Well, good morning, everyone, and welcome to BP's Q2 2023 results presentation. I'm here today with Bernard Looney, Chief Executive Officer, and Murray Auchincloss, Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin today, let me 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 the factors we note on this slide and in our U.K. and SEC filings. Please refer to our annual report, stock exchange announcement, and SEC filings for more detail. These documents are available on our website. I'll now hand over to Bernard.
Well, good morning. Thanks, Craig. Good morning to everyone. Thanks for joining us, either physically in the room here or online. Earlier this morning, we reported our Q2 2023 results. I hope that you see continued evidence of our strategy in action, a strategy that is focused on delivering long-term shareholder value. We've now been in action for over 3 years. We set our direction in 2020. We completed our restructuring in 2021. Since then, we have been focused on delivery and on execution. Let me highlight a few things, if that's okay, before I turn it over to Murray. First, we delivered resilient operational and financial performance in the Q2 with good cash delivery.
During a period where significant turnaround activity and weaker margins impacted our refining business, the underlying business continued to perform well. Looking forward, the outlook for the second half of the year, which I'm sure we'll talk about, remains strong, and I will talk a little bit more in a few moments about that. Second, we are progressing our strategy at pace. We are investing in today's energy system, and not or, something that you will hear repeatedly from us because it defines our strategy, and, and not our strategy. Not or, we are investing with discipline across our five transition growth engines to help accelerate the energy transition. This continued progress underpins our confidence in delivering our 2025 targets. Third, we are growing distributions for our shareholders.
Today, we have announced a 10% increase in the quarterly dividend per ordinary share and a further $1.5 billion share buyback. These decisions are consistent with our continued focus on disciplined delivery against our unchanged financial frame, and they reflect the confidence in our performance, the confidence in the outlook for cash flow, and the progress that we have made in reducing our share count. Murray will obviously return to this later. Let me say a few more words about performance, starting with the strong momentum in resilient hydrocarbons. For the first half of 2023, BP-operated upstream plant reliability was 95%, and compared to the first half of 2022, our upstream production grew by over 3%, while at the same time, unit production costs fell 9%.
We had two project startups in the first half, Mad Dog Phase 2 in the Gulf of Mexico and KGD6-MJ in India. Together, they are expected to add around 90,000 barrels a day of oil equivalent net production by 2025. Two more startups are expected in the second half of this year: Tangguh Expansion, where startup is now actually in progress, and Seagull. GTA Phase 1 is now expected to start up during the Q1 of 2024. All in all, we remain confident in delivering around 200,000 barrels a day of oil equivalent of high-margin production from new projects by 2025. In BPX, first half production was around 9% higher year-on-year.
In the Q3, we expect the start-up of our central, second central processing facility in the Permian, further de-risking our target of 30%-40% production increase by 2025 relative to 2022. Looking to the future in oil and gas, we are strengthening our resource base. In the Gulf of Mexico, we progressed our Kaskida project to concept selection and are also evaluating options to progress the Tiber project. Both of them are 100% BP. Both of them are in the Paleogene. We also acquired 36 leases in the recent Gulf of Mexico lease sale and drilled a successful appraisal well in the southwest part of the Mad Dog Field. We continued building growth optionality in our global gas portfolio, including agreeing to acquire a further 27% interest in the Browse project. In LNG, we are growing supply.
Our third-party offtakes have made good progress with 15 cargoes loaded from Coral and from Freeport, which is now back to full contractual offtake. With additional volumes expected from the start-up of Tangguh Train 3, we remain confident of delivering our 25 million tons per annum of supply in 2025. Finally, we're upgrading our refining infrastructure. Including successfully commissioning 2 improvement projects at Cherry Point in the U.S., which are expected to improve availability, reduce costs, and reduce emissions. They say a picture is worth 1,000. I'm being Irish for a moment. They say a picture is worth 1,000 words, and this one certainly does that.
Murray and I saw this, and we said, "We've got to get this in the pack." This is our Tangguh expansion project in Indonesia, and you can see the third train there, right in the center of the photograph. It's a great example, we think, of us delivering on our strategy, what I like to call another shovel in the ground. This major project adds a third LNG train and around 3.8 million tons per annum of producing capacity to the existing 7.6 million tons per annum facility. Construction and commissioning of the project have been completed, and as I said earlier, startup is now in progress in the facility.
It's an important delivery milestone, contributing towards our target of 200,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day of high-margin production from new major projects in 2025, and our LNG target of 25 million tons of supply per annum in 2025. Having recently extended the production sharing contract in Tangguh to 2055, and with work underway to further grow our gas production and make Tangguh one of the lowest carbon intensity LNG facilities, we're really excited for the future of this key asset. Turning to the progress, significant progress I think we've made in building our five transition growth engines, what we call our TGEs, during the first half. First, to the growth in our convenience business.
In May, we completed the acquisition of TravelCenters of America, TA, adding a network of 288 sites, strategically located on major highways across the United States. Mecca gave me a map of this that I have on my desk, and it really is phenomenal to look at because you see the extensive highway network in America, and now we have dots and sites on virtually every one of them in 44 states. TA is expected to almost double BP's global convenience gross margin and bring growth opportunities in 4 of our 5 transition growth engines. In the first half, excluding TA, we delivered record convenience gross margin with around 7% year-on-year growth. That's on top of, I think, Emma, 9% per annum over the previous three years. In EV charging, we are rapidly building scale and demonstrating emerging profitability.
For the first half, energy sold rose by over two times. Murray and I say it's actually close to three times, year-on-year, supported by a 70%, so almost three times increase in power, a 70% increase in the number of EV charge points, which obviously means that utilization is going up. In the Q2, our JV with Didi in China, which is our largest market, and our business in Germany, were both EBITDA positive. We recently sanctioned $500 million of investment in the United States over the next 2 to 3 years to begin infrastructure build-out there, including at the sites that I just mentioned at TA. In bioenergy, you guessed it, we are growing.
In biofuels, we produce more than 10% growth year on year, and we continue to target final investment decisions on the first of our 5 biofuels projects by year-end. In biogas, we continue to work on safely integrating Archaea Energy into BP. We continue to grow our pipeline in hydrogen projects. Underpinned by new projects in the United States and in Oman, the pipeline has increased by 60% since the end of 2022 to reach 2.8 million tons per annum. Well on the way to delivering our target of doubling our pipeline by the end of the year. Finally, we have strengthened our renewables and power pipeline, growing our renewables pipeline to 43.6 gigawatts net to BP, and that includes our recent offshore wind award in Germany. Let me say a little bit more about that one.
We have been awarded the rights to develop 2 offshore wind projects in the recent German tender round, marking our entry into offshore wind in continental Europe. These 2 projects have a total potential generating capacity of 4 gigawatts, and they grow our offshore wind pipeline globally to 9.3 gigawatts net to BP. Importantly, in Germany and in the region, BP has a demand of around 5-10 gigawatts just from our own operations of renewable power in the 2030s. That's as we scale up green hydrogen, as we scale up biofuels production, as we scale up EV charging, and as we decarbonize the 2 refineries that we have on the ground there. The first thing is we have a large green electricity demand ourselves, 5-10 gigawatts.
At the same time, the region is, and we forecast it to be, short of green electrons in that time period. We expect this offshore wind capacity to, 1, provide us secure access to the electrons we need, and 2, to do it cheaper than we can buy them on the market. As our focus is on securing access to the renewable power, as opposed to full long-term asset ownership, we will pursue a very capital light delivery approach, bringing in a partner through farm down around the point of final invest in a financial investment decision. We expect, of course, to leverage the project with financing. We're confident, as you would expect, very confident, I would say, in achieving 6%-8% unlevered returns, and that's before integration benefits.
We will hence enhance these returns further through integrating across the energy value chain, leveraging Carol's trading and shipping business to optimize value. We believe our bid benchmarked positively compared to other lease auctions, acknowledging, of course, the importance of the timing of payments and other factories like the delivery of the offshore grid connection. As a reminder, and I'm sure probably everyone in this room already knows, but as a reminder, the structure of the bid payments limit our financial exposure with EUR 678 million upfront, and then that's 10% of the bid amount that's paid by the middle of next year. The remaining 90% starts when production starts in the 2030s and beyond, and is paid over a 20-year period when the projects become operational.
Then in Germany, the grid connection is provided by the transmission systems operator, with compensation to the developer for any grid delays. We're delighted. We're really excited about this win. It's fully aligned with our integrated energy strategy. It's in a core market for BP, where we intend to continue to grow our business. Taken together, across resilient hydrocarbons and the TGEs, I hope you will agree, I hope you might agree, that what you see from BP is evidence of our strategy in action, underpinning the confidence we have in the operational and the financial momentum we expect through the rest of the year and as we work towards achieving our 2025 targets. With that, enough from me. Let me hand over to Murray to take you through the Q2 results. Murray?
Super. Thanks, Bernard. Good morning, everybody. Let me start with our Q2 results. We reported an underlying replacement cost profit of $2.6 billion, compared to $5 billion last quarter. Compared to the Q1 in gas and low carbon energy, the result reflects an exceptional gas marketing and trading result, albeit lower than the Q1 and lower gas realizations. In oil production operations, the result reflects lower realizations. In customer and products, the products result reflects significantly lower realized refining margins, primarily due to weaker middle distillate margins and narrower North American crude heavy differentials. A significantly higher level of turnaround and maintenance activity, including a planned full site turnaround at Lincoln and a weak oil trading result.
The customer's result reflects stronger retail margins and seasonally higher volumes, and a stronger convenience performance, partially offset by foreign exchange. Turning to cash flow, operating cash flow was $6.3 billion in the Q2. This includes a working capital release of $100 million. Capital expenditure was $4.3 billion, including inorganic expenditure, net of adjustments of $1.1 billion related to the acquisition of TravelCenters of America. During the quarter, we repurchased $2.1 billion of shares, and the $1.75 billion program announced with Q1 2023 results was completed on July 28th. In the Q2, BP's surplus cash flow was an outflow of $300 million, and at the end of the Q2, net debt was $23.7 billion.
Moving to our disciplined financial frame, our five priorities and guidance remain unchanged. We have today announced a dividend increase of 10% for the Q2 to $0.0727 dividend cents per ordinary share. The dividend remains our first priority and is underpinned by a cash balance point of $40 Brent, 11 RMM, and $3 on Henry Hub. We remain committed to maintaining a strong investment-grade credit rating, we are targeting further progress within the A-grade credit rating. However, we have no intention to target a double A rating. As a result of our strong surplus cash flow generation over the last four quarters, we have executed over $10 billion of buybacks and have reduced our issued share count capital by over 9%.
BP remains committed to using 60% of 2023 surplus cash flow for share buybacks, subject to maintaining a strong investment-grade credit rating. Consistent with this, we have announced a further $1.5 billion share buyback to be completed prior to reporting Q3 results. Today's dividend increase and our ongoing buyback program reflect the confidence we have in our performance and the outlook for cash flow, also reflect the progress we have made in reducing our share count. Looking forward, based on BP's current forecasts, at around $60 per barrel Brent, and subject to the board's discretion each quarter, BP continues to expect to be able to deliver share buybacks of around $4 billion per annum at the lower end of the $14 billion-$18 billion capital expenditure range.
Have capacity for an annual increase in the dividend per ordinary share of around 4%. In setting the dividend per ordinary share and buyback each quarter, the board continues to take into account factors including the cumulative level and outlook for surplus cash flow, the cash balance point, and the maintenance of a strong investment-grade credit rating. Finally, we're enhancing disclosure for our transition growth engines. Starting this quarter, we will report CapEx and EBITDA on a biannual basis for each of the 5 engines. We expect to grow EBITDA from these businesses from around $700 million in the first half of 2023 to $3 billion-$4 billion in 2025, driven by bioenergy, convenience, and EV charging. In bioenergy, we expect to deliver around $2 billion of EBITDA in 2025.
Compared to the first half of 2023, in biofuels, we expect to double production to 2025 to around 50,000 barrels per day, including growth in co-processing at our existing refineries. In biogas, we expect to double production to 2025 to around 40,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day, underpinned by the delivery of the Archaea Energy Pipeline and growth in third-party offtakes. In convenience, we are targeting $1.5 billion of EBITDA in 2025. We expect TA to contribute around $800 million of EBITDA by 2025, the majority from convenience. We also expect to further expand our network of strategic convenience sites, reaching around 3,000 by 2025, from around 2,750 today.
In EV charging, we expect to be EBITDA positive by 2025 as we accelerate the rollout of rapid and ultra-fast EV charge points and drive a material increase in energy sold. This disclosure is an important part of our commitment to reinventing BP, providing greater transparency around the progress we are making as we invest and grow these businesses. With that, let me hand back to Bernard.
Your section was quite long today, Murray.
I know.
Longer than usual.
It's hard to keep up with you.
Thanks, Murray. Let me wrap up, and then we'll go to questions. We are delivering resilient operational and financial performance, and we see strong momentum through the second half of the year. We're delivering our strategy at pace and with confidence, and importantly, we are delivering against our disciplined financial framework, including offering compelling distributions for shareholders. This focus on delivery, and it is absolute focus on delivery, is serving us well and underpins our investor proposition to deliver long-term shareholder value.
Finally, the BP team and myself, and I are looking forward to hosting a number of you in Denver in early October, where we'd like to share more with you about our strategy in action, particularly focused on the oil and gas business and on our biogas business. With that, we will turn it over to you and go to questions. That's where we start. Maybe we'll start with Biraj over here, if that's okay.
Hi there, it's Biraj Borkhataria, RBC.
Morning, Biraj.
Morning. Two questions, please. The first one, just on the dividend. I think, the 10% bump today is probably quite a nice surprise for investors. I guess when I spoke to Craig this morning, he referenced in relation to the 9% share of count reduction in the last year, I guess you, you have two sources of growth for the dividend per share. One is how many shares you're buying back, the other is the underlying growth in the business, or as Murray, you mentioned, the, the balance point. Should we expect you to review your dividend going forwards twice a year in those two things separately, or, or is it an annual review going forwards with those two items put together?
Then the second question is on the credit rating, which you've reiterated your intentions to move up one notch today. I was wondering if this has any bearing on the working capital release you expect, as obviously, one of the advantages of a stronger credit rating is, yeah, less collateral as you're hedging gas, oil, and so on. What you're referring to for second half this year and early 2024, is the current guidance, is the credit rating upgrade embedded in the current guidance, or would you expect a material change if you were to get a credit rating on top of what you've already said? Thank you.
Very good, Biraj. Just to clarify, on the credit rating, we didn't say we were going up a notch today. We're saying we're not targeting double A. We want to make continued progress-
Progress in the A range, yeah.
A rating. There's no upgrade to our expectations.
Okay
around that, other than to clarify that we are not seeking a AA rating. Murray, maybe I'll make some comments at the end, but dividend, twice yearly review and, and a credit rating.
Yeah, I think Biraj, good morning. I think the way to think about it is look back in history. Obviously, the board reviews the dividend each and every quarter and makes a dividend decision each and every quarter, I can't guide on forward, forward thinking, but all I can do is reflect on the last, the last moves we've made. If you rewind back to the Q2 of 2022, we increased the dividend 10%. That was primarily related to share count reduction, but also the ongoing strength of the underlying delivery of the business. Fast-forward to February of 2023, we increased capital guidance and Transition Growth Engines and capital guidance inside the upstream as well, and with that came additional earnings.
That 10% dividend increase was based on our forecast of future cash flows and the strength we saw in the underlying business, all within a cash balance point of $40 and $11.3. Fast-forward to today, we've had a 9% share count reduction over the past 12 months. That easily enables a 10% dividend increase without changing the absolute level of the dividend. Of course, as Bernard Looney just talked about, there's incredible strength in the underlying business itself, with Mad Dog doing very well, new projects coming online, BPX growing, et cetera. We have both great performance, and we've got the share count reduction that we're reflecting in this 2Q decision. Looking forward, the board reviews the dividend each and every quarter and makes decisions.
It will take into account where we are in the balance point, where we see the future outlook over the next few years, and of course, share count reduction. It's a decision every quarter. I can't guide on, I can't guide on anything different than that. As far as the credit rating, that's our, our second priority is, is managing the balance sheet. Obviously, we're on A-, positive outlook right now with S&P. We continue to think about an upgrade over time, that's really a decision for S&P to make, not for us to make. We believe our metrics are in very good shape. We believe they're above their hurdles of cash cover ratio to receive that upgrade. We'll keep working with S&P to try to explain our business and ensure we get that upgrade.
As we disclosed today, we would like further progress in the A range, but we are not, we are not chasing a double A rating. That is inefficient from a balance sheet perspective in our mind, and inefficient for shareholders. Hopefully that helps answer that question, Biraj. The working capital is, if you think about cash outflow, and inflow for the year, in the first half of the year, obviously, we've had a working capital build that's primarily related to the Deepwater Horizon. As we look out at surplus cash flow for the rest of the year, we've got an awful lot of confidence in the second half of the year.
You just need to go through the couple slides that Bernard talked about, of 3% underlying growth in the, the oil and gas business, BPX up, Mad Dog online and ramping up fast. Seagull will come on soon, Tangguh will come on soon, and so on. There's quite a bit of momentum inside the underlying business, which generates high cash flows. At the same time, we have a release from the LNG that we hedged out last year. This is all the merchant LNG that our trading business manages, and we've been forecasting a release of $5 billion of cash flows starting in 3Q through the next 4 quarters. We had a deficit in working capital in the first half of this year.
We'll have a big release in working capital in the second half of the year and extending into, into next year as well, and very strong underlying performance, and that gives us the confidence to set the, set the buyback level. Bernard, anything you'd add?
Other than going through all the lists of things that are exciting in the second half of the year from a growth perspective, we, of course, had $0.9 billion of divestments in the first half of the year. We're still guiding to 2-3 full year. Of course, we had the Gulf of Mexico payment in the Q2, which will not be present in the second half of the year. No guidance there at all other than the outlook for cash flows and performance in the second half of the year, for those of you who are trying to do surplus cash calculations and all of the stuff that Murray does, and all of you guys do. Hopefully that's helpful. Where are we going next?
Lydia, and then Irene, I think, and then maybe we'll go to a question online, maybe, and then we'll go to this side of the room. Lydia.
Thanks, Bernard. It's Lydia Rainforth from Barclays. I have two questions, if I could. The first one on the cost side that you came to, obviously, if I look at the data, BP is the only one that's company of the large caps that's actually managed to reduce costs upstream over the last 12 months. So can you just talk through what's driving that, and particularly in the downstream, if you're actually starting to see that digitalization benefit move over? The second question, Murray, I think I need some help, and you can interpret that however you want. In terms of the buyback, there's $1.75 billion last quarter.
We're saying $1.5 billion this quarter, you've always said, "We'll look forward, we'll look back." That $1.5 billion, can you just tell me, how did you get to that number? Again, is it that whilst you were expecting a stronger second half, is it less strong than you were thinking about 3 months ago? Thanks.
Very good. Very good. You want to go to the second one first, Murray?
Yeah, sure. When we assess the level of buyback, our long-term guidance is at least 60% of surplus will be distributed to shareholders through a buyback. For 2023, in particular, we've guided that 60%. In the quarter, when the board is assessing the level of buyback, we think about what we've done in the past, $1.75 billion, as you said, in the Q1, $1.5 billion announced this quarter, we've done $3.25 billion so far this year. We look at the full year, 2023, based on what we see for underlying growth in the business, the release of working capital, et cetera, et cetera, and we're thinking about a 60% buyback for shareholders for the year.
I think if, I think if you do the math, you can figure out at the pricing that we saw in the first half of the year, if you have that pricing repeat in the second half of the year, you, you can just calculate what the 60% surplus is, and that'll be relatively close to the buybacks we've done in the first half of the year. The last comment I'd make is anchor yourself, please, to our guidance, which is $4 billion in buybacks at $60, and use our rules of thumb to calculate what that buyback can be in the future.
If you recalculate the first half of the year, you'll get darn near bang on what we've announced for buybacks in the first half of the year, based on $78 or $79 Brent for the first half of the year. We've tried to. We're very focused on maintaining our dividend and maintaining the balance sheet, and therefore, the buyback does move up and down with price, but we've given you guardrails to estimate what it was very, very carefully. I hope that helps, Lydia.
Great, on cost, Lydia, I think we should be transparent. I think there is an element of portfolio in those numbers, but that's part of the cost, cost game, so to speak. We are very pleased that we're driving production up and driving unit production costs down. We're actually beginning to see deflation now, particularly in places like bpx, where we're seeing some costs down 20%. Across the world, we're seeing things like steel costs coming down, some of the raw material costs coming down. Labor is, is an area where we do see inflation right across the world, and that is unchanged, and we do our best to offset that with some of the productivity improvements that you alluded to.
We are seeing some sectors being particularly tight, and you'll have seen Bay du Nord being given an extra 3 years, and that's just a slave to returns, a slave to capital discipline. That market is quite hot, I guess, at the moment, and we see a lot of price increases there, and we're not gonna develop that project until we can meet the returns thresholds that we've set out. We'll come back to that when the market is a little calmer. We continue to see tremendous benefits from digitization, probably not yet in the downstream. It's still early days. I think a lot of that is ahead of us. As we've seen in the upstream, it is a journey. I was with Murray's control team during the week, Jane Hutchinson, Hutchinson.
She was telling me about a new closed process where we've taken out 70% or 80% of the steps in a closed process, which is extraordinary numbers achieved through automation, through digitization. Gordon is beginning now, and we're moving roles to India, where we believe we can get incredible quality engineering done, and do it at a lower cost. We are beginning that journey, and I think that's a journey that's gonna ramp up materially. We'll also look at that in our offshore wind space, not just in our upstream space. We remain excited about the journey ahead of us in productivity, not just digital, but digital for sure, and Leanne is here, and you can talk to her about that, but also things like the India conversation.
We will continue to push our teams quite hard to make sure that we offset inflation with ongoing synergies. The central procurement organization that you run, Murray, I think is bringing some real benefits as well. We are going to stay the course on remaining cost-disciplined. We will make sure that safety remains the number one priority. There is no need to compromise on that, and we won't. Anything you'd like to add?
Yeah, I think, just a little AI is all the talk these days. In our Hungary business center over the past three years, we've digitized 2,000 jobs, and that's pretty extensive work inside restructuring your data, realigning your process, and then allowing automation. It's, we're able to absorb 2,000 new jobs coming in from the rest of the business or from expansion, and then reduce jobs. Labor, labor stays relatively constant, but you're able to eliminate 2,000 jobs just through that simple digitization we've done over the past three years. Our passion remains for this, and we see it as a huge opportunity moving forward.
We are not short of opportunity in this space. We're gonna keep going. Irene, then we'll go to Paul on the phone.
Thank you. Irene Himona, Société Générale. You recently got involved in the Eastern Mediterranean, I wonder if you can talk a little bit about the objectives, the vision, what do you wish to achieve there? The second question on refining. Leaving aside the margin environment, which was poor for everyone, obviously, a very heavy maintenance quarter, which impacts not only throughput, but also your costs. I wonder if you can help us understand the cost in terms of RCOP foregone of your maintenance this quarter, which was unusually heavy. Thank you.
Very good. On the Eastern Mediterranean, I think it's at a very, very macro level, it's about the development of natural gas that's close to markets, including close to Europe. That's at the very biggest level, that's what we're trying to do there. We've been in Abu Dhabi for over 60 years. They wish to expand their business internationally. Given the successful partnership that we've had with them over that period of time, I think we were a natural partner for them to try to do this with, in this part of the world. On top of that, of course, we have a large position in Egypt.
If you look in the region at what we've got in Egypt, what we will have in the East Med, coupled with Abu Dhabi's ambitions, we're very excited about the development going forward of Leviathan. We're excited about further developments, potential exploration over the years ahead. This gives us a real anchor in the Eastern Mediterranean. There's a lot of synergies across the, the, the countries that are involved there, and I think it's a natural extension of our partnership, and it's one that I think we hope that we can grow over time.
There's huge demand for gas, both in the region and in Europe, I think we'll look back on this as being a very, very key move for us, and we'll give further update on the progress around that transaction later in the year. On refining, Murray, you may wish to add specifically on cost. If you look at-- I looked at the difference between the Q1 and the Q2 on cost. You can explain the difference between 1Q and 2Q. Roughly, half of it is margin degradation, both in terms of diesel cracks and in WTI, WCS spread. Then, of the remaining half, the majority of it is around the plant maintenance, and a little bit of it is associated with oil trading.
Of course, the, the explanation of the maintenance includes not just the outage time, but also the costs incurred in that. Murray, anything you'd like to add?
Nothing to add.
Okay. I must have done okay on that one, then.
You did great, yeah.
Okay. All right. Good. Thank you, Irene. We'll go to Paul Cheng, where it's very early, I think, where, where Paul is. Paul, good morning.
Good morning, Bennett. 2 questions, please. On the offshore wind, in the recent Wall Street Journal article, talking about how challenging the economic has become, especially, look like in the Gulf of Mexico, several operator, maybe including you guys, is looking for, some renegotiation on pricing. Can you comment on that? They're talking about, whether you see, the offshore wind, economic, especially in North America, have become, far more difficult because of the cost inflation. Secondly, that you have a a mid-course adjustment, 2 quarters ago on the, on the strategy and, maybe that dial back a bit more to the, traditional resilient hydrocarbon business....
You're still looking for a drop of 25% by 2030, and I think it does look like the oil demand may not peak until post 2030. From that standpoint, does it make sense for BP to further dial back and perhaps that seeking to have a flat production instead of drop 25% by 2030? Thank you.
Paul, thank you. Thank you for your questions. I'll have a go, and Murray will correct, add, and improve as appropriate. On the second one first, very clearly, our strategy is what we call an "and, not or" strategy. We are investing in today's energy system, and not or, we are investing in accelerating the energy transition. We're not making a choice between one or the other. We believe the world needs both, and we believe our shareholders are best served by us investing in both. It's an "and, not or" strategy. In February of this year, we leaned into that strategy by saying that we would invest an additional $8 billion into our resilient hydrocarbons business and an extra $8 billion into our transition growth business.
In terms of oil and gas production, you'll actually have seen that we grew oil and gas production in the first half of this year. We will see also that we've improved our outlook for oil and gas production this year from slightly declining to now expecting it to be flat, year-on-year. If you look at underlying oil and gas production, we'll actually grow production through the middle of the decade, and it will be relatively flat through the end of the decade. The 25% is simply what we're achieving through high-grading our production through portfolio management. There are certain barrels within our portfolio that, quite frankly, are probably better off in someone else's hands, and that's what this is about. It is about a high-grading of our portfolio.
It is about portfolio optimization, but you should expect to see, as I said, underlying growth through the middle of the decade and flattish growth through the end of the decade, and that's where we get our strategy. That's where we provide the security that the world needs, at the same time, providing the cash flows that we need for our business. That's one thing I would say on that. Then on offshore wind, clearly, inflation has impacted offshore wind projects, and in an area where the PPAs are not inflation-linked or index-linked, and where we don't see an integration benefit per se, then obviously those projects are challenged, and that's the case in the East Coast of the United States.
What I can tell you categorically is that our returns threshold are sacrosanct, meaning we will not develop projects that don't meet our returns threshold, which is why we are in the midst of renegotiating those PPA contracts in the East Coast with our partner, Equinor. Added to that, I would say, that it is. Points to why our strategy going forward is to do offshore wind only where we see an integration benefit, i.e., we don't want to generate electrons just for electrons' sake or to ultimately put into a 20-year PPA. We wanna generate electrons where we can do something with the electron, add value to the electron, like we do today with an oil and gas molecule.
Our expectation is that we do offshore wind, just as you've seen in Germany, where there is a direct integrated link to our business, where we can take the electron, we can high-grade it, convert it into a molecule, convert it into a power in somebody's car, give it to our trading business, whatever. That's the evolution of the offshore wind strategy, and it is in part based on the learnings of the last two or three years. Murray, anything to add on either?
Nope.
Perfect. Okay. All right. Excellent. Paul, thank you. We'll go to Oswald over here.
Thank you very much. Yeah, maybe just going back to natural gas or, sorry, LNG. You spoke about NewMed Energy and ADNOC relationship. I'm curious, could this give you a participation in the ADNOC LNG expansion in United Arab Emirates? more more related to that is the Browse. Again, maybe elaborate on the strategy for taking on the rest of Browse. That used to have a very big CapEx number attached to it, in terms of landed costs, that might be at the high end relative to somewhere like the United Arab Emirates. Maybe just frame that LNG asset selection process. Secondly, Permian, one of your peers talked about applying technology, potentially doubling recovery factors in the Permian over time.
I wanted to get your thoughts on, on, on, on what you think you can do with your Permian asset as well. Thank you.
Os, thank you. Murray, maybe wants to talk. He loves the Permian. I'll let you talk a little bit about that. I think on the... I, I don't know what we've said publicly about our Abu Dhabi LNG.
Nothing.
Nothing.
Nothing.
So let's leave-
We're in ADGAS.
W-
we are in ADGAS. We've been in ADGAS forever. Yes, they are expanding, but we can't comment other than that.
Browse, I mean, again, very simple level, Os, think of it as a very big option. This is a very, very material gas resource that is very, very close to a market that's gonna be short of gas for decades to come. At the very macro level, this was a very low-cost option that we, we, we have created here. We believe that there's great potential. The numbers will have to work, the returns will have to work. That's what we are working on. Woodside is doing a fantastic job as operator in, in, in, in leading on that. You've got to look at it and say, Big, big gas?... close to infrastructure, close to market. Gotta make sense at some level. Let's see if we can make the numbers work, and that's what we're working on.
If we can, there'll be a project there, and if we can't meet our returns threshold, we won't. That's what I would say about that. Permian, or anything you want to add on the Browse one?
Just, just on the LNG portfolio itself, we have a number of very large gas basins to take forward in the second half of the decade. We'll talk about this more in Denver. Browse, 14 TCF is enormous. Its cost of supply is, if you look at Woodmac, is below U.S. export. So it's more competitive than you might think. We have MNs, we have Oman expansion, Abu Dhabi potential expansion, 22 TCFs in the Haynesville and Eagle Ford to develop. We have a wide swath of-
More in Trinidad, maybe?
More in Trinidad, more in Azerbaijan. There's lots and lots of gas opportunity inside the resource portfolio, and we'll just be very returns driven and choose the right ones to drive forward. I think it's okay to load up with options for free, basically. On the Permian, you'll see some fabulous benchmarking from David Lawler, when we go visit the Permian. You might find-
You always see fabulous benchmarking from David Lawler.
You might, you, you might actually find out that we're number 1 in the basin on development, on frac spread length and, and EUR per well. You might, you might see that in the benchmarking. You might look yourself ahead of time. Dave's got a very, very positive outlook there. We've obviously got the first, first central gathering station, flowing Grand Slam. Bingo should come up online, hopefully ahead of our visit there. That'll be great news. 2 or 3 more to develop over time. Very, very low emissions, recirculated water, electric drive rigs, and electric drive frac spreads. Just incredible stuff that-
First certified natural gas, I think.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Stuff I never would have dreamt about as a kid growing up in the oil and gas patch in Calgary. It's a, it's an amazing story, and they are driving technology at the leading edge on frack and recovery, and I think you'll find from the benchmarking work they do, that we're beating the pants off everybody. Let's wait for, let's wait for Denver to, to understand that, but we continue to see great promise moving forward, and Dave will give you a great, great description of that.
Great. Excellent. Another reason to come to Denver. Lucas?
Thanks very much, Bernard. Thanks very much, Murray. Sorry, Lucas Herrmann, BNP Paribas. Couple, if I might. The first, I just wonder if you could talk about Archaea integration. There have been some management changes which, given the initial statements, one could argue are slightly surprising, in other ways, are probably not. Just, yeah, progress Archaea, particularly build out, not least as waste management companies also seem to be more active in the space and trying to grab opportunity. Secondly, just commentary around Mad Dog discovery and the tieback to Argos, and if you can give any indication of that. I presume that just will allow you to re- remain at plateau for an extended period, but just scale and opportunity. Thanks, Bernard.
Yeah. No, thanks, Lucas. I think Mad Dog Phase 2, a little later than we had expected. Now, it's online. Seems to be doing very well. Four wells online, I think Gordon the fifth this weekend, and I won't get too ahead of myself.
Stop, stop there. Stop there.
More to come here in the next couple of months. That's, that's looking good. You're, you, Carl, I mean, you answered the question quite rightly, which is there'll come a point in time when that field, like the Maclure, is on decline. We want to make sure that we keep the facility full. The best way to do that is to, is to drill nearby. We've drilled nearby, we found something, we feel pretty good about it, and that will likely be, I don't know, a 3, 5-well tieback in the fullness of time that will have, as you would expect, fabulous economics. That's on that. On Archaea, I think, the most important thing there is, Starley Sykes is now in leading that business.
Starlee ran our Gulf of Mexico business. Many of you will have met her. She ran it successfully for many years. She's one of our most trusted leaders as I, as I remind people, and as we, as we remind each other, this is BP. This is a BP business. Archaea is no longer Archaea, it's, it's, it's BP, and we want it to be run by, by our people. Making sure that we've got the right standards in there, that we've got the right culture being built, and to make sure that we leverage our company properly in accelerating delivery. Therefore, it makes sense that we put our own management in there, so to speak. Starlee's gonna do a great job in Denver.
Dare I say it, she will come and present on, the early days of what that looks like. We've got, how many sites to build out?
Eighty.
Eighty sites to build out over the next several years. We remain confident of our $500 million EBITDA target from that business by 2025. I think the EPA recently did some updates on their allocation mechanism or whatever it is that has strengthened RIN pricing in that business. The fundamentals remain very, very strong. A great resource base, albeit in landfills that would otherwise be damaging the environment. A great opportunity for us to capture that, build out these facilities over the next several years, optimize them hugely through Carol's business on the trading side. Does it go into power? Does it go into transportation? Where can we create the most value?
We're looking at capturing carbon at the sites now and taking advantage of the IRA to capture the carbon at those facilities. We might also capture the carbon and take it to our refinery and make e-fuels out of it because it's biogenic carbon. Again, the list goes on. We just are really, really excited. I'm delighted that Starley's in there. She's got her arms around the business. We reviewed it with her and Gordon a couple of weeks ago, and Carol, we're feeling really, really good about it. It's early days, and there's plenty of work to be done, and building out these sites isn't straightforward. It's not technically complex, but it's local and so on and so forth. We're feeling pretty good about that business right now. Anything, Pat?
Nope.
You'll see us do more of getting our management in on day one as we go forward. We're doing that on TA, for example, right now. Where else?
Alister .
Alastair?
Thanks very much. Murray, you, you mentioned Mauritania and Senegal in your list of gas basins. You know, what, what needs to happen to progress further development? And then secondly Bernard, I, I colleague you outside about politics. I'll, I'll ask you about German politics this time. You, you referenced in Germany that the, the, the future market's gonna be short of green electrons. That has a price implication. You know, do you think politicians understand that, that, that it's this is probably not deflationary? and I, I, I guess more importantly, are, are you happy sanctioning development on that basis given that in the last year or so, politicians in, in Europe have been pretty happy to cap and tax the industry on, on something that they think should be affordable?
Yeah, I mean, I certainly won't comment on German politics. I know even less about that than I do about UK politics, won't go there. I think the fundamentals are strong for what we're trying to do in, in, in Germany, Alister. I think, let's not come at this necessarily just from a climate standpoint, because that's where the conversation goes, and can people afford this, and is it inflationary, and so on and so forth. What Germany is doing with its ambitions that it has around offshore wind, and its ambitions that it has around hydrogen, and how much it will develop at home, and how much it will import, yes, of course, it's influenced by climate change, but it's actually driven probably most today by energy security. It's what the country needs.
The only way that the country is going to diversify it's, it's gonna find it very difficult to do solar in Germany. The politics of that are probably difficult, as any populated country will understand. It will look to places like offshore wind to not just supply green electrons, but to supply electrons, period. Our view is that there is of course, a price to be paid here. In many ways, we're having to build a new energy system, and that's unquestionably got a cost. As we look at it, and as we look at what our business is doing in Germany, then I think this is a very, very good investment for us. We feel very confident in the outlook. You can look at any of the forward curves.
You can look at your outlook for carbon prices. You can look at your outlook for natural gas prices. You can look at your outlook for demand for electrons, period. All of which factor into the economics of this decision, as well as the cost to build, as well as the premium that we've paid. Our view is that, on balance, this will end up being a very good use of our capital, limited as we will make it, and we will limit the capital. This will be very, very capital light. We will have a need, and we believe we'll supply that need cheaper and more securely by doing it ourselves than we would if we had to do it in the marketplace. Mauritania and Senegal?
Yeah. What was the question on Mauritania and Senegal?
What has to happen to progress the development?
Yeah. Yep, so, phase one continues. We're looking forward to getting that online next year, Q1 of next year. We just really need to come together with agree the concept, the engineering concept with our partners in the government, then agree share of rent, where the rent goes and how the LNG is priced. It's a, it's an ongoing conversation. Right now, we're really, really focused on getting getting phase one up, we'll see over time what what pace the development of phase two takes. We remain confident that there's lots of gas resource there. We just have to work through the technical decision and the commercial sharing of rent. It's not a lack of gas resource.
No. behind Lucas here.
Henry.
Henry?
Yes.
Henri?
Henri.
Henri? Henry-
Henri, yeah.
What would you prefer?
Either one is fine.
Okay. You can call me Bernard or Bernard. I don't, I don't mind.
Very good.
Go, Henri, go for it.
Patrick from UBS. Two questions, please. The first one, just going back to the production guidance for the year. Would you expect it to be higher, year-on-year? What's been working better than expected here? Secondly, thank you for the enhanced disclosures for the Transition Growth Engines. Just focusing perhaps on EV charging, where I see maybe down or still negative in the first half of the year. Can you perhaps talk about how you see the trajectory here or profitability varies, perhaps depending on different markets? Thank you.
Very good. I'll take the EV charging one maybe, and production, Murray, what's caused you to have more confidence in your production outlook for the year in oil and gas? I think, oil and gas question. On EV charging, we've got three main markets and an emerging fourth market. We've got China, Europe, and the U.K. I guess U.K. is part of Europe, you understand my point. China, Europe, U.K., and the emerging one is the United States. In places like Spain, for example, where I was recently, we have a partnership with Iberdrola. I think we've committed EUR 1 billion this decade to build that out, that charging network out between the two of us. Germany, we're number two in fast charging, Emma, in Germany today.
We were number one. We must have slipped to number two. I think we'll be back to number one, I hope, sometime in the future, but we're there or thereabouts as the largest. Then we're, we're building a very resilient network here in Britain. In China, that market is definitely electrifying. I think it's either 30% or 40% of new vehicles are EV today that are being bought in the market. There is no question what China is doing, and we're seeing it in the utilization rates, and it is the utilization rates that are then driving the fact that China today is EBITDA positive. The same is true in Germany, where we are seeing not really a slowdown in the purchasing of these cars.
The utilization is on the up. Therefore, Germany is also EBITDA positive today. It's obviously a growth business. We have to invest. We do expect what is a negative EBITDA business today to turn into a positive business by 2025. We did, as I said in the script, announce that now that we have the land in America, we announced that we sanctioned $500 million with Emma to build out our charging network in the United States. That's over the next 2-3 years. We'll go beyond that. We'll take advantage of the TA network, of course, and start putting chargers down there.
This Hertz partnership, where we are building Gigahubs, and this is where we can charge 100 cars at one time at major airports, like Houston Hobby, is really begin to take off. U.S. is quite exciting for us, and you'll have seen the price, the price changes that are happening in America on the new EV purchases, which are making the purchase of an EV vehicle more and more attractive. As I always say, there's an F-150 electric, which I think they increased the price of by 14% or 15% because the demand is so high for it, which is quite extraordinary. This is an exciting business for us. We are feeling good about it. We're learning a lot about the business. Lots of opportunities to optimize.
You may have met Robyn Beavers at some point, BluePoint Power, a company that we bought 2 years ago, that's focused on residential power or power in buildings, and how to manage power in buildings and how to optimize it. They're actually helping the EV people where to place the chargers and that software and that insight of the market and the knowledge can make a huge difference in the EBITDA profile of a charging location. We think that their help alone has made us $200 million of EBITDA in that business, in the United States alone, as it comes online over the next several years. We're learning a lot. We're excited about it.
Right now, China, Germany, where we're seeing the highest utilization, very EBITDA positive. By 25, we expect the entire business to be EBITDA positive. Production, Murray?
Yep. We upgraded our production outlook for 2023, as you noticed. That's really, congratula- I'll follow Lucas's example of congratulating Gordon again. Congratulations to Gordon again for great performance inside bpx and great performance inside the Gulf of Mexico. Those are the two principal places that are well ahead of where we thought they would be. Mad Dog is producing from 4 wells, 70,000 barrels a day. That's a stunning performance from the reservoir. That makes us really excited and-
You told me I couldn't say that.
No, it's public data. It's public data after the fact. I said you couldn't-
Okay
... say the sequence of new wells coming online.
Okay, okay, okay.
'Cause we don't want pressure on the teams.
The old-
Just fabulous, fabulous performance out of the lower half, lower 48, and out of the Gulf of Mexico, which has encouraged us to upgrade our guidance for the year. Very pleased with that, and thank you, Gordon.
Yep, while Tangguh is late, it's probably a little earlier than we had anticipated. For those of you interested in big pipelines, which we count ourselves, there is a 48-inch pipe there and a 60-inch?
Eighty.
Eighty inch. 80-inch pipeline. Can you imagine an 80-inch... Yeah, it's, 74 and an 80 inch or something like that.
Eighty.
Extraordinary. Thank you. Question back here, please. Peter?
Hi. Thanks. Yeah, it's Peter Lowe from Redburn. My, my first one was just on the financial framework. You talk about 40% of excess cash flow going to the balance sheet, but actually, net debt's increased over the past year, despite the strong commodity price environment. B ased on your guidance today, should we think that now begins to come down as, as we look into the 12 months ahead? Then the second one was just on OPO. The gas realizations were a little bit weaker than I might have expected. Is that just reflective of the weaker spot price environment, or is there anything else going on there? Thanks.
Great. Murray, please.
OPO gas, a little bit weaker than you expect, 50% down as opposed to 35% on the marker. That's just the lag on NBP. The UK price has lagged NBP, and that's what, that's what's driving that difference. It'll reverse itself over time. Ira can help you if that doesn't make sense, but that's the reason for that one. As second priority inside the framework is to reduce net debt. Yes, we've been reducing net debt. I think 14 quarters in a row, we've been reducing net debt. Yes, it goes up this quarter. Why did it go up this quarter?
Obviously, we had our Deepwater Horizon payment. We had TA, which is the $1.1 billion in capital and the assumed debt that we get with it. It's an increase of $1.6 billion for TA. That's not a bad thing. TA comes with $800 million of EBITDA. That's accretive to rating. We shouldn't necessarily just obsess about net debt. What's important for the rating is cash coverage ratio. TA, although it drove net debt up, is really good for the rating as it's accretive. We like that. It gives us diversification, and it gives us accretion on the rating. We think that's very positive. As we move forward, no change for 2023, 60/40. You've heard how we're thinking about surplus in the second half of the year.
I would expect 40% of that surplus to go to the balance sheet to continue strengthening it as well, dependent, of course, on what the oil price is. Hope that helps.
Great. Thanks, Murray. Martin? Been patiently waiting here at the front. Who's over here? Jim next. Okay.
Yeah. Hi, hello. I just have 2 questions. One, I'm sure Murray might not actually answer this, but I'm gonna ask it nonetheless. I wanted to ask if you could reflect on the weak-ish oil trading results, because if you look at the oil market in the 2Q, all the things that did not work would are working particularly well in the 3Q. I was wondering if you could tell us a little bit about, like, is this a bit of a tombola every quarter, or can we just expect that weak quarters and strong quarters, and weak quarters and strong quarters, should alternate each other? That, that, that I would be quite interested in that.
Position obviously.
Secondly, on Kaskida, of course, quite an interesting project, given that it's , come back after many years. I was wondering if there are any milestones that we should be looking out for, and, and the timeframes that are associated with this project.
Great. Thank you, Martin. Rather than Murray not answer it, why don't I not answer it? I, I, I don't think volatility is cyclical on a quarterly basis. It's driven by more than the calendar. Yeah, I think we'll say nothing more than it was a weak Q2. I think the one thing that you can say as you look forward in the world in general, and it applies to the energy markets particularly, and therefore, it will have an influence on trading over time, is that the energy transition is complex, and therefore, complexity will likely lead to volatility. As everybody knows, volatility is, is constructive for a trading business. I won't comment on Q3 volatility. I don't think you're incorrect, but we'll leave it at that.
Kaskida, yeah, we were just saying this morning, we discovered it in 2006. It's a big, big resource, a lot of oil in place, and the question was how to recover it economically. It's a good story, I think, of the company retaining an option. And we retained that option over many, many years. At the same time as us doing that, the industry has moved forward. 20K rigs have been built, are in operation. People have been successful with not just the technical aspects of the developments, but also increasing the learning around how these reservoirs produce. Both of those things are encouraging for us. So we're encouraged by what we see others do. We feel that its time has come. It has entered concept select.
Unusually, it's 100% BP. Our job now, and the team is focused on working through that optimization and getting us to a project that we can develop that's economic, and that's what we're focused on doing. At the same time as we're doing that, we're focused on Tiber, which is at an earlier stage in the thinking, so to speak. If Kaskida enters the frame, there's no reason why Tiber wouldn't also enter the frame. Just watch this space over the coming quarters as we get more engineering definition, cost definition around the concept. This is one that should see FID, if it will, in the next 2-3 years, I would think. That's how I would think about it. Kim. Christyan's joined us at the back, I think.
Thank you. Just on the NewMed deal, first of all, I understand the ADNOC side of the transaction is, is still, is still being worked out, but I was just wondering what was taking so long to, to finalize the deal. Secondly, I wanted to hear your thoughts on the attractiveness of the UK as an investment destination for upstream and low carbon in light of recent changes, such as the, the change to the UK Energy Profits Levy, the announcement of new licensing rounds, and government support for CCS. Thank you.
Great. What is taking so long? These things just take some time, we're working through the process. I don't think there's anything that's of particular note. We're involved in a public company, it takes time to go through the necessary processes. It's not a signal of something amiss, so to speak. It's just that these things take time and the intent remains very clear from all parties, I think, to close this transaction. On the UK, I think, let me just say generically what I would say, and what I've said this morning to some of the media: We're supportive of any policies or directions which acknowledge that the world needs a rapid transition, and it needs an orderly transition.
For us, that means an and, not or strategy. For us in the UK, that means investing in the North Sea and investing in the transition, and that's what we're doing. We probably, probably have the most diverse energy strategy of any company, probably in Britain. We're involved in oil and gas today. We're drilling. We're on a five-well campaign, I think, West of Shetlands. Today, that's drilling. We're bringing on Seagull later this year. We'll continue to look at licenses and investment decisions there based on the information that we have at the, at the time. At the same time that we're doing that, Lightsource bp is developing solar projects. In fact, I think they developed the biggest solar project in the UK, as far as I know.
We're in offshore wind in the UK, all in the Irish Sea, and which is looking good, by the way, and also in Scotland. We're in green and blue hydrogen at Teesside. We're in net zero power or low carbon power at Teesside. We're in CCS. We're building out an EV charging infrastructure here in Britain, focused on fast charging, which is going very well. I was at our Hammersmith site with the team a few weeks ago. Utilization levels, record utilization there. We're active, and we're importing LNG into the country. We're active right across the spectrum, and that should give you a sense of how we see Britain as a place to invest.
We're going to invest up to 18 billion GBP in Britain this decade. Of course, every decision is taken on the basis of the facts known to us at that time. That's probably all I will say on that. Christyan, did you want a question? Then I think we're
Hey, Christyan Malek from JPMorgan. Most of my questions have been answered, I want to come back. Two questions, one on the, the capital frame. This is, no one's ever gonna complain about a dividend increase, so thanks, thanks for that. I, I , it sounds to me that there's a lot of upside through both your projects, your, your reversals in trading. I just want to understand more just conceptually the logic of raising the dividend when you could have just put more back into buybacks. I mean, it's the third time you've raised a dividend in the last 12 months. Yes, you've lowered the share count, the math doesn't square out entirely.
I want to understand why you didn't just fully, and maybe this is a rhetorical question. Your shares are cheap. You're clearly more constructive on the macro outlook, why not put it all in buybacks? It's again, it's not a complaint about or challenge on the capital frame, it's more just if you could share some of that logic, if the shares are cheap, if you will, in terms of where they are today. The second question is just trying to pick your brain around where would you, if you sat down and challenged yourself around, where could you be wrong on the macro? Whether it's refining, gas, power prices, oil.
How would you frame, on a scale of 1 to 10, where you're probably most bullish across your portfolio, whether it's oil prices, refining? I just want to understand, to what extent are you being procyclical across different parts of the business in thinking about your outlook on the medium term? Thank you.
Thanks, Christyan. I'll let Murray take the first question. I mean, I think on the, on the second question, we all have views on the outlook for different products streams. Of course, the reality is, we never quite know. I can create a very strong case for oil. Why would I do that? I think everybody is talking about global economic growth and what's happening there. Everybody's talking about what's happening in China, and yet we probably will see well in excess or in excess of 2 million barrels a day of demand growth in oil this year. We expect that to continue into next year. Maybe not at the 2 million, but certainly well in excess of one million.
You look at that, you look at the fact that OPEC+ remains exceptionally disciplined, if not increasingly disciplined, and show no sign of changing that tack. I guess in discipline, you also look at the U.S., where I think the rig count has fallen to the lowest level now since February of last year, down by, I think, 20, 20%. I think oil rigs down 12, gas rigs down 12%, oil- gas rigs down more. I can create there a situation where you describe the outlook for oil prices to be strong over the coming months and years.
We, of course, know that there are numerous uncertainties, we therefore don't plan on that basis, and that's why we run the company on the basis of a $40 oil price, a $3 Henry Hub price, and an $11 RMM. We have no intention of moving away from running the company on that basis, because we believe that's the prudent and right way to run the company. If oil prices and refining margins and gas are higher, then so be it. We want to make sure that we take full advantage of that, Murray will talk to how we allocate the surplus cash. Gas, you go through a similar story. Europe, you'd say, better positioned than last. Of course, storage levels mean we're in a much better position than we were last winter.
Does that mean that we're out of the woods? You can't say that. Why not? There was a lot of demand destruction last winter, maybe 20%-25% in industry. Now, what happens to that-- this-- Does that remain? Does it return? We don't quite know. The weather, which we all see. There are many things that are uncertain there. I think the one thing that you can expect through all of these product streams is probably a lot of volatility, probably more so than we have experienced in history. You may wish to add to that, Murray, and obviously, then the conversation about why not y eah, more buybacks.
Yeah, I guess we just the only thing I'd add is we, we run the company for a low break even, and we'll take the upside. We, we run it on a balance point of $40, and we sanction projects at $60, $3 Henry Hub. We run it very prudently, and then, upside is upside, I think is the only thing to add. On the capital frame, dividend versus buyback, I think the hint is in the ordering. The hint is in 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Our first priority is a dividend. We have the capacity to grow at 4% per annum.
Above all else, we want that dividend to be resilient at $40, $11, and $3, and we will continue to increase it over time while we can keep that balance point alive and well and healthy in the event the macro turns against us. That, that is our first priority, and that gives you the hint of how we think about how we think about dividend versus buyback through the frame. Obviously, we have the chance, we've retired 9.2% of our share count over the past 12 months. 10% is a bit higher. Obviously, performance, as you can hear, we're performing really, really well. Updating the production guidance in 2023 is a huge sign of confidence to do that halfway through the year.
I just think we have an awful lot of confidence in, in the business moving forward. We'll focus on that 40 11 3 balance point as we approach the dividend, and it is the first priority for shareholder distribution.
Great. Excellent. Thank you, Christyan. Any other questions? We have no questions online. Greg, anything else from you?
You didn't write me a close, so I'll have to ad-lib. Thank you all, very, very much. I think we just say that we continue to focus on delivery. The company is very focused now on 2025. We have what we call a drive to 25. We're very clear on what our numbers are, what our targets are for 2025. We fully expect to deliver on those. We've got 10 quarters, that's hugely important to us. It's head down inside the company. We're executing simply on the plan that we have laid out. Nothing more, nothing less. I'm really proud of the team. Many of the leadership are in the room here today, but the team throughout BP, very grateful to them for everything that they do.
We thank you for your interest in our company. We hope you get a break over the holidays. We're certainly hoping to get a break over the August period, and let's leave it at that. Thanks, everybody. Thanks for taking the time to join us. Appreciate it.