Big Oil Doubles Profits in Blockbuster 2022

Ron Bousso
Wednesday, February 8, 2023

Big Oil more than doubled its profits in 2022 to $219 billion, smashing previous records in a year of volatile energy prices where Russia's invasion of Ukraine reshaped global energy markets and, in some cases, the industry's climate ambitions.

The profit surge gave the oil companies scope to increase spending on oil and gas projects, and a chance for some to rethink energy transition strategies to meet new demands for security of supply.

The combined $219 billion in profits allowed BP, Chevron, Equinor, Exxon Mobil, Shell, and TotalEnergies to shower shareholders with cash.

The top Western oil companies paid out a record $110 billion in dividends and share repurchases to investors in 2022, spurring outraged calls on governments to impose windfall taxes on the industry to help consumers with surging energy costs.

Norway's Equinor on Wednesday reported a doubling of adjusted operating profit in 2022 to $74.9 billion on the back of a surge in European natural gas prices and as it became Europe's largest gas supplier after Russia's Gazprom GAZP.MM cut deliveries amid the West's support for Ukraine.

Oil companies last year also pulled out of Russia, a major energy producer, leading to huge writedowns, including BP's $24 billion exit from its 19.75% stake in Kremlin-controlled oil giant Rosneft ROSN.MM.

LOW DEBT

The sharp rise in oil and gas prices, falling debt levels and the abrupt drop in Russian supplies to Europe also drove boards to increase spending on fossil fuel production as governments prioritized security of supply.

TotalEnergies Chief Executive Patrick Pouyanne said after the French company reported record profits of $36.2 billion on Wednesday that the global backdrop remained very favorable for energy companies, with the relaxing of COVID-19 measures in China pushing up demand for 2023.

"We wouldn't be surprised to see oil back to $100 a barrel," Pouyanne said. Benchmark oil prices are currently near $85 a barrel. O/R

European companies that have outlined plans to reduce or slow oil and gas investments and build large renewables and low-carbon businesses to cut greenhouse gas emissions adjusted their strategies.

None were more stark than BP Chief Executive Bernard Looney's move to row back on plans to reduce the British company's oil and gas output and carbon emissions by 2030. 

"We need lower carbon energy, but we also need secure energy, and we need affordable energy. And that's what governments and society around the world are asking for," Looney said on Tuesday.

BP's shares hit their highest in three and a half years on Wednesday, building on a 7.6% gain a day earlier following the results and shift in strategy.

Bernstein analyst Oswald Clint called BP "a lesson in pragmatism, prioritization, and performance", rating it "outperform".

"Pragmatism takes priority this week as a world short energy together with governments begging for more from companies like BP causes a response. BP will lean more into oil & gas for the remainder of this decade," Clint said in a note.


Big Oil's shareholder returns Big Oil's shareholder returnshttps://tmsnrt.rs/3DnBH7X

Shrinking debthttps://tmsnrt.rs/3kg7d1M

Big Oil's record profitshttps://tmsnrt.rs/3x4iK7F

(Reuters - Reporting by Ron Bousso. Editing by Jane Merriman)

Categories: Finance Energy Industry News Activity Europe Production North America People & Company News

Related Stories

Inpex Secures Environmental Approval for Indonesia’s Abadi LNG Project

Turkish Petroleum, Chevron Discuss Joint Oil and Gas Exploration

Saipem Lands $425M Turkish Gas Contract in Sakarya Expansion

Russia Gives ExxonMobil More Time to Exit Sakhalin-1 Oil and Gas Project

CNOOC Launches New Offshore Oil Development in Southern China

EnQuest Set to Top 2025 Production Forecast on Southeast Asia Gains

Venture Global, Tokyo Gas Ink 20-Year LNG Supply Deal

Russia Seeks to Boost Oil Exports to China as Sanctions Tighten

Major Oil and Gas Projects Drive Strong OSV Demand in the Middle East

PTTEP Orders OneSubsea Systems for Two Deepwater Projects off Malaysia

Current News

QatarEnergy Selects Technip Energies JV for North Field West Expansion Work

Velesto Lands Jack-Up Drilling Deal with Jadestone off Malaysia

Inpex Eyes Mid-Year Bids for $21B Indonesia LNG Project

Eni Nears FID for Indonesia’s Offshore Gas Projects

GLO Marine to Invest $7M in New Vessel Retrofit Hub in Romania

Seatrium Targets $40M Cost Savings in Continued Divestment Drive

Inpex Secures Environmental Approval for Indonesia’s Abadi LNG Project

MISC Secures Long-Term Charter for Papua New Guinea's First FSO

Dolphin Drilling, Vantris Ink Marketing Deal for Blackford Dolphin Semi-Sub

Saipem Agrees $272M Deal to Acquire Deep Value Driller Drillship

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com