Shell profit up by $2.2bn, to invest $25bn in Nigeria, others
The
net profit of Royal Dutch Shell more than doubled in the first three
months of 2017, surpasing predictions by analysts as rebounding oil
prices and refining gains helped to boost the company’s revenue.
The company’s first quarter 2017
financial results released yesterday showed that net income attributable
to shareholders in the quarter, based on a current cost of supplies
(CCS), rose by $2.2 billion.
CCS is a number similar to the net income that US oil companies report.
It generated a cash flow of $9.5 billion
in the quarter, up 13 fold from a year earlier, and the strongest among
its rivals like Total and Exxon.
“We saw notable improvements in Upstream
and Chemicals, which benefited from improved operational performance
and better market conditions,” its chief executive, Ben van Beurden,
said.
Shell, with operations in more than 70
countries, is Nigeria’s oldest energy company producing oil in various
joint and production sharing arrangements with NNPC and other foreign
oil companies.
It, however only recently resumed
production at its 225,000 barrels per day Bonga field in Nigeria, an
exercise to ensure sustained production and reduced unscheduled
production deferments.
The oil giant said it is investing
around $25 billion this year while it expects the delivery of new
projects to generate $10 billion in cash flow from operating activities
by 2018.
In its upstream operations in the first
quarter, Oil and gas production rose 2 percent to 3.752 million barrels
of oil equivalent from 3.905 million barrels in the fourth quarter of
2016 as a number of new fields continued to ramp up in Brazil and
Kazakhstan in particular.
POSTED BY:OPUOMONI PRIYE
DATE:05/06/2017
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