Proposed Directors of Tirupati Graphite explain why they have requisitioned an GM. Watch the video here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksBP Share News (BP.)

Share Price Information for BP (BP.)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 490.55
Bid: 490.55
Ask: 490.60
Change: 2.40 (0.49%)
Spread: 0.05 (0.01%)
Open: 491.60
High: 494.35
Low: 489.70
Prev. Close: 488.15
BP. Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

Scotland 'Yes' vote would trigger dispute over old oil rigs

Fri, 12th Sep 2014 13:08

* Cost of decommissioning estimated at 40.6 bln pounds

* Tax relief given at 50-75 percent of spending

* Independent Scotland will seek contribution from Britain

By Claire Milhench

LONDON, Sept 12 (Reuters) - Scotland will ask Britain tohelp finance the cost of removing old North Sea rigs andpipelines even if it votes for independence and gains most ofthe oil revenues, a move that bankers and lawyers say may resultin years of legal battles.

An independent Scotland would benefit from most of the newrevenues from North Sea oil output - worth $50 billion a year -but it will nevertheless ask Britain to co-finance some $60billion of decommissioning to remove old platforms andpipelines.

"Successive Westminster governments have accrued around £300billion (in today's prices) in tax receipts from Scotland's oiland gas, and therefore the Scottish government will seek acommensurate contribution to the costs of decommissioning fromWestminster," a Scottish government spokesman said.

The UK Treasury declined to comment on its position on theissue. But a Treasury spokesman directed Reuters to an analysisissued in June 2014. This said that an independent Scotlandwould have to invest almost 3,800 pounds (6,174.62 US dollar)per head for decommissioning, over ten times more than when thecosts are spread across the whole UK.

Lawyers and bankers said that deciding who pays what willcomplicate investment decisions for oil companies.

"We certainly will have a dispute. The liabilities are justtoo large," said Andrew Moorfield, Europe-based head oforigination at Canada's Scotiabank, which is among importantlenders to the North Sea oil industry.

There are about 300 rigs in the UK North Sea and the cost ofdecommissioning is expected to exceed 40 billion pounds ($65billion) until 2040, with expenditure peaking at 1.7 billionpounds as early as 2016, according to industry estimates.

The British government has allowed operators to offsetbetween a half and three quarters of this spending via taxrelief, which means that over 20 billion pounds will not be paidto state coffers.

"The over-riding question of which administration pays whatwould need to be sorted out first and that is an item on the'to-do' list facing post-Yes negotiators," said Richard Heard,managing director of Strategic Decom, a consultancy specialisingin decommissioning.

Stephen Murray, a partner at law firm Herbert SmithFreehills, said there could be bureaucratic delays with regardto consents needed for decommissioning if officials arepre-occupied with negotiations on separation arrangements.

MARITIME BOUNDARIES

Scotland goes to the polls on Sept. 18 and the latestsurveys show that the pro-independence camp has gained ground.

The Scottish government said the outcome of talks withWestminster on how the cost of decommissioning tax relief willbe split would have no impact on the value of the reliefreceived by operators.

But alongside the uncertainty around decommissioning costs,the industry is worried that future investment in the North Seacould be jeopardised by a dispute over maritime boundaries ifScotland becomes independent.

"It is to be hoped that the two governments could come to adecision quickly and avoid a dispute, which does have thepotential to stall investment in the disputed area," said JudithAldersey-Williams, a partner at law firm CMS.

"However, it's perhaps more likely that the question of theboundary will be used as a negotiating weapon and only resolvedas part of a package of contentious issues," she added.

The biggest operators in the North Sea such as oil majors BP and Royal Dutch/ Shell see the decommissioningprocess as a litmus test for other regions which will one dayhave to go through the same challenges as the North Sea.

Companies declined to comment specifically on challenges tothe decommissioning process arising from the potential Scottishsplit from Britain.

"We face the challenges of extending the productive life ofexisting assets and managing the future costs ofdecommissioning. Much of this activity requires fiscal supportto be economic, and future long-term investments require fiscalstability and certainty," BP's CEO Bob Dudley said this week.

His counterpart at Shell, Ben van Beurden, also said thisweek he thought Scotland was better off with Britain: "Asexisting infrastructure gets older and output falls, costs willgo up and tax receipts will come down."

Scotiabank's Moorfield said some investment could ultimatelymigrate to other areas such as Norway's North Sea: "Futureinvestment flows are likely to be negatively impacted ordeferred until there is a clarity on decommissioning".(1 US dollar = 0.6154 British pound) (Additional reporting by Dmitry Zhdannikov, editing by WilliamHardy)

More News
8 Jan 2024 16:38

London close: Stocks manage positive finish after mixed session

(Sharecast News) - London's financial markets experienced a mixed trading day on Monday, with the FTSE 100 and FTSE 250 indices closing in positive territory after spending much of the session in the red.

Read more
8 Jan 2024 12:00

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: FTSE 100 underperforms in muted start to week

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London traded lower at the start of the week, with oil firms weighing on then FTSE 100, as investors look ahead to the week's key inflation prints.

Read more
8 Jan 2024 08:40

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Commodity-heavy FTSE 100 heads lower; Shell slips

(Alliance News) - The FTSE 100 kicked off the week on a downbeat note at Monday's market open, amid share price falls for commodity stocks.

Read more
6 Jan 2024 12:29

BP investors want oil firm to approach BAE chief as CEO- Sky News

Jan 6 (Reuters) - Some of BP's largest shareholders have urged the company to approach BAE Systems Chief Executive Charles Woodburn about becoming the British oil giant's next boss, Sky News reported on Saturday, citing unidentified sources.

Read more
6 Jan 2024 11:38

BP investors want oil behemoth to target BAE chief as CEO- Sky News

Jan 6 (Reuters) - Some of BP's largest shareholders have urged the company to approach Charles Woodburn, the BAE Systems chief executive, about becoming the company's next boss, Sky news reported on Saturday. (Reporting by Devika Nair in Bengaluru; Editing by Jan Harvey)

Read more
4 Jan 2024 16:54

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Stocks up ahead of US nonfarm payrolls

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London closed higher on Thursday, as investors eye the latest US non-farms data.

Read more
4 Jan 2024 13:07

London close: Stocks rise as US jobless claims slow

(Sharecast News) - London markets showed mixed performance on Thursday as investors digested the latest UK services and mortgage data and a fall in jobless claims across the pond.

Read more
4 Jan 2024 12:09

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Retailers Next and JD Sports bookend FTSE 100

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London were slightly higher at midday on Thursday, with the FTSE 100 looking set to snap the two-day losing streak it suffered at the start of the year.

Read more
4 Jan 2024 09:31

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Jefferies cuts Tullow; Berenberg likes Volex

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Thursday morning and Wednesday:

Read more
4 Jan 2024 08:58

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Next leads buoyant FTSE 100 amid services PMIs

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened up on Thursday, amid a slew of services PMI data, including for the UK, while reacting to the latest data from China.

Read more
3 Jan 2024 18:37

Equinor, BP cancel contract to sell offshore wind power to New York

Jan 3 (Reuters) - European energy firms Equinor and BP terminated their agreement to sell power to New York state from their proposed Empire Wind 2 offshore wind farm, citing rising inflation, higher borrowing costs, and supply chain issues.

Read more
3 Jan 2024 17:02

Equinor and BP cancel contract to sell offshore wind power to New York

Jan 3 (Reuters) - Equinor and BP terminated on Wednesday their agreement to sell power to New York state from their 1,260-megawatt Empire Wind 2 offshore wind farm, citing rising inflation, higher borrowing costs, and supply chain issues.

Read more
3 Jan 2024 16:52

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Stocks down ahead of US Fed minutes

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London closed lower on Wednesday, as investors nervously look ahead to the latest US Federal Reserve meeting minutes.

Read more
3 Jan 2024 08:18

Chill Brands plots product launches and looks to ease regulatory worry

(Alliance News) - Chill Brands Group PLC on Wednesday said its vape products will soon launch in retail stores, including WH Smith PLC travel locations, and it reported a trio of initiatives to help soothe regulatory scrutiny.

Read more
2 Jan 2024 16:58

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Stocks down amid disappointing manufacturing data

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London closed lower on Tuesday, after the year was started with some disappointing data about the UK and US manufacturing sectors.

Read more

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.