BP sells US refinery for $ 2.5 bn to Tesoro

Updated 13 August 2012
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BP sells US refinery for $ 2.5 bn to Tesoro

LONDON: British energy group BP said yesterday that it had agreed to sell its Carson refinery in California to US peer Tesoro Corporation for $2.5 billion (2.02 billion euros).
The sale is part of BP's previously-announced plans to sell $38 billion of assets by the end of 2013 to help pay the clean-up bill and compensation costs from the devastating 2010 US Gulf of Mexico oil spill.
The troubled energy major has agreed to sell $26.5 billion of assets since the start of 2010, including the latest deal.
"BP announced today it has reached agreement to sell its Carson, California refinery and related logistics and marketing assets in the region to Tesoro Corporation for $2.5 billion in cash," the group said in a statement.
BP said that the Carson sale would allow it to focus its investment and operations on the British group's three refineries in the northern United States.
The group had announced in February 2011 that it would sell off two major US refineries — including Carson — as part of a restructuring to shift its focus away from the United States and to meet its compensation costs.
It also intends to offload the Texas City facility which suffered a deadly 2005 explosion that killed 15 workers and sparked safety concerns across its US operations.
"Today's announcement is a significant step in the strategic refocusing of our US fuels business," chief executive of BP's global refining and marketing business, Iain Conn, said in yesterday's statement.
"Together with the intended sale of Texas City, this will allow us to focus BP's operations and investments exclusively on our three northern US refineries, which are crude feedstock advantaged, and their large and important marketing businesses."
Tesoro will acquire the Carson refinery near Los Angeles — which produces 266,000 barrels of oil a day — as well as the associated logistics network of pipelines and storage terminals.
It will also take ownership of BP's ARCO-branded retail marketing network in Southern California, Arizona and Nevada.
BP added that it would also sell the ARCO retail brand rights and exclusively license those rights from Tesoro for Northern California, Oregon and Washington.
The deal remains subject to regulatory approvals and is expected to complete before mid-2013.
In late afternoon trade on Monday, BP's share price fell 0.27 percent to 447.35 pence on London's FTSE 100 index of leading companies, which was 0.41 percent lower at 5,823.25 points.
The oil giant had last week announced the sale of its Sunray and Hemphill gas processing plants in Texas, together with their associated gas gathering system, to Eagle Rock Energy Partners for $227.5 million.
BP's fortunes were ravaged two years ago by an explosion on the BP-leased Deepwater Horizon rig that killed 11 workers, sent millions of barrels of oil spewing into the sea and left it with huge compensation costs.
The blast on April 20, 2010, sparked what was been widely acknowledged to be the worst environmental catastrophe in US history.
BP last month said it plunged into a second-quarter net loss, hit by lower output, falling oil prices and a near $5.0-billion writedown on the value of assets.
It made a loss after tax of $1.39 billion in the three months to June, compared with net profit of $5.72 billion in the year-earlier period.
BP is also facing major headaches in Russia after a Siberian court in July ordered the British group to pay $3.1 billion in damages for its attempted Arctic oil exploration tie-up with the state giant Rosneft.
The ruling came after BP entered direct talks with Rosneft over a buy-out by Russia's largest oil company of the British firm's stake in the troubled TNK-BP joint venture worth billions of dollars.

 


Multilateralism strained, but global cooperation adapting: WEF report

Updated 10 sec ago
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Multilateralism strained, but global cooperation adapting: WEF report

DUBAI: Overall levels of international cooperation have held steady in recent years, with smaller and more innovative partnerships emerging, often at regional and cross-regional levels, according to a World Economic Forum report.

The third edition of the Global Cooperation Barometer was launched on Thursday, ahead of the WEF’s annual meeting in Davos from Jan. 19 to 23.

“The takeaway of the Global Cooperation Barometer is that while multilateralism is under real strain, cooperation is not ending, it is adapting,” Ariel Kastner, head of geopolitical agenda and communications at WEF, told Arab News.

Developed alongside McKinsey & Company, the report uses 41 metrics to track global cooperation in five areas: Trade and capital; innovation and technology; climate and natural capital; health and wellness; and peace and security.

The pace of cooperation differs across sectors, with peace and security seeing the largest decline. Cooperation weakened across every tracked metric as conflicts intensified, military spending rose and multilateral mechanisms struggled to contain crises.

By contrast, climate and nature, alongside innovation and technology, recorded the strongest increases.

Rising finance flows and global supply chains supported record deployment of clean technologies, even as progress remained insufficient to meet global targets.

Despite tighter controls, cross-border data flows, IT services and digital connectivity continued to expand, underscoring the resilience of technology cooperation amid increasing restrictions.

The report found that collaboration in critical technologies is increasingly being channeled through smaller, aligned groupings rather than broad multilateral frameworks.  

This reflects a broader shift, Kastner said, highlighting the trend toward “pragmatic forms of collaboration — at the regional level or among smaller groups of countries — that advance both shared priorities and national interests.”

“In the Gulf, for example, partnerships and investments with Asia, Europe and Africa in areas such as energy, technology and infrastructure, illustrate how focused collaboration can deliver results despite broader, global headwinds,” he said.

Meanwhile, health and wellness and trade and capital remained flat.

Health outcomes have so far held up following the pandemic, but sharp declines in development assistance are placing growing strain on lower- and middle-income countries.

In trade, cooperation remained above pre-pandemic levels, with goods volumes continuing to grow, albeit at a slower pace than the global economy, while services and selected capital flows showed stronger momentum.

The report also highlights the growing role of smaller, trade-dependent economies in sustaining global cooperation through initiatives such as the Future of Investment and Trade Partnership, launched in September 2025 by the UAE, New Zealand, Singapore and Switzerland.

Looking ahead, maintaining open channels of communication will be critical, Kastner said.

“Crucially, the building block of cooperation in today’s more uncertain era is dialogue — parties can only identify areas of common ground by speaking with one another.”