Q4 2014 BP PLC Earnings Call

Feb 03, 2015 AM EST
BP.L - BP PLC
Q4 2014 BP PLC Earnings Call
Feb 03, 2015 / 02:00PM GMT 

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Corporate Participants
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   *  Jess Mitchell
      BP PLC - Director of Group IR
   *  Bob Dudley
      BP PLC - Group CEO
   *  Brian Gilvary
      BP PLC - CFO
   *  Lamar McKay
      BP PLC - CEO, Upstream
   *  Tufan Ergenbilgic
      BP plc - CEO, Downstream

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Conference Call Participants
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   *  Blake Fernandez
      Howard Weil Incorporated - Analyst
   *  Oswald Clint
      Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. - Analyst
   *  Jason Kenney
      Banco Santander Brasil S.A. - Analyst
   *  Theepan Jothilingam
      Nomura International - Analyst
   *  Thomas Adolff
      Credit Suisse - Analyst
   *  Doug Terreson
      Evercore - Analyst
   *  Jason Gammel
      Jefferies & Company - Analyst
   *  Irene Himona
      Societe Generale - Analyst
   *  Martijn Rats
      Morgan Stanley - Analyst
   *  Guy Baber
      Simmons & Company International - Analyst
   *  Anish Kapadia
      Tudor, Pickering and Holt - Analyst
   *  Rob West
      Redburn - Analyst
   *  Lydia Rainforth
      Barclays Capital - Analyst
   *  Fred Lucas
      JPMorgan - Analyst
   *  Chris Coupland
      BofA Merrill Lynch - Analyst
   *  Lucas Herrmann
      Deutsche Bank - Analyst
   *  Bertrand Hodee
      Raymond James Euro Equities - Analyst
   *  Neill Morton
      Investec, Inc. - Analyst
   *  Richard Griffith
      Canaccord Genuity - Analyst

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Presentation
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Operator   [1]
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 Welcome to the BP Presentation to the Financial Community Webcast and Conference Call. I now hand over to Jessica Mitchell, Head of Investor Relations.

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 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [2]
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 Hello and welcome. This is BP's Full-year 2014 Results Webcast and Conference call. I'm Jess Mitchell, BP's Head of Investor Relations. I'm here with our Group Chief Executive, Bob Dudley; Chief Financial Officer Brian Gilvary; Upstream Chief Executive, Lamar McKay; and our Downstream Chief Executive, Tufan Erginbilgic.

 Before we start, I need to draw your attention to our cautionary statement. During today's presentation, we will make forward-looking statements that refer to our estimates, plans, and expectations. Actual results and outcomes could differ materially due to factors that we note on this slide, and in our UK and SEC filings. Please refer to our annual report, stock exchange announcement, and SEC filings for more details. These documents are available on our website. Thank you, and now over to Bob.

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 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [3]
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 Thanks, Jess, and welcome everyone today's call. Today's an important day for BP, particularly as it marks the fulfillment of our 10-point plan and the start of a new phase. We're here to look back on a turbulent last quarter, a strong 2014, and a three-year period in which we did what we said we would do. We're here to look ahead to a tough period for the industry, but one that we're prepared for.

 I'll start with an overview of where we've got to in our future plans, and I'll hand over to Brian to take us through the detail of fourth-quarter results, and update you on key elements of guidance for 2015. Then Lamar and Tufan will talk in some more detail about their areas of the business. At the end there will be time to take your questions.

 The first thing to say is that with 2014 now complete, we can confirm that we have delivered the 10-point plan we laid out back in 2011. As part of that plan, we set a series of goals that we would accomplish over a three-year period. We said we would focus relentlessly on safety. We undertook to manage our portfolio actively while playing to our strengths, and to generate around $30 billion of operating cash flow in a $100-per-barrel world. We committed to strengthening our balance sheet to be more capable of weathering uncertainty. This all had a core purpose of creating a stronger, simpler, and more focused BP. As we stand today, I believe we've achieved all that and more.

 Back in 2011 we were just one year into a recovery from a major incident with multiple legal, financial, environmental, and strategic implications. Progress we've made says a lot about how BP and our people have worked over the past three years. But to me, it says more about BP's prospects over the next few years. We are capable to change, and capable of taking on tough challenges.

 To briefly summarize the key achievements, we have improved the safety and reliability of our operations. In 2014, we had fewer serious process safety incidents, and fewer leaks and spills than in 2011. To meet our obligations to the US Gulf states, we completed an initial $38 billion of divestments in 2013, and have since been working towards a further $10 billion of divestments which are well underpinned.

 In the upstream we've made 13 significant discoveries, and delivered 15 new major project start-ups over the last three years, while also transforming the business to operate under a new functional model. It's been a similar story in the downstream, where we've invested in the major upgrade of our Whiting Refinery, and at the same time divested two large US refineries, and some related marketing assets, leaving a portfolio of more advantaged assets.

 In all, the choices we have made around our portfolio have provided us with a more focused footprint, a less complex business, and a stronger overall set of assets. At the same time, we have resumed payment of our dividend in 2011, and have since grown shareholder distributions. This includes repurchasing $10.3 billion of our own shares, largely using funds from the sale of our interest in TNK-BP. We leave 2014 behind with a proven track record of delivery in our underlying business, and better placed to navigate the new and challenging world we have all entered in 2015.

 The recent sharp fall in oil price is of course the big story in the industry today. A lot has been said and written about this, so I'm going to concentrate today on how BP is positioned in this environment. How well we navigate the road ahead will be a test of our business model. We have a diverse portfolio, a rigorous process to allocate capital, and an already established focus on efficiency.

 As well as being an integrated oil Company with a strong downstream, our portfolio has around one-third of upstream production coming from production-sharing agreements, and a growing portfolio of high-quality gas projects, both of which make us less sensitive to oil price fluctuations.

 We are a long-range business, and we look to generate competitive returns across the full life cycle of a project. Over the last three to four years we have been sanctioning upstream projects at $80 per barrel, while testing projects for resilience at $60 per barrel. Of course, in the current volatile times we will look closely at each investment decision, taking account of current price levels, our ability to leverage deflation, and our long-term outlook for the environment. As and when prices look to have reset in a structural way, we would moderate these assumptions accordingly.

 We also drive capital discipline by constraining the total level of capital spend in any one year, taking account of the opportunities available and the flexibility of our balance sheet. We are currently paring back activity, and looking to re-phase spend to reflect the expected deflation. We are resetting our capital expenditure in 2015 to around $20 billion, well below our previous guidance. Our overall capital budget will be the subject of ongoing review, as we re-work our medium term plans.

 At this moment, we benefit from being an organization that is already very focused on cost discipline. We began to streamline activity and increase efficiency some 18 months ago, in response to becoming a smaller, more focused Company. This timing gives us an advantage, as the benefits are already becoming evident. More on that in a moment.

 Going into 2015, our balance sheet reflects gearing of 16.7%, and we are working steadily towards divesting a further $10 billion of assets over the 2014 to 2015 period. We are where we planned to be, but the outlook for the environment is now much weaker. The interventions we are currently making on capital and costs have become critical to ensuring we can re-balance our financial framework to the new environment. Brian will take you through the specifics for 2015 shortly.

 Let me now spend a moment on how we intend to deepen our focus on costs in the different parts of our business. The background to this, as you know, is that BP invested significantly in certain areas of functional capability following the Deepwater Horizon incident, which was also a period of strong inflation. At the same time, we started divesting non-core assets. This triggered a need to streamline our supporting functions and structures so they are the right size to support our new portfolio, without sacrificing safety and risk management in any way.

 At the corporate and functional level, as part of the outlook we showed you last year, we identified over 60 simplification initiatives, many of which are well under way. You will recall this included consolidation in our global business services organization, and combining a number of our corporate functions, among other initiatives.

 As Lamar highlighted in December, simplification of the upstream primarily reflects a continued focus on doing the right activity at the right time, active management of our supply chain, and aligning business support costs with the reduced size of our operations. It also includes making choices in our portfolio, such as the restructuring of the lower 48 in the United States.

 We're now further intensifying our efforts in response to current market conditions, and we will be actively looking to take advantage of the deflationary opportunity. We will do this without compromise to safety. Of course, the outcome of this is as much about the industry as about BP, so we are not going to put a number to what we think is achievable today. We would say that we expect to at least maintain our competitive position as industry costs re-brace to the new lower oil prices.

 In the downstream, too, we've developed a track record of delivering on cost efficiency. Tufan has brought renewed focus to this since assuming leadership of the segment, with 26 simplification initiatives currently under way. We aim to deliver around $1.6 billion per year of efficiency savings by 2018 versus 2014, as Tufan will explain.

 This all works together to right-size our total cash cost base. In 2014, we saw a reduction in total group cash costs of over $1 billion relative to 2013. We expect ongoing activity to deliver further efficiencies in 2015, and to be sustainable over the long term.

 Consistent with this, we announced in December that we expect the Group to incur about $1 billion of non-operating restructuring charges before the end of 2015. Given the uncertainty of the outlook, we now also see it as prudent to reset our cost base for a more sustained period of lower oil prices. We are deepening our efforts, and looking even more closely at all forms of activity across the group. This will be an area of intense focus for 2015, and we will keep you updated as we put more detail to these plans.

 Turning to the portfolio, today's environment is a good reminder of the logic of being an integrated business with a focused portfolio of high-quality assets. The repositioning of our portfolio following our divestments has made us less complex, with a lower risk footprint, and positioned to focus resources for the greater discipline demanded by current conditions.

 We keep our portfolio constantly under review, looking for ways to unlock value, whether by exiting assets that no longer fit our strategy, or transforming a business model that could work harder, as with the lower 48. It also includes remaining alert to opportunities for investing in assets that fit our core strategy that could arise in the current market conditions.

 In the upstream, our portfolio reflects a balance of investment in giant fields, deep water, and gas value chains, with strong incumbent positions in our four key geographic regions of Angola, the Gulf of Mexico, Azerbaijan, and the North Sea. The portfolio is sufficiently diverse to balance exposure to fiscal and geopolitical risk, but concentrated enough to allow us to focus on our strengths. It provides a distinctive platform for the future.

 Our gas positions have the potential to grow operating cash and improve returns over the next decade, along with our established oil positions. Our re-positioned downstream business, with our newly upgraded Whiting Refinery, is not only an important cash generator for the group, but still has potential to grow returns as we focus on growth markets and efficiency.

 With respect to Russia, the current geopolitical context remains challenging. Nonetheless, Russia remains today the world's' largest oil and gas producer, and we remain committed to our strategic investment in Rosneft, a position with attractive opportunities for the long term. BP will continue to comply with all relevant sanctions. Overall, we believe we have re-shaped a portfolio over the last few years that will allow us to succeed over the long term. Lamar and Tufan will both provide more color around their respective businesses.

 Turning to our overall raindrop proposition to investors, this is a slide we showed you in March last year. Of course a lot has changed since then, but the fundamental principles of that proposition remain unchanged over the long term. We are pursuing value over volume, which means investing in high-quality activities which play to our strengths, divesting non-core assets, and finding new ways to create long-term value through portfolio management. This is central to our strategy, no matter what the environment.

 In the you new environment, our focus has to be on re-balancing our financial framework to manage through a period of low oil prices, while underpinning our dividend, and meeting our legal obligations in the United States. Looking further out, our aim remains to grow sustainable free cash flow through a combination of growth and underlying operating cash flow from our business, and a strong focus on capital discipline. I believe we have already demonstrated our ability to maintain an affordable capital frame. Over time, this aims to support growth in distributions to shareholders.

 Looking ahead to what we expect to happen over the next few years, we see this year and probably the next several years as an industry reset phase -- a period of intense change, the outcomes of which will be defined by oil and gas prices, pace of deflation, the realization of efficiencies across the sector, and possible inorganic activity.

 At BP, we will be focusing on a clear set of priorities. For simplicity, I'd like to think of this under the four headings of delivery, divestments, discipline, and the dividend. By delivery, I mean consolidating the underlying momentum of the last three years in our businesses through continued, safe, reliable, and efficient execution. Divestments is about completing the $10-billion program of divestments.

 Discipline has two parts: Firstly, resetting the capital budget to ensure every dollar of capital spend delivers value for shareholders, paring back activity as necessary and taking advantage of deflation; and secondly, right-sizing the cost base to match our footprint and withstand a sustained period of lower oil prices. Most importantly, the dividend, which is firmly established as the first priority within our financial framework.

 Looking beyond this phase and into the medium term, we expect to be operating off a reset base. We expect this reset base to be underpinned by the next wave of upstream major projects and longer-term opportunities for resource progression. In the downstream, we see us moving to the next level of competitiveness and efficiency as we leverage our advantaged portfolio, and we will be continuing our focus on capital and cost efficiency. There's a lot that may be unclear, particularly in this current phase. But there is one point we are completely clear on. Our focus throughout will be on growing value for shareholders.

 Now let me turn specifically to our full-year 2014 results. Our underlying replacement cost profit was $12.1 billion. As you would expect, in the upstream this was significantly affected by the weaker environment, particularly in the fourth quarter. We also experienced some higher costs, DD&A and exploration write-offs in particular. The depreciation of the ruble and lower oil prices also had a negative impact on our share of Rosneft's net income for the year.

 However in the downstream, despite a weaker refining environment we delivered improved performance from our fuels marketing business, and benefited from the ramp-up of the modernized Whiting refinery. This reminds us of the importance of being an integrated oil Company.

 Post-tax operating cash flow in 2014 was $32.8 billion, and as indicated has fulfilled a major goal of the 10-point plan. Our organic capital expenditure in 2014 was $22.9 billion, $1.1 billion below the lower end of the guidance range given at the start of the year. This demonstrates our strong commitment to capital discipline.

 Proceeds during the year from divestments totaled $3.5 billion. As already noted, our gearing at the end of the year was well within our target band of 10% to 20%. We distributed $5.9 billion in cash to shareholders through dividends, and we also bought back $4.8 billion of our own shares last year. Finally, our reserves replacement ratio for 2014 is estimated at 62%, excluding the impact of acquisitions and divestments.

 Now I want to walk you through the important area of our safety performance in 2014. These charts show an encouraging overall trend since 2010, which I believe reflects the disciplined approach we're taking to our operations around the globe. Looking first at losses of primary containment, or LOPCs, which reflect even very small releases of any hazardous material, we have seen a small increase in these instances against a strong result in 2013. Newly available data from enhanced automation in our lower 48 operations in the United States was the reason for the increase in our LOPCs in 2014, and we continue to focus our efforts in this area.

 We also track process safety events. The American Petroleum Institute, or API, industry metric. Looking at Tier 1 and Tier 2 events combined, the overall downward year-on-year trend has continued. As regards personal safety, our recordable injury frequency rate remains level with 2013. Safety is good business. It remains the primary focus in our operations, and we are always striving to improve our performance.

 Lastly, let me briefly touch on the ongoing Gulf of Mexico litigation processes in the United States. The penalty phase of the MDL 2179 trial is now under way. This is the third of three steps in the process of determining the amount of penalties under the Clean Water Act. Following the first phase, the court issued rulings which included finding of gross negligence and willful misconduct by BP. We strongly disagree with these findings and have appealed.

 Regarding Phase II, the court recently ruled that 3.19 million barrels of oil were spilled into the Gulf as a result of the incident, and found no gross negligence in our source-control efforts. As we've said before, we will pursue fair outcomes in all legal matters, while protecting the best interest of you, as shareholders, at all times.

 Further, the recent decision of the US Supreme Court not to hear BP's appeal on the issue of causation in relation to business economic loss claims, we have a responsibility to continue to contest what we believe to be unfounded claims. I should also point out that the deadline for submission of any further economic loss claims has now been set for June 8 of this year. Brian will give the usual update on the financial impacts for the quarter shortly. As always, we are continuing to compartmentalize these legal activities, and BP's operational delivery teams remain fully focused on our core businesses. Let me now hand over to Brian.

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 Brian Gilvary,  BP PLC - CFO   [4]
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 Thanks, Bob. I'll start by touching briefly on the price environment, in what continues to be a very weak market. In the fourth quarter, Brent fell to an average of just under $77 per barrel, the lowest quarterly average since the third quarter of 2010, and has averaged $48 per barrel so far this quarter.

 As is now well documented, oil prices softened in the latter part of 2014, as market fundamentals reflected production growth in the United States, other increases in global supply, and weaker global demand. Prices weakened further following OPEC's decision to maintain production in November. Henry Hub prices continue to fall through 2014, as growth of United States shale production out-paced consumption. European and Asian spot prices fell, reflecting modest demand and rising LNG supplies. Henry Hub gas prices for the fourth quarter averaged almost exactly $4 per million British thermal units, and now stand around $2.70 per million British thermal units.

 The overall refining environment was lower in the fourth quarter, impacted by the seasonal reduction in refining margins, along with falling crude differentials in the United States. As you'll have seen, the sharp fall in oil and gas prices has had an impact on our upstream results for the fourth quarter. However, the full run rate effect of the falling prices will only be visible as we move through the first quarter and beyond. As Bob mentioned, against this backdrop we are making a number of interventions to re-balance our financial framework that I will come back to shortly.

 Turning to the results. BP's fourth-quarter underlying replacement cost profit was $2.2 billion, down 20% on the same period a year ago, and 26% lower than the third quarter. Compared to the fourth quarter of 2013, the result reflects significantly lower liquids realizations, and a lower contribution from our share holding in Rosneft, offset by improved downstream earnings and increased upstream production in high-margin areas.

 You will have seen from our stock exchange announcement that we have booked a pre-tax, non-operating, non-cash charge of $6.5 billion, or $3 billion post-tax for impairments in the fourth quarter. These are mainly upstream assets, reflecting the impact of the lower near-term price environment, revisions to reserves, and other factors.

 Fourth-quarter operating cash flow was $7.2 billion. This did not benefit from any unwinding of working capital, which remained broadly flat between quarters. The fourth-quarter dividend, payable in the first quarter of 2015, remains unchanged at $0.10 per ordinary share.

 Turning to the highlights at a segment level. In upstream, the underlying fourth-quarter replacement cost profit before interest and tax of $2.2 billion compares with $3.9 billion a year ago, and $3.9 billion in the third quarter. Compared to the fourth quarter of 2013, the result reflects significantly lower liquids realizations, the absence of the one-off benefit to production taxes in the fourth quarter of 2013, and higher exploration write-offs. These are partly offset by lower costs, increased production in high-margin areas, and stronger gas marketing and trading.

 Excluding Russia, fourth-quarter reported production versus a year ago was 2.6% lower, primarily due to the Abu Dhabi onshore concession expiry in January 2014. After adjusting for this and for entitlement and divestment impacts, underlying production increased by 2.3%. Underlying production growth for the full year was 2.2%. Compared to the third quarter, the result reflects significantly lower liquids realizations and higher exploration write-offs, partly offset by significantly stronger gas marketing and trading, higher production, and lower costs.

 Looking ahead, we expect first-quarter 2015 reported production to be higher than the fourth quarter, reflecting higher entitlements in PSA regions, based on lower oil prices. For the fourth quarter of 2014, we have recognized $470 million as our estimate of BP's share of Rosneft's underlying net income, compared to $1.1 billion a year ago, and $110 million in the third quarter.

 BP's share of Rosneft's production for the fourth quarter is estimated at just over 1 million barrels of oil equivalent per day, 4% higher compared with a year ago. Rosneft's results for the period were affected by an unfavorable duty lag, lower oil prices, and other items, as well as foreign exchange effects which had a favorable impact on the results. Further details will be provided by Rosneft when they report their fourth-quarter results.

 In the downstream, the fourth-quarter underlying replacement cost profit before interest and tax was $1.2 billion, compared with $70 million a year ago, and $1.5 billion in the third quarter. The fuels business reported an improved underlying replacement cost profit, before interest and tax of $930 million in the fourth quarter, compared with a loss of $200 million in the same quarter last year. This was driven by higher fuels marketing performance, increased heavy crude processing in the United States, and improved results from supply and trading, and lower turn-around activity, partly offset by a weaker refining environment, primarily due to falling crude differentials in the United States.

 The lubricants business delivered an underlying replacement cost profit of $310 million, compared with $230 million in the same quarter last year. This reflects continued gross margin improvement in growth markets, and the absence of restructuring charges, partially offset by adverse foreign exchange impacts. The petrochemicals business reported an underlying replacement cost loss of $30 million in the fourth quarter, compared to a profit of $40 million in the same period last year. The result reflects a continuation of the weak margin environment, particularly in the Asian aromatics sector, and unplanned operational events.

 Looking to 2015, we anticipate weaker refining margins due to narrowing crude differentials in the low crude price environment. We expect the financial impact of refinery turn-arounds to be at similar levels as 2014, and the petrochemicals margin environment to gradually improve.

 In other business and corporate, the pre-tax underlying replacement cost charge was $120 million for the fourth quarter, a reduction of $490 million on the same period a year ago, mainly due to improved results in our other businesses, lower corporate and functional costs, and a number of one-off credits. As a result of the very low charge in the fourth quarter, the full year pre-tax underlying charge of $1.3 billion is lower than the guidance range we provided in February. The effective tax rate on underlying replacement cost profit for the fourth quarter was 38%, taking the full-year effective tax rate to 36%, in line with the guidance for 2014.

 The charge for the Gulf of Mexico oil spill was $480 million for the fourth quarter, primarily reflecting increased costs related to business economic loss claims, litigation, and the ongoing cost of the Gulf Coast restoration organization. The total cumulative pre-tax charge for the incident to date is $43.5 billion. This does not include any provision for business economic loss claims that are yet to be received, processed, or paid, other than a provision for claims that are being processed and not subject to appeal within the claims facility.

 The charge in the fourth quarter relating to business economic loss claims was $235 million. As we have previously advised, it is still not possible to reliably estimate the remaining liability for business economic loss claims. We continue to review this each quarter.

 Regarding the Clean Water Act, we have filed notice of appeal of the Phase I gross negligence ruling, and the penalty phase is under way. We continue to believe that our original provision of $3.5 billion represents a reliable estimate of the penalty in the event we are successful in our appeal, and we have maintained a provision at this level.

 The pre-tax cash outflow on costs related to the oil spill for the full year 2014 was $1.3 billion, including $740 million relating to fines and penalties. As previously disclosed, the cumulative amount estimated to be payable from the trust fund has now reached $20 billion. Additional costs not provided for will be charged to the income statement as they arise. At the end of the quarter, the aggregate remaining cash balances in the trust and qualified settlement funds totaled $5.1 billion, including $1.1 billion remaining in the seafood compensation fund, with $20 billion paid in, and $14.9 billion paid out.

 Now turning to progress on divestments, and our objective to divest $10 billion of assets by the end of 2015. Agreed deals to date have reached $4.7 billion. These include the sale of a package of assets on the Alaskan north slope, the farm-down of 40% of our interest in the Oman Khazzan project, monetization of part of our interest in the Tiber and Gila fields in the Gulf of Mexico paleogene, and the sale of our global aviation turbine oils business. We remain on track to reach our $10 billion objective this year.

 Now looking at our full-year cash flow movements. This slide compares our sources and uses of cash in 2013 and 2014. Operating cash flow for 2014 was $32.8 billion, marking delivery of the 10-point plan operating cash flow target. This includes $7.2 billion generated in the fourth quarter. Excluding oil-spill-related out-goings, underlying operating cash flow for the year was $11.6 billion, higher than in 2013. This includes a working capital release of $2.2 billion for the year.

 Full-year organic capital expenditure was $22.9 billion, in line with our revised guidance provided with third-quarter results. Organic capital expenditure in the fourth quarter was $6.6 billion. In 2014, we bought back $4.8 billion of shares, including $800 million in the fourth quarter. The cumulative total since early 2013 is now $10.3 billion. Around $8 billion of this reflects the proceeds of the sale of our interests in TNK-BP, with the balance coming from the proceeds of our $10-billion divestment program.

 Turning to our forward-looking guidance for 2015, we expect full-year underlying production in 2015 to be broadly flat compared with 2014, with base decline offset by new major project volumes. The actual reported outcome will depend on divestments, OPEC quotas, and entitlement impacts. As mentioned, organic capital expenditure in 2014 was $22.9 billion. We now expect 2015 organic capital expenditure to be around $20 billion, relative to our previously signaled capital frame of $24 billion to $26 billion in 2015.

 This reflects a re-balancing of our uses of cash in the current price environment. In the upstream, the reduction is expected to come from paring back exploration and access spend, shelving a number of marginal projects, prioritizing activity in our base operations, and the reduced spending we anticipate in projects operated by others.

 This does not rely on supply-chain deflation in the near term. Depending on where prices settle, we would expect deflation to become evident in the ongoing review of our capital frame as we move into 2016 and beyond. These interventions in the upstream will be further supported by not advancing selected projects in the downstream and our other businesses.

 The DD&A charge was $15.2 billion in 2014, reflecting a steep rise compared to 2013, as a result of a significant production delivered from new upstream major projects, and the commissioning of the refurbished Whiting refinery. In 2015, we see a flatter trend for DD&A relative to 2014.

 In other business and corporate, the average underlying quarterly charge is expected to be around $400 million, although this may fluctuate between individual quarters. In the current environment, and with our current portfolio of assets, the effective tax rate is expected to be lower during 2015. Today's fourth-quarter results also includes a $433 million non-operating restructuring charge against the $1-billion charge we expect to see before the end of this year.

 Clearly, as Bob outlined, this is a year of transition as we adjust to the reality of current and expected lower oil prices. As we re-balance the Company's sources and uses of cash, we will update you on progress quarter by quarter.

 Turning to our financial outlook, our 2014 operating cash delivery of $32.8 billion reflects the reliable operating performance in our business, and a release of working capital that is less than half of the build we saw in 2014. This exceeds our 10-point planned target of $30 billion to $31 billion in a $100-per-barrel oil price environment. Net debt at the year end was $22.6 billion, putting gearing at 16.7%. We remain committed to keeping gearing in the 10% to 20% range, while uncertainties remain.

 We are now entering a phase of uncertainty while the industry transitions through a period of weaker prices. We are very clear on the actions we need to take to complete our current $10-billion divestment program, reset our capital frame to around $20 billion for 2015, and re-size our cost base. With the interventions we are making, we believe we have sufficient flexibility to support our dividend in 2015 in the current price environment, while staying within our gearing band.

 Current circumstances aside, our objective over time is to reflect a position where underlying operating cash flow covers capital expenditure and dividends. We will be actively working to re-establish this balance in our financial framework over the medium term.

 Over the course of this year, we expect industry margin structures to start to respond to deflation, as we also reset our own controllable costs to be sustainable through a lower-price environment. This will put us in a better position to define the longer-term financial implications for the group.

 To reinforce Bob's earlier words, our first priority within the financial framework is the dividend. As we adjust to the new environment, we will continue to judge the uses of cash for discretionary reinvestments and distributions on an ongoing basis, with a bias to distributions. We will continue to keep you updated as our plans evolve through the year. Now let me hand over to Lamar to talk about the upstream business.

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 Lamar McKay,  BP PLC - CEO, Upstream   [5]
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 Thanks, Brian. In December I shared with you some significant detail about our strategy and plans for the upstream, so I do not intend to go into a lot of detail today. I'll start with a look back at 2014, followed by a reminder of the key activities driving value in our business, and other recent and near-term developments. I'll end with a brief recap of the key pillars of the strategy I outlined in December.

 We achieved a number of key milestones in 2014. 18 exploration wells were drilled in the year. We made five new discoveries at Orca in Angola, [Notis] in Egypt, [Cheralete] in Brazil, Vorlich in the North Sea, and Guadalupe in the Gulf of Mexico. We also continued to achieve new access, including the UK North Sea licensing round in the fourth quarter.

 In December we signed a new production-sharing agreement with SOCAR in Azerbaijan to jointly explore for and develop potential prospects in the shallow water area around the Absheron peninsula in the Azerbaijan sector of the Caspian Sea, pending final government approval. This is in addition to blocks awarded earlier in the year in Morocco, Australia, Greenland, the prior North Sea licensing round, and the Gulf of Mexico. Last month we formally received the licenses for the Al-Matariyyaha and Carawan concessions in Egypt, following the announcement of the award last year.

 Turning to major projects, our 2014 start-ups continue to ramp up as planned. The start-up of both Sunrise Phase I in Canada and Kinnoull in the UK North Sea during December takes the total 2014 major project start-ups to seven. Production from the Andrew platform, which the Kinnoull project ties in to, is forecast to peak at more than 50,000 barrels per day. Sunrise Phase 1, operated by our 50% joint venture partner Husky, represents our first in situ oil sands operation, and an asset which we expect to generate steady production for decades.

 Turning to operations, we successfully completed our final 2014 turn-around in December on schedule, taking the total completed in 2014 to eight. Additionally, operations at the Rhum gas field in the central North Sea resumed in the fourth quarter, in accordance with the agreed temporary management scheme. Our well delivery execution has also improved in 2014. We completed all of our priority wells, and had the highest production from new wells and well work since 2009.

 As I described in December, our core business activities are designed to drive value growth and competitive returns. In our base operations, we are focused on driving systematic delivery of safe and increasingly reliable operations, with our operated plant reliability increasing by 7% since 2010, and strong levels of plant reliability in our top fields. We are also focused on efficient reservoir management and wells execution, in order to optimize recovery and value from our base assets. Managing existing wells is just as important, and we maintain these through timely well interventions to either restore or enhance production.

 We continue to move forward with a set of quality major projects. We have around 60 projects, with a balance between deep water, giant fields, and gas value chains, which are also balanced across different geographies and stages of development. More on this year's project start-ups in a moment. We have reloaded our exploration pipeline over recent years through significant access to new opportunities. This has given us many opportunities for resource progression into the next decade.

 Finally, but importantly, we have a strong focus on capital and cost discipline. In the current environment, we are intensifying this focus to reset our cost base, as Bob and Brian have explained. With regard to capital expenditure, we expect to pare back exploration and access spend, to re-phase certain projects, and we will continually prioritize all of our activity.

 We have uncommitted spend, and flexibility to manage pace of investment, and to take advantage of any deflation in the sector. On cost discipline, we expect to align our cost base with the reduced size of our operations through actively managing our supply chain, by again prioritizing activity, focusing our efforts on where we have distinctive capability, and making choices in our portfolio.

 Now I'll look more specifically at the four major projects which we expect to start up in 2015, which are progressing on time and within budgets. In Angola, the Kizomba Satellites Phase II project is progressing well. Sub-sea installation is going to plan, and three production wells are complete. Also in Angola, the Greater Plutonio Phase 3 sub-sea development is making good progress, with the first well already completed. In Algeria, the In Salah Southern fields project is on track. The pipeline is under construction, and commissioning of the plant is ongoing. Finally, in Australia, brown field activities in sub-sea installations are moving ahead on the Western Flank A project.

 In total, we have 15 projects which we have passed through the final investment decision, and are in the construction stage across the world. The remaining projects in our pipeline are in the design or appraisal stage. Going forward, we will sanction and progress these projects at the right time. We fully intend to make use of the current environment to secure reasonable contract rates, to continue negotiation of fair price and fiscal terms in certain regions, and to access market deflation by phasing investment for the appropriate projects.

 I will now focus a little more on our portfolio and recent developments in the United States, where we have three main upstream businesses, the Lower 48, Alaska, and the Gulf of Mexico. We have initiated change to actively pursue more efficient operating models in each of these businesses.

 In March 2014, we announced our plan to separate our US Lower 48 oil and gas business into a separate unit. The rationale was that a new operating model was needed to improve performance in this business against its direct competitors, the US independents. We expect faster decision-making, more innovation, and shorter cycle times through the value chain, and expect that significant capital and cost efficiencies will follow.

 Our plans, which include reporting separate financials, are on track. We are already seeing positive results from the more streamlined organization. We have had a work force reduction of 900 employees and contractors, and have seen cash costs fall by around 25% between 2012 and 2014.

 In Alaska, we sold the Endicott and Northstar assets, and farmed down in the Liberty and Milne Point fields to Hilcorp in the second quarter of 2014. The intent of this transaction was to put funds towards our obligations to the US Gulf states, and to allow us to focus our footprint to operate only one material asset, the giant Prudhoe Bay field, while divesting those worth more to others. At the same time, we sought to find an experienced partner to operate those assets where we diluted our interest, in order to drive incremental value.

 Finally, in the Gulf of Mexico, we focus our efforts on four operated hubs and three non-operated positions which have the potential to deliver production growth. At the same time, we will also consider how we can most efficiently support the logistics of these BP-operated assets. We also continue to explore and appraise new positions, and we participated in three exploration wells in the Gulf of Mexico during 2014. As these exploration activities provide potential new development opportunities, we will continue to consider where and how much we operate.

 In light of this, last week we announced a new ownership and operating model with Chevron and ConocoPhillips to advance current and future paleogene discoveries in the deep water Gulf of Mexico. We are diluting around half of our current 62% equity interest in the Gila and Tiber fields to Chevron, passing operatorship to them at the same time, and we also gained exploration access to the Gibson prospect.

 This alliance will enable us to do three things that are at the core of our strategy in the Gulf of Mexico. Namely, to support exploration and development in the paleogene, which we expect to be a key part of our future in the region; to share development costs and maximize synergies, which will allow us to manage and improve capital efficiency; and to increase our focus on maximizing production at our existing operated hubs.

 To close, I'd like to revisit the key take-aways from our Upstream Day in December. We are building a track record of delivery. We are improving safety and making our operations more reliable. We are focused on value over volume. By investing in high-quality activities, we have a more focused footprint, and we will continue to actively manage our portfolio. We are delivering value today, through the efficient execution of our base activities, by progressing a quality set of major projects, and we continue to make discoveries from our exploration portfolio.

 In order to deliver long-term growth, we will continue to maintain a disciplined investment approach into three distinctive classes of assets: Deep water, gas value chains, and giant fields. We will continue to maintain a balanced portfolio of opportunities. Finally, we drive the efficient execution of our activities through our functional operating model, and this is delivering results.

 These remain the pillars of our upstream strategy, regardless of the oil price environment. Our strategy aims to deliver competitive operating cash growth through focusing on safe and reliable base operations, selecting and executing our capital projects at the right time, and ensuring sustainability through cost and capital discipline. I'll now hand over to Tufan to talk about the downstream.

------------------------------
 Tufan Ergenbilgic,  BP plc - CEO, Downstream   [6]
------------------------------
 Thanks, Lamar. In the next few slides I will provide a brief update on our progress in 2014, and will set out the opportunity I see for further performance improvement across the downstream, and the strategy we will be following to capture this opportunity.

 In terms of progress in 2014, we have seen continued improvement in our process safety performance, particularly on loss of primary containment, where we have achieved around 20% reduction in incidents year on year during 2014, which represents our best recorded annual performance.

 In fuels, we continue to deliver strong operational performance across our refining system, with [Solomon] refining available at a sustained at around 95% for the year. Our recently repositioned Whiting refinery near Chicago is now fully on stream. We also announced our intention to cease refining operations at Bulwer refinery in Australia during 2015.

 In lubricants, our focus on growth markets and premium brands continues to deliver like-for-like profit growth. In petrochemicals, in response to continued difficult environment, we have undergone a strategic review to create a higher earnings potential business which is more resilient to bottom-of-cycle conditions. I will cover this in more detail later in the presentation.

 This operational progress across many fronts has resulted in operating cash flow growth. Our 2014 progress gives us a great base to build on, and I believe there is further performance improvement opportunity for us to capture in downstream. Our strategy focuses on improving returns, growing operating and free cash flow, and building a quality downstream business, which leads the industry as measured by net income per refining barrel.

 Our strategy to deliver this performance opportunity has five main themes. Our first priority remains safe and reliable operations, and we will continue to drive for performance improvement, both in personal and process safety. Advantaged manufacturing in refining means we will continue to build a top-quartile refining business by having a competitively advantaged portfolio, which is underpinned by operations excellence. In petrochemicals, it means creating a business with higher earnings potential, which is significantly more robust to a bottom-of-cycle environment.

 In fuels marketing and lubricants, we have material and reliable profit and cash businesses. We will differentially invest in higher-returning businesses which have operating cash growth potential. This should improve downstream returns and operating cash flow growth.

 Our strategy has a constant focus on portfolio quality through the high grading of assets and capital discipline. Where businesses do not fit our strategic frame, we will seek to divest. Finally, as Bob has already mentioned, we have launched a simplification and efficiency program to support our strategy to deliver performance improvement, and to make our businesses even more competitive.

 I will now briefly talk about the key elements of our strategy, beginning with advantaged manufacturing. We have improved our refining portfolio quality in terms of both feed stock advantage and scale, and sustained competitive complexity through portfolio rationalization and selective investment.

 We have divested or closed 14 refineries since 2000. This gives us a smaller, more focused, higher-quality refining portfolio, which as the top left start shows, is largely concentrated in Europe and the United States. We believe that having a quality refining portfolio connected to strong marketing positions is core to our integrated fuels value chain businesses, as this provides optimization opportunities in highly competitive markets.

 Turning to each of the regions. In the US, the top right chart illustrates how feed stock advantage has grown materially, and has the potential to further improve due to refinery repositioning and logistics investments which are largely complete. Our three US refineries have access to Canadian crudes and US shale oil, both of which typically price at a discount to other crudes. Our US refineries are also location-advantaged versus Gulf Coast refineries, due to Canadian crude supply proximity. Feed stock flexibility enables us to fully optimize our crude slate, depending on relative crude differentials -- an important capability, given today's volatile energy markets.

 In Europe, the bottom right chart illustrates we have a top-quartile refining portfolio in terms of scale, and a smaller refining exposure than our primary competitors. Our refining portfolio is also competitive in Nelson complexity. Excluding our Rotterdam refinery, which as you know has significant grading and logistics flexibility, our average European Nelson complexity rises to around 11.

 Outside the US and Europe, where we have refineries in Africa and Australia, these are industry-leading in their region in terms of scale, and have top-quartile profit capability. Across all regions, we expect to operate our portfolio at top-quartile availability and with improved efficiency. The bottom left chart illustrates our performance over time, together with our aim for further improvement.

 To underpin this operational delivery, a program of operations excellence has recently been launched. This advantaged portfolio, and our business improvement programs, should ensure the portfolio delivers further performance improvement, and is more resilient to volatility in the environment. This supports our strategy of creating a refining business with last-man-standing portfolio quality and performance in the regions in which they operate.

 Our petrochemicals portfolio is focused in large on two main end products, purified terephthalic acid, or PTA, and acetic acid. We are taking steps to significantly improve the cash break-even performance of the business. This will improve our earnings potential, and make the business more robust to a bottom-of-cycle environment. These actions include a significant portfolio restructuring in our aromatics business to shut down older capacity in the United States or Asia, and to sell less-advantaged assets, provided we can get good value for them. We also expect to commission Zuhai 3 in China, our latest generation of PTA plant in the next couple of months.

 Secondly, extending the I-plan program to retrofit our best technology into our advantaged sites, and thus, reduce overall operating cost. Thirdly, creating additional value from our leading petrochemical technologies by growing third-party licensing income. Finally, we plan to deliver operational improvements such as turn-around efficiency and improved reliability.

 As illustrated in the left-hand chart, taken together we expect these actions will lead to over 35% improvement in our petrochemicals cash break-even performance. The top right chart confirms that market demand growth for our primary petrochemical products, PTA and acetic acid, has been stronger than the overall chemicals market. Industry analysts forecast continued growth in the 5%, 6% per annum range. We believe the market fundamentals for the acetic acid asset business are positive and improving, with strong demand growth which presents the opportunity to selectively invest to capture extra earnings potential.

 The bottom right chart illustrates the cost advantage enjoyed from our latest technologies. Deployment of these leading technologies plus portfolio actions should deliver performance uplift, improve earnings potential of the business, and ensure our portfolio is more resilient to bottom-of-cycle conditions.

 Moving now from advantaged manufacturing to marketing. Fuels marketing and lubricants are both key to our profitable growth strategy. In the left-hand chart, the bubble size illustrates total 2014 business profit generation plotted against business returns and the percentage of profit generated from growth markets. These are businesses which have good returns and are reliable in terms of profit and cash generation. They deliver these returns and grow through differentiated offers and distinctive partnerships.

 The retail business is the most material element of fuels marketing operations, and is proving to be a significant source of growth opportunity, both today and into the future. To give you an appreciation of the scale of our retail network, it comprises over 17,000 sites spanning 16 countries, and services over 8 million customers per day, which is comparable to Starbucks. This business has good exposure to growth markets, and we intend to increase it further.

 To reinforce our differentiated position, we partner with leading retailers globally, creating distinctive offers which deliver good returns and material growth potential. Our partnership with Marks and Spencer, M&S, in the UK is a good example of this. As illustrated in the top right chart, we are able to generate more than 50% incremental gross margin when we bring in our new offer compared to a traditional BP connect site. This uplift is primarily through shop sales.

 Additionally, this combined quality offer generates incremental customer footfall, and positions the sites for further growth. It also provides a more balanced profit mix, helping reduce reliance on fuel margins. This BP-owned and operated network delivers returns of over 20%.

 Including M&S, we have distinctive partnerships under way in six countries with leading retailers, and have ambitions to further extend elsewhere. The bottom right chart illustrates how our lubricants business has grown profit at 5% per annum at constant foreign exchange rates. This has been driven by our exposure to growth markets and increasing sales mix of premium lubricants, underpinned by strong brands, technology, and customer relationships.

 With more than 50% of profit sourced from growth markets, and with continued growth in premium lubricants, we have an excellent base for further business expansion and sustained profit growth. In summary, oil fuels marketing and lubricants businesses have the platform to generate operating cash growth with good returns and reliable earnings profiles.

 Turning now to our simplification and efficiency program. We have a good track record of generating cost efficiencies, as shown in the top right chart. Going forward to improve our performance and competitiveness, simplification and efficiency programs will form key elements of our downstream strategy. As you can see in this slide, we have four main programs in our efficiency agenda now under way. We are in the process of simplifying and streamlining the downstream head office and functions. A new fuels organization and restructuring within lubricants will eliminate duplication, reduce interfaces, and where appropriate, simplify our route to market.

 In manufacturing, our first priority remains safe and reliable operations. As I mentioned before, in refining we are building plans by refinery to further improve our competitiveness. In petrochemicals, we are pursuing the same aims by deploying advantaged technology across our portfolio. Lastly, we are focused on identifying efficiency opportunities in our third-party costs. We have 26 simplification initiatives currently under way across these programs.

 Taking it all together, we aim to deliver around $1.6 billion per annum of efficiencies by 2018 versus a 2014 baseline. This delivery will contribute to our operating cash flow growth and improved returns. It will also further enhance our competitiveness as measured by our ratio of cash cost to gross margin, as illustrated in the bottom right chart.

 Now let me summarize the key elements of our strategy to capture further performance improvement. Within refining and petrochemicals, we will focus on building an advantaged manufacturing portfolio, improving the earnings potential of the business through increasingly advantaged assets, operational excellence, and distinctive technology.

 In marketing, we will selectively invest in higher-return differentiated marketing businesses which have operating cash flow growth potential. Efficiency and simplification will be central to our strategy, and will further enhance our competitiveness, and improve our resilience to volatility and bottom-of-cycle conditions. We will do all of these with safety remaining our first priority.

 Taking all these together, there is potential to expand the operating cash flow and to improve returns of the downstream from a 2014 base. Capturing the performance improvement opportunity should deliver industry-leading earnings quality, measured by net income per barrel of refining capacity, a measure we are have shown consistently in the past.

 Implementation of this strategy is expected to lead to a growing downstream earnings profile, and increasingly make the business more robust to external environment impacts. Growing operating cash flows and capital discipline will ensure that the downstream remains a source of increasing cash flows for BP -- now and into the future. As the new Chief Executive of the downstream business, I am excited by the opportunity I see, and the caliber of our people to deliver it. Let me now hand you back to Bob.

------------------------------
 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [7]
------------------------------
 Thanks, Tufan. Now to summarize the key points we want to leave you with today, we leave 2014 behind having delivered some significant milestones over the last thee years, including everything we said you should expect and be able to measure as part of our 10-point plan. We now have a track record of delivery, real momentum in our business operations, and a proven ability to adapt to tough times.

 We are well aware that the industry is going into a very challenging phase as we reset to a lower price environment. But our business model is a very focused one, and we are already well in action to respond. Our near-term priorities are very clear, and about delivery in our business, completion of our $10-billion divestment program, a disciplined reset of both our capital and cost base, and a commitment to the dividend as the first priority within our financial framework.

 Looking beyond the near term, we have a road map for the future. It's based on the potential of our upstream business, the opportunity to leverage advantaged portfolio and improve returns in our downstream business, and our resolve to continue our focus on capital and cost efficiency. All of this works towards our intention over time to grow distributions in line with the improving circumstances of the firm, and to maintain a progressive dividend policy. Now with that, we're ready to take your questions.

==============================
Questions and Answers
------------------------------
Operator   [1]
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 (Operator Instructions)



------------------------------
 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [2]
------------------------------
 Thank you for polling your questions and for your patience. We will try and get around to everybody today. We'll start today in the US with Blake Fernandez from Howard Weil. Are you there, Blake?

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 Blake Fernandez,  Howard Weil Incorporated - Analyst   [3]
------------------------------
 Yes. Thank you, Jess. Good afternoon, everyone. My question is around CapEx. It sounds like most of the reductions are coming from exploration and access. Bob, it sounds like you're maintaining your internal $80 oil deck. I'm just trying to get a sense, does this mean we should expect ongoing FID or sanctioning this year as you would have otherwise?

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 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [4]
------------------------------
 Blake, thanks. Lamar's here. It's more than just exploration and access. We think we've got some projects that we plan to FID this year, actually early in the year. Based on what's happening we're going to re-tool them again. There's one that you've heard about before that we've taken a step back from. We'll certainly do that again as the big Mad Dog project in the Gulf of Mexico. That's a good example. Lamar, maybe you want to comment on some others?

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 Lamar McKay,  BP PLC - CEO, Upstream   [5]
------------------------------
 Maybe a real quick frame, Blake. We're going to maintain spending and safety reliability, integrity, and the high return base in-fill type spending. Exploration and appraisal -- we do have some flexibility to move some of that sideways, and defer high grade and re-phase. We'll be doing that. Projects in execute phase we will continue to do those projects, especially facility side. We'll look at optimizing, so-to-speak, the pre-drill, drilling expenses, and the tempo by which we get the drilling done over the next several years.

 Then in the projects in the pre-execute or the pre-FID phase, we'll definitely defer, re-scope and re-approach some of those projects. Mad Dog might be a good example where we do think they will benefit from deflation, and we'll access that to the best of our ability. There will be some changes in each and every one of those categories. You can imagine, we want to be as efficient as we can be, and it requires examination of every single dollar. But it's a holistic approach where we make sure that we're safe and reliable, and yet we still preserve the future.

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 Blake Fernandez,  Howard Weil Incorporated - Analyst   [6]
------------------------------
 Okay, great. Thank you. My second question is on the Lower 48. I'm assuming the separation looks like it's still on track, but I assume it has its own balance sheet. Does this macro change as far as the liquidity or balance sheet structure? Are you still expecting to increase rig activity as outlined in December? Thanks.

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 Lamar McKay,  BP PLC - CEO, Upstream   [7]
------------------------------
 Blake, yes, everything's continuing as we hoped and expected in Lower 48, and the balance sheet is set. They will react to the environment just like their competitors are, although as you know, we haven't had really high levels of activity in the Lower 48, so you won't see quite as drastic capital reductions there. They'll certainly be working just like their competitors in terms of making sure each and every dollar they spend is going to be the right dollar to spend. We expect that to continue. We'll be reporting separate financials later this year, which will give you some insight into that. But yes, everything's on track, and costs and capital's coming down, so that's good.

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 Blake Fernandez,  Howard Weil Incorporated - Analyst   [8]
------------------------------
 Okay, thank you.

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 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [9]
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 In the UK now, we'll go to Oswald Clint of Bernstein.

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 Oswald Clint,  Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. - Analyst   [10]
------------------------------
 Maybe a question on return on capital, return on average capital employed. I guess one of the things we're also looking for is steadily growing return on capital, which is something Bob that you've been targeting. I don't think -- it didn't step up too much last year. As I think about this CapEx reduction, the shelving of marginal projects, the returns here in the downstream business going up, plus also some cost deflation which you might access, is it -- or do you have more confidence at this point that the return on capital metric might actually step up materially from here?

 Secondly, a question on the North Sea and the impairment. I noticed part of that was to do with increased abandonment provisions. Maybe some thoughts on the UK at this oil price, and what sort of abandonment costs? Ultimately, does that feed into near-term CapEx if you choose to start abandoning some of the North Sea? Thank you.

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 Lamar McKay,  BP PLC - CEO, Upstream   [11]
------------------------------
 Bob, let me take a stab at that. North Sea first. On the abandonment costs, those abandonment costs went up mainly due to a change in the interest rate we calculate to decommissioning value, in effect. I think the North Sea is an area that we have stated before, and I talked about in December as a challenged area. We need better performance out of the North Sea. Plant reliability is not where it needs to be, and of course we've got teams working very hard to get that up. We need to see a step-change in performance in the North Sea.

 The quality of the assets is good, and we have a set of new projects coming on, Claire Ridge and Quad 204 that effectively re-purpose the North Sea for us in the west of Shetlands area. I think everyone's struggling a bit in the North Sea. We've got a lot of work to get our plant reliability up. This particular impairment is related to an interest rate change in the decommissioning cost.

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 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [12]
------------------------------
 Oswald, on return on capital, I think we have been saying that we must increase return on capital going forward here. I think we've said this publicly, but the average return on capital employed of the roughly $35 billion of upstream assets that were sold had a return on capital of about 50% to 55%. Now that's a huge return on very mature, highly depreciated assets. That by definition has brought our return on capital deployed to the group down, and I would expect it to continue to rise here up and down a little bit with the oil price cycles. But we're definitely high-grading the portfolio going forward.

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 Oswald Clint,  Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. - Analyst   [13]
------------------------------
 Okay. Thank you both.

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 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [14]
------------------------------
 Thanks, Oswald. Next question from Jason Kenney at Santander.

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 Jason Kenney,  Banco Santander Brasil S.A. - Analyst   [15]
------------------------------
 Good afternoon. Thank you very much for the opportunity. Do you think there will be a profit or a loss from the upstream Americas business in 2015 in a $55-a-barrel environment? That's the first question.

 The second question, I suppose another quarter, another surprise for the Russia contribution. I know there's been accounting changes and it was possibly late in the day to have guided on your thoughts as to where that could have been; but it was a surprise for most people on the divisional result from Russia. With the changes that Rosneft have announced and the FX hedging, are you able to give us a steadily quarterly outlook for what Rosneft might contribute on an EBIT basis under a, again, a $55 oil price. Thanks.

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 Brian Gilvary,  BP PLC - CFO   [16]
------------------------------
 Jason, let me take the first one, then Lamar will talk about the profitability in terms of the United States, to the degree he can at $55 a barrel, given what we're doing around deflation. Rosneft has adopted a standard, actually, which makes complete economic sense in terms of locking in their debt against future oil revenues, and we'll see what the effects of that are quarter by quarter.

 They've adopted IS39, which makes complete sense. I'm not sure that could have been signaled to the market any sooner. It's something which is considered by their Board and what they've discussed and implemented back in October. I think it's good, so you're clear, it's exactly the way we would have approached it ourselves under the same IFRS reporting.

 In terms of giving indication going forward, I think Rosneft have all the same challenges that we have and the whole sector has around trying to drive deflation in the cost space, managing sources and uses and cash. I think, Jason, you have to be patient and wait a few quarters before you start to see any sort of stable earnings figures going forward; because when you see a 60% drop and correction in the oil price, and I suspect we're going to be here for a short to medium while, that's going to take time before you start to see those results flow through to the earnings numbers.

 At these levels, the rules of thumb that you may have been able to apply historically, they're pretty tough to apply when you have this big a correction in the oil price. I think it's too premature. I don't know, Lamar, if you can give any more indication on the US, but I suspect it would be just as difficult.

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 Lamar McKay,  BP PLC - CEO, Upstream   [17]
------------------------------
 No, I think it's exceptionally difficult right now to predict individual asset performance throughout the year at $55. We've got to see how the cost base can adjust, where we're going to concentrate our efforts. You'll get a better view by way of seeing the Lower 48 separate. That will help. But right now I don't carry in my head the -- and probably wouldn't say, anyway -- the addition of those three assets.

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 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [18]
------------------------------
 If I could add a footnote to what Brian said about Rosneft, because it is complicated. We came in this morning, and at 6:30 in the morning here in London, Rosneft had issued a fairly detailed press release explaining the accounting change and the background on it. Some of you who are trying to model that might want to have a look at that. It might help.

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 Jason Kenney,  Banco Santander Brasil S.A. - Analyst   [19]
------------------------------
 Thanks very much.

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 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [20]
------------------------------
 Thank you. And we'll go next to Theepan Jothilingam of Nomura.

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 Theepan Jothilingam,  Nomura International - Analyst   [21]
------------------------------
 Hi, good afternoon. Thanks for taking the questions. Just a few on the cash cycle, actually. Firstly, just coming back to the 2014 result and the group beating that sort of $30 billion, $31 billion of cash flow, can you just talk about compared to your internal estimates where the beat was. Secondly, Brian, I think you mentioned there wasn't really a working cap unwind release. How do you see that going forward into 2015?

 Then a broader question. It appears you are more vocal on being a bit more bearish on the duration of where oil prices may be. What should the aspiration for BP be in terms of balancing the cash cycle going forward? Are you thinking $60, $70? I'm trying to get a sense compared to your $80 to $100 that you used to talk about. Thank you.

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 Brian Gilvary,  BP PLC - CFO   [22]
------------------------------
 Thanks, Theepan. On the cash cycle question, I think it's that the beat and over-performance came through across the whole piece actually, both in terms of the strength of the upstream EBITDAR that we saw coming through in terms of 4Q, I think was certainly underpinned the 4Q operating cash number; the recovery in the downstream compared to the same period a year ago.

 We're starting to see some of these functional costs that we spent the last 18 months to two years talking about in terms of simplification effort that Bob had highlighted in previous quarters around the 60-odd initiatives that we had around the corporate center and the overhead. They were starting to flow through. That underpinned everything towards the back end of the year. That's why you saw such a strong cash number coming through.

 In terms of working capital, I think we signaled we had expected about two-thirds of the $5-billion build we saw in 2013 to reverse out -- actually it was a lot less than that, as about $2.2 billion reversed out in terms of working capital release. There's a lot of moving parts around working capital as we go into 2015, with these oil prices and where we are, payments out of provisions.

 As you can imagine, Theepan, we are looking at everything across the board, which comes back to your third question about rebalancing the books. I think it's a bit too premature to talk about where we expect it to be, but directionally at lower prices we tend to get release of working capital. But the price was pretty low at the end of last year.

 In terms of philosophy on balancing the books, I think we see 2015 as a transition year. It's about with the capital coming down to around $20 billion, as we reset the Company we drive out further activity in the simplification initiatives that we've talked about before. It's around getting back to being able to balance the books at the sort of levels that we see today over the medium term.

 We're not going to give you an explicit date, but probably two points to observe. One, in the progress report we gave you back in March around the future projections of what we expected for the firm, we were breaking even at around $80 a barrel by 2017, is what we talked about. Last year we were break-even below $100 a barrel, so we were well on that trajectory. Now we need to see how fast we can drive deflation that Lamar talked about in December in terms of deflationary cycle, the 18-month cycle, how fast we can drive that in, what it looks like in terms of projects that Bob and Lamar both talked about, and then you'll get a better feel for this as we go through this year.

 But our view is -- and I think Bob you may want to sweep in terms of oil prices, where we think they are -- but certainly we see as many bearish factors right now, maybe more bearish factors than bullish factors. We'll probably work on the basis that the oil price is going to stay somewhere around where we've seen so far this year, the average around $48 a barrel. We're going to assume that for the medium term as we start to re-balance the books.

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 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [23]
------------------------------
 Theepan, in terms of being bearish on the oil price, I think it's more a function we look at supply and demand. There is an excess of supply. There's a lot of factors of course on this. Certainly US oil production is not going to adjust overnight to a change in the price. We see oil production continuing to increase in the US, at least through the summer, even though the rig counts are dropping very fast. Stocks are filling up around the world. You've got probably floating storage before long here. When you have that much storage out there, it takes a long time to work that off.

 You look at the -- of course, China's growing. No question it's growing. But the rate of growth is off, which has accounted for quite a bit of demand growth in the past. We'll just have to see. Time reminds me a little bit of 1986 in terms of the potential here for this to be extended down-turn. I think any time the price of oil drops 60%, it's not a correction. It's something different.

 Geopolitical events could impact things the other way and create some dislocations. There's a lot of chatter around the world about agreements with Iran, and that could be a negative price signal. We've got to plan our Company quickly to be ready for that without sacrificing a couple of things. We defer projects like Mad Dog. We actually think there will be more value when the costs come through, and we think they'll be lower.

 We are not going to compromise on safety, reliability, or training for hazardous jobs. None of that, everything's off limits there. Certainly all our compliance and ethics commitments. There are boundaries around what we're going to do, but we're going to continue to drive simplification into what quite frankly had become -- we had become a really complicated Company after 2010, and it's time for us to right-size it, anyway.

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 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [24]
------------------------------
 Okay. Thanks, Theepan. We'll take the next question from the web from Fadel Gheit of Oppenheimer. Thank you, Fadel. The question is, is the reserve write-down a reflection of the assets quality, and how does it reconcile with BP's strategy of value over volume?

------------------------------
 Lamar McKay,  BP PLC - CEO, Upstream   [25]
------------------------------
 Let me take that, Jess. This is Lamar. I don't think it's a reflection of asset quality. If you let me go anorak for just one second, we have had some reserve revisions. Once we have those reserve revisions it can trigger an impairment test. We've done impairment tests on these assets. The unfortunate -- I guess if you don't like write-offs -- the unfortunate thing is you do the impairment, at least we do, the impairment test with a five-year strip. Some of these near-term assets that had some reserve revisions were tested at the five-year strip, so 48 to whatever the five-year strip is, and that caused some impairment. I think it's a fairly conservative way, and a correct way as we understand it under IFRS, to look at our assets and the amount we have on the books for them. We're following IFRS accounting.

------------------------------
 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [26]
------------------------------
 Thanks, Lamar. We'll take a question now from Thomas Adolff of Credit Suisse. Are you there, Thomas?

------------------------------
 Thomas Adolff,  Credit Suisse - Analyst   [27]
------------------------------
 Hi, thank you. Two questions, please. The first one on your dividend, I guess. If I look at your revised CapEx guidance, it's a much bigger cut than your peers, as you know. Isn't that really an admission that your dividend base right now is just the wrong one, particularly as you say 2015 is a bit of a transition year in oil markets, and you have a relatively healthy balance sheet? Actually one of your competitors did say earlier this week that the industry is over-distributing.

 The second questions is just the point that Brian made on break-even. I just wanted to get a better sense for how you define it. How does the break-even look if you ex-out the script dividend, and any disposal proceeds, so really organic break-even? Thank you.

------------------------------
 Brian Gilvary,  BP PLC - CFO   [28]
------------------------------
 On the second point, I'm not sure it's actually particularly relevant. We offer a script. Our shareholders like that script, and they take it up. But certainly for last year we were surplus around $2 billion of cash in terms of balancing the books. We'd like to do that in terms of going forward with the new oil price set. In terms of dividend --

------------------------------
 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [29]
------------------------------
 I think we're comfortable with the dividend level. We've got -- I think that's why partially, I think it's prudent to do it regardless of the dividend, re-base the Company for what could be a new price range. It's absolutely a priority for us, and cutting the CapEx has more to do with finding value and making sure we spend the CapEx and the shareholders money carefully in this lower-price environment, so it's not really related to the dividend.

------------------------------
 Thomas Adolff,  Credit Suisse - Analyst   [30]
------------------------------
 Okay, thank you.

------------------------------
 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [31]
------------------------------
 We'll move now to the US again, and take a question from Doug Terreson of Evercore.

------------------------------
 Doug Terreson,  Evercore - Analyst   [32]
------------------------------
 Good morning, everybody. One of the key themes at the Upstream Day that Brian highlighted today was cost efficiency and working with the service providers to align the cost structure with the more challenging environment that Bob talked about. My question regards an update on the outlook for cost efficiencies in the upstream, and specifically the areas of the supply chain that the Company is most optimistic about. Should we assume that the benefits will be fairly broad-based? Also, is there an order of magnitude amount of savings that the Company feels it can attain in the upstream, maybe along the lines of the decline in cash costs that Tufan highlighted on his slides on 39?

------------------------------
 Lamar McKay,  BP PLC - CEO, Upstream   [33]
------------------------------
 Doug, hi, this is Lamar. Let me try that.

------------------------------
 Doug Terreson,  Evercore - Analyst   [34]
------------------------------
 Okay.

------------------------------
 Lamar McKay,  BP PLC - CEO, Upstream   [35]
------------------------------
 I think we will see -- we've seen this before, and in past cycles we see cost reductions both on the capital side and really on the operating side of a reduction of 20% to 30% in 18 to 24 months. We think we'll see the same type of thing. It generally shows up first in rigs and seismic, in terms of where the -- in the contracting space, but it happens everywhere.

 We've got in -- to give you a sense, I don't know how many total contracts we have, I wish I did, but we've got 1,250 coming up for renewal in 2015. We'll be using those as opportunities to understand what the cost set should be on the activity associated with those contracts going forward. There are a lot of contractors and obviously other operators out there making big changes today.

 I think we'll see broad-based cost reductions. It will happen in -- probably happen fastest in the US, where some of the capital's being trimmed back quickest. But we'll see it broad-based, and we'll see, I suspect, if things stay relatively stable in terms of price and everything, we'll see 20% to 30% reductions in the next 18 to 24 months. Now our job will be to access that as best we can.

------------------------------
 Doug Terreson,  Evercore - Analyst   [36]
------------------------------
 Sure. Lamar, I think one of your slides in December talked about the lag effect. Would you say that this cycle is from a timing perspective about where you thought we would be at this point? Are we running pretty close to your expectations with timing?

------------------------------
 Lamar McKay,  BP PLC - CEO, Upstream   [37]
------------------------------
 It's hard -- to be honest, it's hard to judge. But I have thought about that. I don't know why, but it feels fast right now.

------------------------------
 Doug Terreson,  Evercore - Analyst   [38]
------------------------------
 Okay, good. Thanks a lot.

------------------------------
 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [39]
------------------------------
 This is Bob. The other thing I think will also happen, in previous times when the price drops this fast, this sharply, not only does the supply chain move, but also governments take a look at taxation as well, in terms of re-basing the industry.

------------------------------
 Doug Terreson,  Evercore - Analyst   [40]
------------------------------
 Good point. Thanks a lot, everybody.

------------------------------
 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [41]
------------------------------
 Thanks, Doug.

------------------------------
 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [42]
------------------------------
 Okay, thank you. A question now from Jason Gammel of Jefferies.

------------------------------
 Jason Gammel,  Jefferies & Company - Analyst   [43]
------------------------------
 Thanks very much, Jess. I wanted to ask a couple around the divestiture program, if I could, please. My recollection is that the upstream was the area where you intended to generate most of the proceeds. Is that still going to be realistic, given the drop in oil price? Indeed, would you be perhaps better off as an acquirer if we start to see distressed assets in the market?

 The second question is I believe Brian made reference to having a bias towards distributions for discretionary cash. Would you consider divestiture proceeds to be discretionary cash? Would those then be biased towards share repurchases, or do you think you're done with share repurchases in the price environment?

------------------------------
 Brian Gilvary,  BP PLC - CFO   [44]
------------------------------
 Jason, let me just pick up that last point first, which is we'll retain buy-backs as part of our armory, but recognize that we're in a transition right now, with 60% of our revenues on the oil-price side not there. Therefore as we re-balance the books through this year and next, it will be discretionary, but we're going to keep it within our armory. We're not about to suspend buy-backs, although actually we've not been in the market so far this year. I think we purchased back about $800 million last year. We were in the market right up to 20th of December. We'll keep it within our armory, and we'll make sure that we still have the flexibility to do buy-backs, but we're not in the market right now.

 In terms of divestments, I think when we outlined the original $10 billion, I think we said a lot of it would be more early-life assets, not late-life assets, so to that degree not quite as dependent on the oil price. You saw the transaction that Lamar completed just recently in terms of the paleogene in the Gulf of Mexico, which I think is an example of that in terms of shorter term, in terms of not-long-life type fields.

 The bulk of the divestment proceeds left to come, a lot of that's going to be across the piece, less of it now upstream. Of the $4.7 billion, the remainder will be biased toward downstream some of the corporate businesses that we have, less of it coming out of the upstream, and still one or two mid-stream assets we have around terminals and pipelines and so on. I think that's fairly well underpinned for this year, and their less dependence on the absolute oil price.

------------------------------
 Jason Gammel,  Jefferies & Company - Analyst   [45]
------------------------------
 Are you seeing attractive prices on distressed assets in the upstream, or is this still too early in the price correction?

------------------------------
 Brian Gilvary,  BP PLC - CFO   [46]
------------------------------
 Lamar, do you want to pick up from where we are in terms of potential assets that we might choose to acquire during this period, as well?

------------------------------
 Lamar McKay,  BP PLC - CEO, Upstream   [47]
------------------------------
 I think it's a little early to be able to talk about certainly any specifics. But I think this is all going through a transition for everyone right now. I think it's a bit early on that.

------------------------------
 Jason Gammel,  Jefferies & Company - Analyst   [48]
------------------------------
 Fair enough. Thanks a lot, guys.

------------------------------
 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [49]
------------------------------
 Okay, next question from Irene Himona of SocGen. Go ahead, Irene.

------------------------------
 Irene Himona,  Societe Generale - Analyst   [50]
------------------------------
 Thank you. Good afternoon, gentlemen. Just two quick questions, please. Firstly, in December you flagged the $1-billion pre-tax restructuring charge to be taken over five quarters. I just want to clarify, in Q4 it appears that you took $433 million in restructuring and rationalization costs. Is the $1 billion unchanged, or should we expect an increase or perhaps an acceleration in light of the macro environment? Secondly, India, I note you're impairing the assets. Can you remind us perhaps or clarify what view on Indian gas prices is used behind that impairment, please? Thank you.

------------------------------
 Brian Gilvary,  BP PLC - CFO   [51]
------------------------------
 Irene, let me pick up the first piece. The $433 million we took in 4Q is the first tranche, as we saw it. The original $1-billion restructuring charge came out of really these simplification efforts that we have been talking about over the last five or six quarters. When we came to roll the plans up in December, we could see $1 billion or thereabouts of restructuring, hence why we put the announcement out that we did around the Upstream Investor Day. That was really around how we right-size the Company for the smaller footprint off the back of all the disposals.

 For now it's still our best estimate, but we'll keep you updated on that as we progress through this year. I would certainly anticipate that we will use the full $1 billion. In terms of whether there's more than that, we'll know more as we progress through quarter by quarter, given what we're now doing around the re-balancing the books of the Company.

------------------------------
 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [52]
------------------------------
 On India, I think if I'm right, there was some exploration write-offs. I'm not sure they were impairments. If we had an impairment, it was a very small one. Isn't there some exploration write-offs, Lamar?

------------------------------
 Lamar McKay,  BP PLC - CEO, Upstream   [53]
------------------------------
 Yes, there was. I think the thing to think about in India is that there has been a good step made on gas prices -- one step that effectively applies to the base assets. It requires a different gas price to unlock the discoveries and the developments that we've got. We are hoping in 2015 that we can work with the Indian government and get that done. But it does require a higher -- basically, a gas premium in the gas formula for these projects to be unlocked.

------------------------------
 Irene Himona,  Societe Generale - Analyst   [54]
------------------------------
 Thank you.

------------------------------
 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [55]
------------------------------
 Next question from Martijn Rats at Morgan Stanley. Go ahead, Martin.

------------------------------
 Martijn Rats,  Morgan Stanley - Analyst   [56]
------------------------------
 Hi, good afternoon. I want to ask you two questions. I wanted to take you up on the 1986 comparison, because also back then there were some pretty spectacular cost reductions and CapEx savings. But also, if you go back to the annual reports of the day, the Company did look particularly well-prepared to deal with that crisis back then, as in the sense that BP was growing quite fast, and the free cash flows were quite comfortably covering the dividends. I was wondering how you feel you're positioned at this moment, particularly in the context of that 1986 comparison?

 Secondly, I wanted to ask you about Egypt. In December you still said that the Company's plan was to invest $100 billion over the coming sort of 10 years, if I remember correctly, with gas projects; and West Nile Delta was of course a big chunk of that. I was wondering how you think about that project, given current oil and gas price expectations?

------------------------------
 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [57]
------------------------------
 Thanks, Martin. 1986. If I think back, I'm not sure the Company was positioned particularly well going into 1986. I think it had higher oil price assumptions and it was somewhat stressed, but you're right about the amount of capital and cost reductions in the industry that happened that we think could happen now.

 How's the Company positioned going into this year? Well, having completed now well over $40 billion of divestments, I'm glad that happened. Timing on that, quality of those are good. I think going into 2015 with a gearing of 16% is good. I think you'll see companies, smaller companies in particular in the US, highly leveraged. I don't think a 16% gearing is particularly highly leveraged. While it's going to be tough, and we needed to do lots of things as well, bring our overhead down. Having sold the $40 billion, and our overheads were actually up a bit, I think we're positioned about as well as anyone going into 2015. And for Egypt, Lamar?

------------------------------
 Lamar McKay,  BP PLC - CEO, Upstream   [58]
------------------------------
 I don't remember saying $100 billion over the next 10 years, but nonetheless, Egypt is a place where we do have a lot of investment opportunity, and some good projects to do. West Nile Delta, that particular project is not entirely, but it's pretty well insulated from the price and the price change that's happened over the last few months. Obviously we'll do everything we can to make it as efficient as we can, but I think West Nile Delta will still be a project that will go forward.

------------------------------
 Martijn Rats,  Morgan Stanley - Analyst   [59]
------------------------------
 All right, thank you.

------------------------------
 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [60]
------------------------------
 Okay, thanks, Martin. Back to the US and Guy Baber of Simmons.

------------------------------
 Guy Baber,  Simmons & Company International - Analyst   [61]
------------------------------
 Thank you guys for taking my question. I had a question on the balance between the obvious focus on capital discipline and restraint, versus the ability to grow the long-term resource base of the Company through this cycle over time.

 The question is, I guess, in deciding to reset that capital base to a lower level, do you believe that $20 billion of organic spend is an adequate base level that's sufficient to drive the long-term resource base over time, or would the current level of spend need to be supplemented by rising exploration spending over time, and be supplemented by acquisition of resource? Just curious about how you think about that balance, and then whether moving to our 100% organic reserve placement is a goal that you guys believe you have line of sight to?

------------------------------
 Lamar McKay,  BP PLC - CEO, Upstream   [62]
------------------------------
 Bob, maybe -- this is Lamar again. I think it's a great question. I think obviously the $20 billion and how much activity we can do off that $20 billion is contingent on how we get the cost base for that $20 billion. Beyond that, I think the root of your question is about renewal through organic means versus a combination. Quite frankly, I think it's going to take a combination of organic and potentially acquisitions. I put unconventional resources in an organic category that's not exactly like exploration. I think those three pieces of the pie are going to play going forward.

------------------------------
 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [63]
------------------------------
 Guy, just to supplement, when we sat down and went through in great detail the portfolio and we look out to the end of the decade, we've still got 50 to 60 major projects that we're looking at. They may pace at a little bit different timing now, but some of them look good, and we'll just keep going with them for sure.

 If we were in a position where we were short of major project opportunities, we've got more than we can do. We had that before this price drop. We were always going to have to prioritize. Secondly, over the last three to four years we have really reloaded the exploration portfolio -- acreage, some discoveries, and appraisals. A slower pace of exploration I don't think is going to change our ability to grow. I'd just add that to what Lamar said.

------------------------------
 Guy Baber,  Simmons & Company International - Analyst   [64]
------------------------------
 That's very helpful. Then I had one follow-up. You mentioned prioritizing base spending in 2015 as one reason you were able to reduce the overall capital budget. I was just hoping you could elaborate a bit on that comment, and perhaps quantify for us how that spending level has declined in year-over-year terms, and specifically where you may be able to make cuts. I'm trying to understand those implications, whether that affects your base decline rate at all, and just how you think about that decision-making process?

------------------------------
 Lamar McKay,  BP PLC - CEO, Upstream   [65]
------------------------------
 Guy, I can't give you specifics today, but the base spending that I'm talking about that's going to be maintained around safety, reliability, and integrity, that's going to be the same as it's been. It might be a little bit lower in some instances, because we've done a bunch of turn-arounds over the last several years. It may attenuate a little bit.

 The infield programs generally are very high return, and I don't think they're going to be attenuated that much. I think that's important to secure the cash flow in the near term. My point was more that we're going to examine every single dollar in every single category, not so much that we were going to find a silver bullet in the base. I think our base decline, our aim is to keep that base decline in that 3% to 5% range that we talked about in December.

------------------------------
 Guy Baber,  Simmons & Company International - Analyst   [66]
------------------------------
 Okay. Thanks Lamar, that's helpful.

------------------------------
 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [67]
------------------------------
 Thanks, Guy. Next question from Anish Kapadia of Tudor, Pickering, Holt.

------------------------------
 Anish Kapadia,  Tudor, Pickering and Holt - Analyst   [68]
------------------------------
 Hi. The first question was on your 2014 cash flow from operations. I was just wondering if you could split that between upstream and downstream, and looking at the upstream number, give some kind of updated sensitivity for 2015 for the oil price?

------------------------------
 Brian Gilvary,  BP PLC - CFO   [69]
------------------------------
 No, we don't normally give that level of granularity in terms of breaking it down. You can probably do some rule of thumb estimates. No, we don't normally, actually wouldn't break out the operating cash flow. It would be commercially sensitive in terms of what sits between downstream and upstream.

------------------------------
 Anish Kapadia,  Tudor, Pickering and Holt - Analyst   [70]
------------------------------
 Okay. The second question is on looking at your taxes for 2015. I was wondering if there's going to be any significant difference that you would expect in terms of cash taxes versus P&L taxes this year?

------------------------------
 Brian Gilvary,  BP PLC - CFO   [71]
------------------------------
 Cash taxes have been running at about 8% lower than the tax charge, which is all to do with how we roll out the provisions versus what we've -- cash pay versus provisions we have in place in terms of deferred tax. It's typically running at an 8% difference between paid and charged.

 I think as we enter this year and we start to see the earnings profiles, there's no question the effective tax rate will be lower than the average that we saw this year. But there are so many factors that influence it, it's impossible at this point to really give you guidance. We've got a rough indication of where we think it will be based on the plans that we've rolled up, but I think given the sharp drop in the oil price, it's impossible to sort of come up with specific guidance on that at this point.

------------------------------
 Anish Kapadia,  Tudor, Pickering and Holt - Analyst   [72]
------------------------------
 Okay, thank you. One final one, if I can. In terms of yours assets in the US, I think you pointed to the Eagle Ford assets being fairly high quality. Just wondering how you think about those assets in this oil price scenario? But then as well, some of the lower tier assets in the US in terms of how do they cope in a low oil price scenario?

------------------------------
 Lamar McKay,  BP PLC - CEO, Upstream   [73]
------------------------------
 In terms of the Eagle Ford, that is a very high quality set of assets in the Eagle Ford. Obviously we would be working with our partner, Lewis, on exactly what the activity level's going to be maintained through the year. I suspect there will be a little bit of attenuation there. The other assets that we have are more gassy. We've had very little capital activity on those assets. Actually, ironically, some of our activity may go up a little bit in the Lower 48 in certain areas, certain sweet spots. I think we're probably a little bit different than the average in the US independent space.

------------------------------
 Anish Kapadia,  Tudor, Pickering and Holt - Analyst   [74]
------------------------------
 Thank you.

------------------------------
 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [75]
------------------------------
 We'll take the next question from Rob West of Redburn.

------------------------------
 Rob West,  Redburn - Analyst   [76]
------------------------------
 Hi, there. Thanks very much for taking my question. I'd like to return to the theme of your having lower oil price expectations than your peers, which quite unanimously seem to expect rapid bounce-back in the crude price. My first question is a specific one. You were recently out-bid on the Abu Dhabi on-shore license renewal by one of your peers. I was wondering, is that evidence that with your lower oil price view, you see the need to be somewhat more disciplined in investing those marginal dollars in that specific case?

 Second, more generally, if your peers are willing to out-bid you on new licenses and new service contracts, and even project capacity, if we look beyond 2015 does that mean that if that happens you're willing to just invest less than them for long-run growth, and by extension return that cash instead, rather than targeting longer-term growth than your peers expect the oil price to bounce back?

------------------------------
 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [77]
------------------------------
 Rob, I think we're keenly aware of the feedback we've had from major shareholders. In fact, beyond the major shareholders, just people that broadly observed the oil and gas industry for about half a decade now has generated lots of operating cash flow and puts it back into projects, which have turned out to be pretty low returns. This is even at high $100 oil. We've been working hard to make sure that we have a discipline around our capital.

 I'm perfectly comfortable with the changes that we're making. It is an investor focused strategy. We do think in terms of value over volume. I think that a disciplined reset of both capital and cost is very prudent. We've actually seen this movie before. This is -- there are four times when the price ha come down say over the last 30 years. Only once was there a rapid jump-back, and that was probably 2008 and 2009. But other times there's more of a re-basing here. We see the fundamentals could do that.

 I think we need to do it very carefully, but we need to do it quickly. I think that's good for all seasons, and I think we are going to keep that commitment to the shareholders. We'll make sure that we protect the dividend, but I don't have a problem with taking this focused approach now. I don't think we're going to just cut into the really long-term value. We may defer some, but that growth will come, I believe, with lower capital and operating costs.

 In Abu Dhabi, I've only read in the press, but don't know anything other than that. I think Total was awarded a share in that concession. But beyond that, I'm not sure that process is over, either. I just don't know. We don't know.

------------------------------
 Rob West,  Redburn - Analyst   [78]
------------------------------
 Okay, very clear. Thank you.

------------------------------
 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [79]
------------------------------
 Next question from Lydia Rainforth at Barclays. Go ahead, Lydia.

------------------------------
 Lydia Rainforth,  Barclays Capital - Analyst   [80]
------------------------------
 Thanks, Jess. Good afternoon. A couple of questions. The first one on the cost base, or the process of actually trying to reduce the cost base. What sort of proportion of that is actually going through the corporate overhead, as opposed to actually in the individual businesses? Within that, can you give us a couple of examples? Secondly in terms of actually a very quick question on the reserve replacement rate ex-Rosneft, if you have it?

------------------------------
 Brian Gilvary,  BP PLC - CFO   [81]
------------------------------
 Lydia, on the first point, as part of the simplification initiatives we're talking about, we're already in the process of taking somewhere around 10% to 15% of the corporate and functional overhead costs. As we now look through all of our activity on an activity basis, we will be looking to take out at least as much again, if not more, and we are going through an activity review of all of our activities and functions, human resources, IT&S, information systems, all of the activity -- but coming back to Bob's earlier point, not compromising safety and operational risk, or compliance and ethics. They will absolutely not be compromised.

 In terms of everywhere else, we're looking at where we can take activity out, which will all help us in terms of re-balancing the books going forward. On the reserves piece, at this point we don't normally give that sort of guidance. That will come out as part of new reporting accounts in 20-F5.

------------------------------
 Lydia Rainforth,  Barclays Capital - Analyst   [82]
------------------------------
 Perfect, thank you.

------------------------------
 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [83]
------------------------------
 Turning now to Fred Lucas of JPMorgan. Are you there, Fred?

------------------------------
 Fred Lucas,  JPMorgan - Analyst   [84]
------------------------------
 Yes, I am, Jess. Thank you, guys. I welcome the intention to re-balance your cash flows under a much more bearish oil price outlook. But I wonder if you could just authenticate the simple arithmetic of how you do that. It sounds like you still intend to grow your capital employed, albeit more slowly with the lower-rated CapEx. Just using BP's rule of thumb for oil price sensitivity, we may have lost around $45 going from $100 to, say, $55, plus or minus. Your EBIT sensitivity would suggest that's an EBIT loss of over $12 billion.

 Putting that on a post-tax basis, that's almost $9 billion of earnings, which I guess drops straight to the cash flow. Given your capital-employed base of around $140 billion, that's an implied loss of return of 6% on your return of capital, which in 2014 wasn't very good to start with. It was below 10%, and versus where you were back in 2011, that was 16%.

 I hear what you say, Bob, about you sold high-return assets. But the facts are your return on capital employed is pretty much halved, and it looks like it may halve again. I'm trying to square the circle to where you get to a cash flow balance, but in order to do that, you've got to be clearing your cost of capital. I don't see how you get there. How can you recover that loss of cash flow, what has amounted to $9 billion, to initiate that balance?

------------------------------
 Brian Gilvary,  BP PLC - CFO   [85]
------------------------------
 Fred, there's an awful lot of information you've just dropped into that question. I'd be very happy to go through each of the pieces with you. First of all you jumped to $55 when the year-to-date average is $48. Don't get over-enthused by where the oil few is in the last few days.

------------------------------
 Fred Lucas,  JPMorgan - Analyst   [86]
------------------------------
 Well, that's how you're going to make the numbers work.

------------------------------
 Brian Gilvary,  BP PLC - CFO   [87]
------------------------------
 No, absolutely. That's exactly what I'm looking at, Fred. That's exactly why we're in the process of re-balancing the books. I think it's a little disingenuous to think about the business at $115 a barrel, and the returns as you've just described them from our perspective weren't satisfactory, and that was something we're looking to grow. You can't then assume the oil price goes to your $55, if that's where you want to sit, and we have a cost base that was built at $115. We've got to start to drive deflation into that. That will drive costs out.

 We've got a pretty good handle on what level of costs we need to drive out over the next short to medium term to get those returns back where they need to be. But we can't do that overnight, as you'd expect. You can't lose that much revenue overnight off a big chunk of your portfolio. It is one of the things that we're very focused on. It's one of the things that we're looking at in terms of how we re-balance the books. It's not just about re-balancing the source and uses of cash.

 The rules of thumb you use, kind of interesting at $115 a barrel. For someone that's followed the market as long as you have, Fred, you will know those rules of thumb will not be applying down at $45, $50 a barrel. That's something we'll look to try and reset through this year to help you with guidance in terms of future quarters. It's just a bit premature at this point, but absolutely agree with your points.

------------------------------
 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [88]
------------------------------
 This is Bob. I think the question, the sort of stark reality that you've painted there is an industry one. It's not just a BP one.

------------------------------
 Fred Lucas,  JPMorgan - Analyst   [89]
------------------------------
 I agree, it's not unique to BP, but I'd love to hear how BP's going to bridge those numbers. That EBIT sensitivity was for last year. I appreciate it's not linear when you fall by as much as $40, $50. Assuming it's approximately right, and assuming that you continue to grow cap employed -- and tell me if that's wrong -- then it's very difficult to see how you can recover that loss of capital return to get back to that point of cash flow balance; because I assume cash flow balance is synonymous with a business that earns a return that exceeds its cost of capital.

------------------------------
 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [90]
------------------------------
 I think that's why, and you say we have a bearish outlook on prices. I think what we have is a prudent, realistic response to what's happening in the industry, and we're going to do it fast. We're going to do it rapidly. We're going to go through the costs and the cost base, and that's how you move the dial quickly. That's what we're going to do across all of our activities. I think we're the only ones who have put in, for example, pay freezes and other things, significant reductions as we go through.

 But that's exactly why we're going to move fast. I think you create -- it sounds like you're distinguishing us, but I tell you, the industry broadly has the same issue. Those that delay, it's not wise. You need to know, we're all over it. I think we can do it. We've gone through -- 2015 is a reset year. You obviously cannot get there in 2015. But we're going to get it down in 2016. We see the road map to do that, we know how to do that. That's what you should hear from us, a sense of urgency to re-base the Company in 2016 and beyond.

------------------------------
 Fred Lucas,  JPMorgan - Analyst   [91]
------------------------------
 But what would you say is a satisfactory return on capital for BP?

------------------------------
 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [92]
------------------------------
 Well, again, $40 billion, $35 billion to $40 billion of 55% return, that's why you've seen those numbers come down over time. We just divested even some more of those in December. You have to know at what price that is, as well. But I think you will see, taking any price, really, you will see an increase in our return on capital employed going forward. Of course that will vary depending on what price you assume.

------------------------------
 Brian Gilvary,  BP PLC - CFO   [93]
------------------------------
 Fred, maybe just to help, our long-run assumptions haven't changed at this point. We still assume our long-run assumptions of $80 a barrel for our 20 to 30 investments still staying good. We held that when the price was $148 a barrel. We'll hold it now while it's down at $45 to $50 a barrel. We think long term that's where it will end up. We don't want to, during this period of transition back to those sort of levels how long that's going to take. I think we're just planning to be very prudent about how we do that.

------------------------------
 Fred Lucas,  JPMorgan - Analyst   [94]
------------------------------
 When does your long term start, Brian?

------------------------------
 Brian Gilvary,  BP PLC - CFO   [95]
------------------------------
 What do you mean when does it start?

------------------------------
 Fred Lucas,  JPMorgan - Analyst   [96]
------------------------------
 When do we get back to that $80.

------------------------------
 Brian Gilvary,  BP PLC - CFO   [97]
------------------------------
 Fred, if I could answer that question for you, I'd be a very rich man.

------------------------------
 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [98]
------------------------------
 But I think we have to plan on minimum a year, and it could be several years.

------------------------------
 Fred Lucas,  JPMorgan - Analyst   [99]
------------------------------
 Right. Over that time, actually, do you think you can recover the loss in capital employed, return on capital employed you're likely to experience through this year, and get back to the right level?

------------------------------
 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [100]
------------------------------
 Again, you get different numbers depending on what price you use.

------------------------------
 Brian Gilvary,  BP PLC - CFO   [101]
------------------------------
 Yes Fred, we'll be able to update you on this as we go quarter by quarter and you can start to see the progress -- just like we did with the 10-point plan. It was over 12 quarters it was delivered. You will see progress, and at this point last year I don't think many people thought we could hit the $30-billion target, if you looked though all the summation of all the various things. We've exceeded that, and I would fully expect that we will be able to do the same thing over the next couple of years, assuming the oil price stays what it is. If it's above where we expect it to be, that's all upside.

------------------------------
 Fred Lucas,  JPMorgan - Analyst   [102]
------------------------------
 Okay, guys, I'll leave it there. Thanks.

------------------------------
 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [103]
------------------------------
 Okay. We'll take the next question from Chris Coupland of Bank of America.

------------------------------
 Chris Coupland,  BofA Merrill Lynch - Analyst   [104]
------------------------------
 Thank you, Jess. Hello, good afternoon. Just two quick questions. On the CapEx outlook, just wanted to see that $3 billion cut year on year, can you put a number on your exploration spend budget for 2015? Where has that gone to? Can you refer to a few FID deferrals. You've talked about Mad Dog. Which other FIDs do you still plan to make during 2015? If I may, Brian, I appreciate your rule of thumb. We'll need a bit of time to update. But can you at least confirm in which direction it's going as the oil price drops, not just from $100 to $90, but all the way down to $40. Thanks.

------------------------------
 Lamar McKay,  BP PLC - CEO, Upstream   [105]
------------------------------
 Let me go first, Brian. I think we're staying on our group numbers today. We're not breaking all these things down into the intricacies of the plan. But the exploration difference in 2015 versus 2014 will be significant, but I'm not going to give a number today. In terms of FIDs, Mad Dog I listed as a potential deferral. There have been no decisions made on that. As far as -- I think that's a project actually that is more about just finding the optimum way in time to go to the market to understand what the cost of that project will be. That's still to be worked with the partners.

 Other examples, we'll be looking along the normal paths, I think. Expansions of heavy oil in Canada would be some things that we'll be looking at to deferral, potentially. Our portfolio, the whole thing will be looked at, but very similar things to what other people are looking at. We've got to be a little careful about saying exactly which ones, because we have partners in some of these projects, and we have to consult with them, as well.

------------------------------
 Brian Gilvary,  BP PLC - CFO   [106]
------------------------------
 On the rules of thumb, I think it's premature. If I had a gut feel, it's probably going to be slightly higher on the oil and slightly lower on the gas, but until we go through the pull fairly and look at all the effects of the PSAs, what that means in terms of different price sets, it's just premature at this point. We will update when we can.

------------------------------
 Chris Coupland,  BofA Merrill Lynch - Analyst   [107]
------------------------------
 Okay, thank you.

------------------------------
 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [108]
------------------------------
 Okay. Chris, we'll take our next question from Lucas Herrmann of Deutsche Bank.

------------------------------
 Lucas Herrmann,  Deutsche Bank - Analyst   [109]
------------------------------
 Thanks very much, Jess, and afternoon to everyone. At least two, if I might. Just to bring Tufan into things -- he's been listening very patiently. Chemicals, it's a business that over the last three years has, I guess, struggled would be the right phrase. If I go back three, four years it was delivering nearly $1 billion of profit.

 What I don't really understand is you seem to have advantaged assets particularly in the paraxylene PTA chain, advantaged technology. Yet the losses remain surprising relative to the strength of your position. To what extent, or over what time period Tufan, and to what extent, and do you think it's still possible, to move back towards the kind of numbers you were delivering in 2010, 2011? That's the first one.

 Secondly, Lamar, I wonder if you'd like to talk a little more about the transaction you've undertaken with Chevron. It's a shame in ways you haven't disclosed what payment you might receive, because this is a classic case in some respects of realizing value from exploration. What really intrigued me was the decision to cede operatorship in a base in which you have a very strong position in, that you've always been exceptionally proud of. It's not criticizing what you're doing. It's better understanding the logic for ceding?

------------------------------
 Tufan Ergenbilgic,  BP plc - CEO, Downstream   [110]
------------------------------
 Let me start with petrochemicals. First of all I will say I think PTA and PX right now is at the bottom of cycle. We knew that loss of capacity came in China. How long do we believe this bottom-of-cycle will last? At least I would say a couple of years, maybe three years or more, until the excess supply clears up.

------------------------------
 Lucas Herrmann,  Deutsche Bank - Analyst   [111]
------------------------------
 Is that two to three years from now, Tufan?

------------------------------
 Tufan Ergenbilgic,  BP plc - CEO, Downstream   [112]
------------------------------
 That's my expectation, if I look at that. I would say, therefore, if you look at this strategy, we actually fundamentally changed this strategy. Strategy is right now to say we have significant restructuring, especially in our [amatix] business to reduce the cash break-even more than 35%, as I mentioned in my presentation. This is good for all seasons, frankly.

 If the numbers, if the environment picks up and gets to the levels you are talking about, then we expanded earnings potential of the business. If it stays at low levels, we have a much more robust business, hence why we came up with this strategy, especially in our amatix restructuring. One thing I want to say, in acetyles we actually see a better market, and it has been growing. We expect environment to improve even further in acetyles. I think we may selectively invest to capture that earnings potential in acetyles business.

------------------------------
 Lucas Herrmann,  Deutsche Bank - Analyst   [113]
------------------------------
 Thank you.

------------------------------
 Lamar McKay,  BP PLC - CEO, Upstream   [114]
------------------------------
 Lucas, hi, Lamar. I think this was a very important transaction. No, we haven't given the compensation side of it yet, but I think it was an exceptionally important transaction, one that we've been working on for quite a while. It creates -- effectively, it creates commercial alignment across a number of blocks in a neighborhood of quality discoveries, probably the largest and highest-quality paleogene discoveries, or some of them at least.

 The simple logic is that we can do more optimal development and capital efficiency for the whole through deciding together and collaboratively with Chevron and Conoco where a host may be, what would it look like, what would tie in from where. There's massive synergy in that. Teams, we think we will have seconded members both ways into teams. We may operate some of the drilling. They may operate. The operatorship, it is an emotional issue sometime.

 As I've talked many times, we are dedicated to trying to find the absolute best way to do something. Chevron has the ability. They put a paleogene field into operation. They built a facility. It might look very similar to something we may use in this consortia. The technology development needs to be done by multiple companies rather than one. Don't forget, we still own Kaskida 100%, and operate Kaskida, as well as other exploration prospects that we operate. It's a balanced way of trying to get the most value out of this play, really.

------------------------------
 Lucas Herrmann,  Deutsche Bank - Analyst   [115]
------------------------------
 Does this accelerate delivery over and above the ability of the three of you to work together on technology? Do you think Chevron's already into a position where it can push this development more aggressively than would have been the case if it had just been in your hands?

------------------------------
 Lamar McKay,  BP PLC - CEO, Upstream   [116]
------------------------------
 I think there is a pretty good chance that working together will accelerate development, and it will be the right development rather than everybody for themselves. That's what it's fundamentally about.

------------------------------
 Lucas Herrmann,  Deutsche Bank - Analyst   [117]
------------------------------
 Okay, thank you.

------------------------------
 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [118]
------------------------------
 Moving now to Bertrand Hodee of Raymond James.

------------------------------
 Bertrand Hodee,  Raymond James Euro Equities - Analyst   [119]
------------------------------
 Hi, everyone. Thank you for taking my question. Two quick ones, if I may. The first one is on Mad Dog. Your latest view on Mad Dog I think in December 2014 was that development costs were coming down to around $14 billion. How much deflation do you still need on Mad Dog for this project to fly -- let's say at lower oil-price assumption. Let's say $50 or $60. That's my first question. The second question, you took an impairment of $1 billion in Angola, around. Can you explain the rationale behind this impairment? Is it also linked to decommissioning costs like the impairment on the North Sea, or is it something else? Thank you.

------------------------------
 Lamar McKay,  BP PLC - CEO, Upstream   [120]
------------------------------
 Bertrand, this is Lamar. Let me hit the second one first. The impairments in Angola, we're not going to go into detail on individual area impairments too much. But it was a combination of reserve write-downs that triggered the impairment test that I talked about earlier with a very pretty much low oil price, $48 strip, as well as some decommissioning effects on the cost, so it was both.

 Then I forgot your first question. Ah, Mad Dog. We think Mad Dog costs have come down, as I talked about in December, partly due to its design and scope, and partly due to better prices in effect. I'm not going to give any sort of target in terms of where we're trying to get to make it economic at any oil price.

 But I do think there is very significant savings yet to come in Mad Dog. We will take the time to understand how and when to go to the market to try to access those better costs. I think we will certainly have to work with partners and make sure we're all on the same boat on this and aligned; but I think that's going to be an example that probably goes to the right a little bit.

------------------------------
 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [121]
------------------------------
 Drilling costs.

------------------------------
 Bertrand Hodee,  Raymond James Euro Equities - Analyst   [122]
------------------------------
 Yes, can I just -- one follow-up on Mad Dog. Do you still intend to go to contractors in March as you said in December, or are you going to push this back?

------------------------------
 Lamar McKay,  BP PLC - CEO, Upstream   [123]
------------------------------
 Well, I think we need to talk to the partners, but I would think -- well, I'm not going to give guidance on that. We'll go when we think it's ready to go.

------------------------------
 Bertrand Hodee,  Raymond James Euro Equities - Analyst   [124]
------------------------------
 Okay, fair enough. Thank you.

------------------------------
 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [125]
------------------------------
 Thank you. We'll move now to Neill Morton of Investec.

------------------------------
 Neill Morton,  Investec, Inc. - Analyst   [126]
------------------------------
 Thanks, Jess. Good afternoon, everyone. A couple of hopefully quick questions. Firstly on the gearing, you talked about the 10%, 20% band while uncertainties remain. Now going into 2015, your strong balance sheet is 17%, but it's not a million miles away from the top end of that range. Just wondered how is that a line in the sand that you defend at all costs? Secondly on Macondo, wondered whether you're looking to appeal the Phase 2 ruling? If so, would there be a time deadline on that? Thank you.

------------------------------
 Brian Gilvary,  BP PLC - CFO   [127]
------------------------------
 Thanks, Neill. If I just pick up that first question, you'll recall that pre-Macondo our gearing band was 20% to 30%. We reset that in 2010, latter part of 2010 in the 10% to 20% band, which is where we've talked about while uncertainties remain. To agree, the environment was one of those uncertainties. I wouldn't go as far as saying it's a strong hard line in the sand, but it's been an incredibly powerful way to manage the Company going forward.

 There's no question at these oil prices it gets back to re-balancing source and use of cash, which is one of the reasons why we're taking all the actions that we're taking, recognizing that there are a number of uncertainties still out there. I wouldn't call it a hard line in the sand, but it's absolutely a key part of our financial framework right now. We would anticipate at the current price levels of where we see today, we can still manage through this year, cover the dividend, re-balance the books the way we described to you today, and still stay within that band of 10% to 20%. We're pretty confident about that for this year.

------------------------------
 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [128]
------------------------------
 There's some slight flexibility to do some things we don't anticipate inorganically, but that's small things. On your second question, which was the Phase 2 of the trial, for those it's complicated. Phase 2 was the one that looked at what they called source control and response to the spill. The judge ruled that we were not grossly negligent in that, and had a value of oil. We're just considering options for Phase 2 appeal, and really guidance at this time.

------------------------------
 Neill Morton,  Investec, Inc. - Analyst   [129]
------------------------------
 Is there a deadline, Bob?

------------------------------
 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [130]
------------------------------
 I don't think there is a deadline. Actually, although I've been exposed to a lot of the legal points, I actually don't know. There's probably no one right now that can answer whether there's a hard deadline or not. We won't let ourselves be timed out from what we think is right.

------------------------------
 Neill Morton,  Investec, Inc. - Analyst   [131]
------------------------------
 For sure. Thank you very much.

------------------------------
 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [132]
------------------------------
 Thank you, Neill. A question now from Richard Griffith of Canaccord.

------------------------------
 Richard Griffith,  Canaccord Genuity - Analyst   [133]
------------------------------
 Good afternoon. I haven't listened to the entire call, so as a quick point of clarification, really. You've talked about the CapEx budget coming down this year, if I heard you correctly, driven by activity reduction with a view to capturing industry, or sorry, service industry deflation, perhaps from 2016 onwards. Would that infer that your CapEx spend from 2016 onwards could be lower, given how cautious you are on the oil price outlook? Sorry, lower than 2015?

------------------------------
 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [134]
------------------------------
 Well, I think the CapEx guidance is an adjustment to what we see as an environment. We're not making assumptions of deflation in that CapEx number. But we see opportunities to defer, secure longer-term growth by deferring, and avoiding the issue of putting CapEx into something that might not get the right returns. I think as we look beyond 2015 into 2016, we'll have to judge this. We're -- it's hard to say. It feels like that level is about the right level for us in a lower oil price environment to secure the growth. But I think it's probably a little bit premature to lock it in.

------------------------------
 Brian Gilvary,  BP PLC - CFO   [135]
------------------------------
 Yes, I think at this point, Richard, it is a bit premature. We'll have to see what happens in terms of deflation, because of course that will ultimately drive to a low number. But it's just too soon at this point. We'll be able to update you quarter by quarter as get through this year and see how the plans progress.

------------------------------
 Richard Griffith,  Canaccord Genuity - Analyst   [136]
------------------------------
 Okay, thank you.

------------------------------
 Jess Mitchell,  BP PLC - Director of Group IR   [137]
------------------------------
 Thank you all. There are no further questions. I'll just hand back to Bob to say a few last words.

------------------------------
 Bob Dudley,  BP PLC - Group CEO   [138]
------------------------------
 Thanks, Jess. Time's going fast this year. First, happy new year to everybody. We're already into February. It's quite extraordinary. I think as you listen to what we've said and what we've been saying now consistently, I'd remember that we are an integrated Company, so we're responding in the upstream very strongly, and of course the downstream actually offers us some growth and a cushion to this.

 What you're hearing from us is we need to prudently prepare the Company for a different environment. This is more than a price correction. It's quite significant, and we've been through a lot as a Company. I think the Company, the broad Management teams across the Company are quite steeled at responding to challenges and problems. In this case, we're going to have a disciplined reset of both capital and cost. We think it's prudent to do that. We've got a commitment to the shareholders in maintaining a dividend and over time having it be progressive.

 We will -- we have some momentum in what we're doing. I think we've been pretty fast off the mark in our view of adjusting here. We will do it carefully, but we will do it rapidly, and look forward to talking with you next quarter, because think about this. The average price in our industry of $77 in the fourth quarter, so far is running at $48. These are not going to be dull quarters ahead of us, but we're not going to be complacent. Again, thank you all. I hope your year's off to a good start, and we'll be in touch. Thanks.




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