Connect with us

Energy

Oil giants Shell, Total and Exxon report falling profits in Q3

Published

on

The global oil refining industry has been hit by squeezed margins, with three of the biggest oil companies reporting falling third-quarter profits on Thursday.

Royal Dutch Shell has seen its third-quarter earnings fall by 31% to $4.2 billion (£2.6 billion) from $6.2 billion (£3.8 billion), saying that weak industry refining margins and security problems in Nigeria are to blame.

The oil giant said that it, like the rest of the industry, has suffered from rising operating, exploring and maintenance costs while seeing lower profit margins from its refinery business. 

 

It added that oil theft and sabotage in Nigeria also cost the firm $300m (£186m). Nigerian authorities estimate that around 150,000 barrels worth of oil is stolen per day, directly from the pipelines that cross the country. The company also blamed this crisis for its falling profits in the second quarter. 

Advertisement

Peter Voser, chief executive of Shell, said the situation in Nigeria will only deteriorate further, but argued that there are reasons for optimism.

“The company is rich with new investment opportunities – in the next few quarters Shell’s capital discipline means we will need to make hard choices between the best new investment opportunities from this industry-leading portfolio,” he said.

We have started up a series of new oil and gas fields in the last few months, in deep water, integrated gas, and in our longer-term plays such as Iraq.

“Shell’s sustained investment in new growth projects will drive our financial performance.”

Advertisement

Shell is not alone in reporting poor third quarter performance in the refinery business. Total and Exxon Mobil both reported yesterday that their profit margins from oil refinery were down, blaming falling demand in a time of economic difficulty and increased industry capacity.

However, both of the companies still reported profits of $2.8 billion (£1.7 billion) and $7.8 billion (£4.86 billion) respectively.

BP, meanwhile, had announced a $1m increase in profits for the third quarter compared to the second on Wednesday. However, these profits were lower than those from the same period last year.

Further reading:

BP announces $3.7bn profits for third quarter of 2013

Advertisement

Investors worth $3tn put pressure on fossil fuels industry to rethink future

UK universities have £5.2bn invested in the fossil fuel industry, report says

San Francisco pension fund opts against fossil fuel divestment

‘Deteriorating operating environment’ in Nigeria leads to Shell profit plummet

Advertisement
Advertisement

Like our Facebook Page

Advertisement

Trending