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    ExxonMobil Doubles 2Q Profit

Summary

ExxonMobil's 2Q profits almost doubled in 2Q2017 thanks to higher prices. Gas production was up, but fell sharply in Europe because of a cap on Dutch production.

by: Mark Smedley

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Natural Gas & LNG News, Americas, Corporate, Exploration & Production, News By Country, United States

ExxonMobil Doubles 2Q Profit

ExxonMobil's second quarter profits almost doubled in 2Q2017 thanks to higher prices.

The US supermajor said July 28 net earnings were up 97% year on year to $3.35bn. CEO Darren Woods said: “These solid results across our businesses were driven by higher commodity prices and a continued focus on operations and business fundamentals.”

Upstream volumes declined 1% to 3.9mn barrels of oil equivalent/day largely because of lower entitlements, but increases from projects and work programs more than offset field declines. Exxon announced phase 1 of its world-class Guyana Liza development was funded, with first oil by 2020.

Liquids output of 2.3mn b/d was 61,000 b/d lower year on year. Gas production at 9.9bn ft3/d was up 158mn ft3/d (up 1.6%) as project ramp-up, primarily in Australia, was partly offset by field decline and lower demand. However that total included European gas output down 17.5% at 1.44bn ft3/d, with the reduced production cap at the Groningen gasfield – where a joint Shell-Exxon venture is operator with 60% equity – the main factor. Last year the Dutch government agreed to cap the country's largest field at 24bn m³/yr (2.32bn ft3/d) for the five-year period from October 2016 to September 2021. But this year the government said it wanted a further 10% cut to 21.6bn m³/yr from October 2017 to Sept.2021; a judicial ruling in November may cut that further.

Exxon's upstream earnings rose substantially to $1.2bn, with downstream earnings up 68% at $1.4bn.  Chemical earnings were $985mn, down $232mn, owing to higher turnaround activities and lower margins. The company also reminded analysts of its positive results last month at the Muruk-1 sidetrack 3 well in Papua New Guinea, northwest of Hides gas field that supplies feedstock for PNG LNG.

 

Mark Smedley