profits were the second highest for the second quarter in the firm’s history and follow record profits from rival Shell and huge earnings from British Gas owner Centrica last week.

Dale Vince, the founder of energy supplier Ecotricity said BP was “holding a shedload of money that is coming from hard-pressed bill-payers in our country”, adding he believed it was time to increase taxation on the profits of oil and gas companies.

“Clearly there are exceptional windfall profits in the oil and gas sector, and clearly there’s a problem in the energy market, and we should fix one with the other,” he told the BBC’s Today programme.

The government has introduced a package of measures to help people with energy bills, such as a £400 discount, and following political pressure, ministers announced in May that oil and gas firms would pay an extra 25% in tax on profits to fund support.

However, as the legalisation – known as a windfall tax – wasn’t formally introduced until July, the tax does not apply to profits announced by BP and other energy firms between April and June.

The huge increase in profits for firms has been fuelled by higher prices for oil and gas, which have risen sharply due to the war in Ukraine.

In recent months, Russia has reduced supplies to Europe following the invasion and fears are growing it may switch off the taps altogether.

The potential of gas supply problems have led to the wholesale price soaring, which has led to energy firms passing those costs onto customers – pushing up household energy bills by unprecedented amounts.

Higher oil prices have also led to the price of petrol and diesel reaching record highs at the pumps in recent months, although prices have started to fall slightly.

‘Slap in the face’

Campaign groups Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth called on the government to impose a tougher windfall tax on oil and gas firm profits.

“While households are being plunged into poverty with knock-on-impacts for the whole economy, fossil fuel companies are laughing all the way to the bank, said Doug Parr, chief scientist for Greenpeace UK.

Labour Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves said after the government “U-turned” and introduced a windfall tax on the like of BP and Shell, “they decided to hand billions of pounds back to producers in tax breaks”.

Meanwhile, Sarah Olney of the Liberal Democrats said BP’s profits were a “slap in the face for everyone across the country” as she called for government’s windfall tax to cover the latest figures.

The Treasury said it did not comment on “individual taxpayers”, but added it expected the windfall tax, called the Energy Profits Levy, to raise about £5bn in its first year.

Dr Craig Lowrey, principal consultant at Cornwall Insight, told the BBC’s Today programme that energy bills “at this point in time” looked set to stay high across 2023 and into 2024.

“This is very much a long-term problem for households and one which is going to need concerted and enduring action from the government to help manage that,” he said.

Dr Lowrey said the £400 would make a “dent” in higher bills but was “not going to offset this”.

‘Cash machine’

BP said following its bumper profit results that it would boost shareholder payouts by 10% as well as buy back shares as a result of its higher earnings.

Last year, chief executive Bernard Looney described the energy market as “a cash machine”.

But on Tuesday he said the company’s staff had helped to solve an “energy trilemma” which he added was “secure, affordable and lower carbon energy”.

“We do this by providing the oil and gas the world needs today – while at the same time, investing to accelerate the energy transition,” he added.

BP said strong refining margins and oil trading helped it boost its profits, adding it expected expected crude oil and gas prices as well as refining margins to remain “elevated”.

However, the company’s half-year figures were affected by a massive £19.9bn hit from its move to ditch the its near-20% stake in Russian oil producer Rosneft in response to the Ukraine war.

Richard Hunter, head of markets at online investment firm Interactive Investor, said BP had “already made some strong progress” in recouping the financial pain of its Russian exit, adding BP’s latest results were an “early indication of the company’s ability to repair such damage”.

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Analysis box by Simon Jack, business editor

The contrast is stark but inevitable. The same high oil and gas prices emptying the pockets of consumers are filling those of the companies that sell it.

BP’s profit from April to June was triple the amount than last year and is the second highest in the company’s long history.

The company said it would increase its payments to shareholders by £3.6bn pounds in the next three months. Those shareholders include most pension funds but these numbers sit uncomfortably alongside new estimates that average annual energy bills will cost over £3,600 a year.

Insiders at BP and Shell, which announced record results last week, point out that a couple of years ago, both companies were losing billions and no-one was offering to subsidise their losses.

Both companies have profited from soaring internationally-set oil and gas prices as a rise in post-Covid global demand has been exacerbated by attempts to cut Russia out of the international energy market.

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