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BP PLC Interim / Quarterly Report 2013

Oct 29, 2013

4622_ffr_2013-10-29_cf3c3a5c-2af4-4466-8766-516b49687ab4.zip

Interim / Quarterly Report

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6-K 1 bp201310296k1.htm 3RD QUARTER RESULTS bp201310296k1.htm Licensed to: LSE Document Created using EDGARizer 2020 5.4.1.0 Copyright 1995 - 2009 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

Form 6-K

Report of Foreign Issuer

Pursuant to Rule 13a-16 or 15d-16 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

for the period ended October, 2013 BP p.l.c. (Translation of registrant's name into English) 1 ST JAMES'S SQUARE, LONDON, SW1Y 4PD, ENGLAND (Address of principal executive offices) Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual reports under cover Form 20-F or Form 40-F. Form 20-F |X| Form 40-F --------------- ---------------- Indicate by check mark whether the registrant by furnishing the information contained in this Form is also thereby furnishing the information to the Commission pursuant to Rule 12g3-2(b) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Yes No |X| --------------- ----------------

BP p.l.c. Group results Third quarter and nine months 2013 Top of page 1

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

London 29 October 2013

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
5,281 2,042 3,504 Profit for the period (a) 22,409 9,529
(747) 358 (326) Inventory holding (gains) losses, net of tax (235) (110)
4,534 2,400 3,178 Replacement cost profit (b) 22,174 9,419
Net (favourable) unfavourable impact of non-operating
483 312 514 items and fair value accounting effects, net of tax (c) (11,555) 3,800
5,017 2,712 3,692 Underlying replacement cost profit (b) 10,619 13,219
Replacement cost profit
23.82 12.62 16.84 per ordinary share (cents) 116.62 49.54
1.43 0.76 1.01 per ADS (dollars) 7.00 2.97
Underlying replacement cost profit
26.35 14.26 19.57 per ordinary share (cents) 55.85 69.52
1.58 0.86 1.17 per ADS (dollars) 3.35 4.17

· BP's third-quarter replacement cost (RC) profit was $3,178 million, compared with $4,534 million a year ago. After adjusting for a net charge for non-operating items of $522 million and net favourable fair value accounting effects of $8 million (both on a post-tax basis), underlying RC profit for the third quarter was $3,692 million, compared with $5,017 million for the same period in 2012. For the nine months, RC profit was $22,174 million, compared with $9,419 million a year ago. After adjusting for a net gain for non-operating items of $11,536 million and net favourable fair value accounting effects of $19 million (both on a post-tax basis), underlying RC profit for the nine months was $10,619 million, compared with $13,219 million for the same period last year. RC profit or loss for the group, underlying RC profit or loss and fair value accounting effects are non-GAAP measures and further information is provided on pages 3, 19 and 21.

· All amounts relating to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill have been treated as non-operating items, with a net adverse impact on a pre-tax basis of $39 million for the quarter and $280 million for the nine months. For further information on the Gulf of Mexico oil spill and its consequences, including information on utilization of the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill Trust fund, see page 12 and Note 2 on pages 25 - 30. Information on the Gulf of Mexico oil spill is also included in Legal proceedings on pages 35 - 37.

· Including the impact of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, net cash provided by operating activities for the quarter and nine months was $6.3 billion and $15.7 billion respectively, compared with $6.2 billion and $14.1 billion in the same periods of 2012. Excluding amounts related to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, net cash provided by operating activities for the third quarter and nine months was $6.3 billion and $15.9 billion respectively, compared with $6.4 billion and $17.1 billion in the same periods last year.

· Net debt at the end of the quarter was $20.1 billion, compared with $31.3 billion a year ago. The ratio of net debt to net debt plus equity at the end of the quarter was 13.3% compared with 20.9% a year ago. Net debt and the ratio of net debt to net debt plus equity are non-GAAP measures. See page 4 for more information. Total capital expenditure for the third quarter was $5.9 billion, all of which was organic (d) . For the nine months, total capital expenditure was $29.4 billion (including the Rosneft transaction), of which organic capital expenditure was $17.5 billion. Organic capital expenditure for the full year 2013 is expected to be $24 - $25 billion with a similar level of expenditure expected in 2014. Organic capital expenditure through 2020 is expected to be $24 - $27 billion per annum. Disposal proceeds received in cash were $0.4 billion for the quarter and $21.6 billion for the nine months. . BP intends to continue to focus its global business portfolio around key assets and strategic strengths, and, as a result, expects to divest a further $10 billion of assets before the end of 2015. Post-tax proceeds from these divestments are expected to be used predominantly for additional distributions to shareholders, with a bias for share buybacks.

· BP today announced a quarterly dividend of 9.5 cents per ordinary share ($0.57 per ADS), which is expected to be paid on 20 December 2013. The corresponding amount in sterling will be announced on 9 December 2013. See page 4 for further information. Moving forward, BP's board intends to review the level of dividend with the first and the third quarter results each year

(a) Profit attributable to BP shareholders.
(b) See page 3 for definitions of RC profit and underlying RC profit.
(c) See pages 20 and 21 respectively for further information on non-operating items and fair value accounting effects.
(d) Organic capital expenditure excludes acquisitions, asset exchanges, and other inorganic capital expenditure. See page 18 for further information.
The commentaries above and following are based on RC profit and should be read in conjunction with the cautionary statement on page 39.

Top of page 2

Group headlines (continued)

· The effective tax rate (ETR) on RC profit for the third quarter and nine months was 31% and 22% respectively, compared with 34% and 35% for the same periods in 2012. Adjusting for non-operating items and fair value accounting effects, the underlying ETR in the third quarter and nine months was 31% and 38% respectively, compared with 34% and 34% for the same periods in 2012. Recently enacted UK corporation tax rate changes have resulted in a $99- million deferred tax benefit in the third quarter. In the third quarter 2012 changes in the taxation of UK oil and gas production resulted in a $256-million deferred tax charge. The increase in the underlying ETR for the nine months is mainly due to a reduction in equity-accounted earnings (which are reported net of tax) and foreign exchange impacts on deferred tax, partly offset by the deferred tax adjustments for changes in UK taxation noted above

· Finance costs and net finance expense relating to pensions and other post-retirement benefits were a charge of $397 million for the third quarter, compared with $376 million for the same period in 2012. For the nine months, the respective amounts were $1,170 million and $1,171 million.

· As at 30 September 2013, BP had bought back 465 million shares for a total amount of $3.3 billion, including fees and stamp duty, since the announcement on 22 March 2013 of an $8-billion share repurchase programme expected to be fulfilled over 12- 18 month.

· Total production for the third quarter, including Rosneft, was 3.17 million barrels of oil equivilant per day. BP's share of Rosneft production in the third quarter was 965 thousand barrels of oil equivalent per day.

Top of page 3

Analysis of RC profit before interest and tax

and reconciliation to profit for the period

Third Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
RC profit before interest and tax
4,907 4,400 4,158 Upstream 14,120 14,803
2,408 1,016 616 Downstream 3,279 1,535
1,282 - - TNK-BP (a) 12,500 2,798
- 218 792 Rosneft (b) 1,095 -
(1,096) (573) (674) Other businesses and corporate (1,714) (2,289)
(56) (199) (30) Gulf of Mexico oil spill response (c) (251) (869)
(64) 129 263 Consolidation adjustment - UPII (d) 819 (148)
7,381 4,991 5,125 RC profit before interest and tax 29,848 15,830
Finance costs and net finance expense relating to
(376) (369) (397) pensions and other post-retirement benefits (1,170) (1,171)
(2,405) (2,138) (1,462) Taxation on a RC basis (6,253) (5,068)
(66) (84) (88) Non-controlling interests (251) (172)
4,534 2,400 3,178 RC profit attributable to BP shareholders 22,174 9,419
1,059 (506) 444 Inventory holding gains (losses) 344 172
Taxation (charge) credit on inventory holding
(312) 148 (118) gains and losses (109) (62)
5,281 2,042 3,504 Profit for the period attributable to BP shareholders 22,409 9,529
(a) BP ceased equity accounting for its share of TNK-BP's earnings from 22 October 2012. See Note 3 on page 31 for further information.
(b) BP's investment in Rosneft is accounted under the equity method from 21 March 2013. See page 10 for further information.
(c) See Note 2 on pages 25 - 30 for further information on the accounting for the Gulf of Mexico oil spill response.
(d) Unrealized profit in inventory.

Replacement cost (RC) profit or loss reflects the replacement cost of supplies and is arrived at by excluding inventory holding gains and losses from profit or loss. RC profit or loss is the measure of profit or loss for each operating segment that is required to be disclosed under International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). RC profit or loss for the group is not a recognized GAAP measure. See page 19 for further information on RC profit or loss.

Analysis of underlying RC profit before interest and tax

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
Underlying RC profit before interest and tax
4,366 4,288 4,423 Upstream 14,413 15,061
3,009 1,201 720 Downstream 3,562 5,069
1,294 - - TNK-BP - 2,903
- 218 808 Rosneft 1,111 -
(573) (438) (385) Other businesses and corporate (1,284) (1,548)
(64) 129 263 Consolidation adjustment - UPII 819 (148)
8,032 5,398 5,829 Underlying RC profit before interest and tax 18,621 21,337
Finance costs and net finance expense relating to
(373) (359) (388) pensions and other post-retirement benefits (1,141) (1,158)
(2,576) (2,243) (1,661) Taxation on an underlying RC basis (6,610) (6,788)
(66) (84) (88) Non-controlling interests (251) (172)
5,017 2,712 3,692 Underlying RC profit attributable to BP shareholders 10,619 13,219

Underlying RC profit or loss is RC profit or loss after adjusting for non-operating items and fair value accounting effects. Underlying RC profit or loss and fair value accounting effects are not recognized GAAP measures. On pages 20 and 21 respectively, we provide additional information on the non-operating items and fair value accounting effects that are used to arrive at underlying RC profit or loss in order to enable a full understanding of the events and their financial impact.

Reconciliations of underlying RC profit or loss to the nearest equivalent IFRS measure are provided on page 1 for the group and on pages 6 - 11 for the segments.

BP believes that underlying RC profit or loss is a useful measure for investors because it is a measure closely tracked by management to evaluate BP's operating performance and to make financial, strategic and operating decisions and because it may help investors to understand and evaluate, in the same manner as management, the underlying trends in BP's operational performance on a comparable basis, period on period, by adjusting for the effects of these non-operating items and fair value accounting effects.

Top of page 4

Per share amounts

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 2013 2012
Per ordinary share (cents)
27.74 10.73 18.57 Profit for the period 117.86 50.11
23.82 12.62 16.84 RC profit for the period 116.62 49.54
26.35 14.26 19.57 Underlying RC profit for the period 55.85 69.52
Per ADS (dollars)
1.66 0.64 1.11 Profit for the period 7.07 3.01
1.43 0.76 1.01 RC profit for the period 7.00 2.97
1.58 0.86 1.17 Underlying RC profit for the period 3.35 4.17

The amounts shown above are calculated based on the basic weighted average number of shares outstanding. See Note 6 on page 33 for details of the calculation of earnings per share.

Net debt ratio - net debt: net debt + equity

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
49,071 46,990 50,284 Gross debt 50,284 49,071
1,572 460 734 Less: fair value asset of hedges related to finance debt 734 1,572
47,499 46,530 49,550 49,550 47,499
16,174 28,313 29,499 Less: cash and cash equivalents 29,499 16,174
31,325 18,217 20,051 Net debt 20,051 31,325
118,883 130,133 131,251 Equity 131,251 118,883
20.9% 12.3% 13.3% Net debt ratio 13.3% 20.9%

See Note 7 on page 34 for further details on finance debt.

Net debt and net debt ratio are non-GAAP measures. Net debt includes the fair value of associated derivative financial instruments that are used to hedge foreign exchange and interest rate risks relating to finance debt, for which hedge accounting is claimed. The derivatives are reported on the balance sheet within the headings 'Derivative financial instruments'. We believe that net debt and net debt ratio provide useful information to investors. Net debt enables investors to see the economic effect of gross debt, related hedges and cash and cash equivalents in total. The net debt ratio enables investors to see how significant net debt is relative to equity from shareholders.

Dividends

Dividends payable

BP today announced a dividend of 9.5 cents per ordinary share expected to be paid in December. The corresponding amount in sterling will be announced on 9 December 2013, calculated based on the average of the market exchange rates for the four dealing days commencing on 3 December 2013. Holders of American Depositary Shares (ADSs) will receive $0.57 per ADS. The dividend is due to be paid on 20 December 2013 to shareholders and ADS holders on the register on 8 November 2013. A scrip dividend alternative is available, allowing shareholders to elect to receive their dividend in the form of new ordinary shares and ADS holders in the form of new ADSs. Details of the third-quarter dividend and timetable are available at bp.com/dividends and details of the scrip dividend programme are available at bp.com/scrip .

Dividends paid

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 2013 2012
Dividends paid per ordinary share
8.000 9.000 9.000 cents 27.000 24.000
5.017 5.834 5.763 pence 17.598 15.263
48.00 54.00 54.00 Dividends paid per ADS (cents) 162.00 144.00
Scrip dividends
15.0 43.8 65.7 Number of shares issued (millions) 124.0 65.7
105 315 452 Value of shares issued ($ million) 868 484

Top of page 5

*THIS PAGE IS INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK*

Top of page 6

Upstream

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
4,919 4,396 4,165 Profit before interest and tax 14,121 14,695
(12) 4 (7) Inventory holding (gains) losses (1) 108
4,907 4,400 4,158 RC profit before interest and tax 14,120 14,803
Net (favourable) unfavourable impact of non-operating
(541) (112) 265 items and fair value accounting effects 293 258
4,366 4,288 4,423 Underlying RC profit before interest and tax (a) 14,413 15,061

(a) See page 3 for information on underlying RC profit and see page 7 for a reconciliation to segment RC profit before interest and tax by region.

The replacement cost profit before interest and tax for the third quarter and nine months was $4,158 million and $14,120 million respectively, compared with $4,907 million and $14,803 million for the same periods in 2012. The third quarter and nine months included net non-operating charges of $226 million and $163 million respectively, primarily related to impairment charges partly offset by disposal gains and fair value gains on embedded derivatives. A year ago, there was a net non-operating gain of $516 million in the third quarter and a net non-operating charge of $157 million for the nine months. Fair value accounting effects in the third quarter and nine months had unfavourable impacts of $39 million and $130 million respectively, compared with a favourable impact of $25 million and an unfavourable impact of $101 million in the same periods a year ago.

After adjusting for non-operating items and fair value accounting effects, the underlying replacement cost profit before interest and tax for the third quarter and nine months was $4,423 million and $14,413 million respectively, compared with $4,366 million and $15,061 million a year ago. The result for the third quarter reflected lower production due to divestments and higher exploration write-offs and depreciation, depletion and amortization, offset by higher liquids and gas realizations, an increase in underlying volumes and a one-off benefit, mainly in respect of prior years, resulting from the US Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approval of cost pooling settlement agreements between the owners of the Trans Alaska Pipeline System (TAPS). The result for the nine months reflected the same factors as the third quarter with the exception of liquids realizations, which were lower, and a benefit from stronger gas marketing and trading activities, mainly in the first quarter.

Production for the quarter was 2,207mboe/d, 2.3% lower than the third quarter of 2012. After adjusting for the effects of divestments and entitlement impacts in our production-sharing agreements (PSAs), underlying production increased by 3.4%. This primarily reflects new major project volumes in the North Sea and Angola and the absence of seasonal weather-related downtime in the Gulf of Mexico. For the nine months, production was 2,259mboe/d, 3.0% lower than in the same period last year. After adjusting for the effect of divestments and entitlement impacts in our PSAs, underlying production for the nine months was 3.1% higher than in 2012.

On the back of stronger-than-expected third-quarter production, which benefited from the absence of seasonal adverse weather in the Gulf of Mexico, we expect fourth-quarter reported production to be broadly flat with the third quarter and costs to be higher with the absence of the one-off TAPS pooling benefit. Full-year reported production is expected to be lower than 2012, mainly due to the impact of divestments. The actual reported outcome will also depend on OPEC quotas and the impact of entitlement effects in our PSAs. After adjusting for divestments and the impact of entitlement effects in our PSAs, we continue to expect full-year underlying production in 2013 to increase compared with 2012.

We continued to make strategic progress. In August, BP and its partners ConocoPhillips, Chevron and Shell confirmed the installation of the Clair Ridge platform jackets (the steel support structure), a major milestone in the Clair Ridge project in the North Sea.

Also in August, a new gas condensate discovery in the Cauvery basin off the east coast of India was announced by Reliance Industries Limited and BP.

In September, we announced a significant gas discovery, Salamat, in the East Nile Delta. The deepwater exploration well is the deepest well ever drilled in the Nile Delta and the first well in the North Damietta Offshore concession, granted in 2010 and operated by BP.

BP also announced that over $1.5 billion has been awarded in contracts to UK-based companies to provide services and equipment for the major redevelopment of the Schiehallion and Loyal oil fields to the west of Shetland.

Also in September, the Shah Deniz consortium announced that 25-year sales agreements have been concluded for over 10 billion cubic metres of gas per annum to be produced from the Shah Deniz field in Azerbaijan as a result of the development of Stage 2 of the Shah Deniz project. Nine companies will purchase this gas in Italy, Greece and Bulgaria.

At the end of September, gas production started at the Woodside-operated North Rankin 2 project in Australia's North West Shelf, in which BP has a 16.67% interest.

After the end of the quarter, BP entered into three farm-out agreements with Kosmos Energy covering three blocks in the Agadir Basin, offshore Morocco. Under the terms of the agreements, which are subject to government approval, BP will acquire a non-operating interest in each of the Essaouira Offshore, Foum Assaka Offshore and Tarhazoute Offshore blocks.

BP also announced that it will appoint Richard Herbert as its new head of exploration. He will succeed Mike Daly who has chosen to retire from BP at the end of 2013 after a career of 28 years with the company, eight leading BP's exploration function.

The commentary above contains forward-looking statements and should be read in conjunction with the cautionary statement on page 39.

Top of page 7

Upstream

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
Underlying RC profit before interest and tax
741 611 1,301 US 2,910 3,027
3,625 3,677 3,122 Non-US 11,503 12,034
4,366 4,288 4,423 14,413 15,061
Non-operating items
465 62 5 US 61 (861)
51 81 (231) Non-US (224) 704
516 143 (226) (163) (157)
Fair value accounting effects (a)
(28) (33) (84) US (157) (38)
53 2 45 Non-US 27 (63)
25 (31) (39) (130) (101)
RC profit before interest and tax
1,178 640 1,222 US 2,814 2,128
3,729 3,760 2,936 Non-US 11,306 12,675
4,907 4,400 4,158 14,120 14,803
Exploration expense
35 85 147 US (b) 312 510
255 349 364 Non-US 955 656
290 434 511 1,267 1,166
Production (net of royalties) (c)
Liquids (mb/d) (d)
356 335 356 US 353 387
95 97 75 Europe 95 112
697 732 716 Rest of World 720 683
1,148 1,165 1,147 1,168 1,182
Natural gas (mmcf/d)
1,545 1,573 1,546 US 1,550 1,670
339 286 146 Europe 253 439
4,559 4,386 4,458 Rest of World 4,524 4,541
6,443 6,244 6,150 6,327 6,650
Total hydrocarbons (mboe/d) (e)
622 606 622 US 620 675
153 147 100 Europe 139 188
1,483 1,488 1,485 Rest of World 1,500 1,466
2,259 2,241 2,207 2,259 2,328
Average realizations (f)
99.00 94.92 100.66 Total liquids ($/bbl) 99.59 102.79
4.77 5.37 5.01 Natural gas ($/mcf) 5.31 4.67
60.68 61.27 62.80 Total hydrocarbons ($/boe) 63.09 61.69
(a) These effects represent the favourable (unfavourable) impact relative to management's measure of performance. Further information on fair value accounting effects is provided on page 21.
(b) Nine months 2012 includes $308 million classified within the 'other' category of non-operating items (see page 20).
(c) Includes BP's share of production of equity-accounted entities in the Upstream segment.
(d) Crude oil and natural gas liquids.
(e) Natural gas is converted to oil equivalent at 5.8 billion cubic feet = 1 million barrels.
(f) Based on sales of consolidated subsidiaries only - this excludes equity-accounted entities.
Because of rounding, some totals may not agree exactly with the sum of their component parts.

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Downstream

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
3,390 501 1,009 Profit before interest and tax 3,565 1,813
(982) 515 (393) Inventory holding (gains) losses (286) (278)
2,408 1,016 616 RC profit before interest and tax 3,279 1,535
Net (favourable) unfavourable impact of non-operating
601 185 104 items and fair value accounting effects 283 3,534
3,009 1,201 720 Underlying RC profit before interest and tax (a) 3,562 5,069

(a) See page 3 for information on underlying RC profit and see page 9 for a reconciliation to segment RC profit before interest and tax by region and by business.

The replacement cost profit before interest and tax for the third quarter and nine months was $616 million and $3,279 million respectively, compared with $2,408 million and $1,535 million for the same periods in 2012.

The 2013 results included net non-operating charges of $157 million for the third quarter principally reflecting the reassessment of environmental provisions, and $461 million for the nine months mainly relating to impairment charges in our fuels business, compared with $315 million and $3,099 million for the same periods a year ago (see pages 9 and 20 for further information on non-operating items). Fair value accounting effects had favourable impacts of $53 million for the third quarter and $178 million for the nine months, compared with unfavourable impacts of $286 million and $435 million for the same periods a year ago.

After adjusting for non-operating items and fair value accounting effects, the underlying replacement cost profit before interest and tax for the third quarter and nine months was $720 million and $3,562 million respectively, compared with $3,009 million and $5,069 million a year ago.

Replacement cost profit before interest and tax for the fuels, lubricants and petrochemicals businesses is set out on page 9.

The fuels business reported underlying replacement cost profit before interest and tax of $344 million for the third quarter and $2,434 million for the nine months, compared with $2,718 million and $3,993 million in the same periods in 2012. Compared with 2012, the third-quarter result was significantly impacted by weaker refining margins (particularly in the US) as well as the absence of earnings from the divested Texas City and Carson refineries, each of which delivered unusually strong results in the third quarter of 2012 given the favourable environment. The nine months' result was impacted by weaker refining margins and reduced throughput due to the planned crude unit outage at our Whiting refinery as part of the modernization project, partly offset by a strong supply and trading contribution as compared to the same period in 2012.

The Whiting refinery modernization project, which re-started the upgraded crude unit in the second quarter, remains on track to commission the remaining new units associated with the investment by the end of the fourth quarter. We will progressively introduce heavy feedstock once the coker is operational during the fourth quarter, and expect to achieve full run-rate capacity during the first quarter of 2014.

Looking ahead to the fourth quarter, we expect refining margins to remain under significant pressure due to very high gasoline stocks and new competitor capacity additions as well as lower seasonal demand.

The lubricants business delivered an underlying replacement cost profit before interest and tax of $325 million in the third quarter and $1,042 million in the nine months, compared with $311 million and $956 million in the same periods last year. The lubricants environment is challenging; however our investment in technology and our targeted marketing programmes are contributing to the strong position of our premium Castrol brands and this continues to benefit overall business performance. In the third quarter approximately 50% of our lubricants sales revenues were from countries which we define as growth markets, such as China, Australia and India.

The petrochemicals business reported an underlying replacement cost profit before interest and tax of $51 million in the third quarter and $86 million in the nine months, compared with an underlying replacement cost loss before interest and tax of $20 million and an underlying replacement cost profit before interest and tax of $120 million respectively in the same periods last year. Margins and volumes continue to be under pressure, however, margins and utilization improved slightly in the third quarter, resulting in increased profitability compared with the third quarter of 2012.

The commentary above contains forward-looking statements and should be read in conjunction with the cautionary statement on page 39.

Top of page 9

Downstream

Third Second Third $ million Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter Underlying RC profit before interest and tax - months months
2012 2013 2013 by region 2013 2012
1,723 557 (22) US 1,285 2,462
1,286 644 742 Non-US 2,277 2,607
3,009 1,201 720 3,562 5,069
Non-operating items
(229) (17) (145) US (134) (2,750)
(86) (306) (12) Non-US (327) (349)
(315) (323) (157) (461) (3,099)
Fair value accounting effects (a)
(388) 219 81 US 235 (432)
102 (81) (28) Non-US (57) (3)
(286) 138 53 178 (435)
RC profit (loss) before interest and tax
1,106 759 (86) US 1,386 (720)
1,302 257 702 Non-US 1,893 2,255
2,408 1,016 616 3,279 1,535
Underlying RC profit (loss) before interest and
tax - by business (b)(c)
2,718 853 344 Fuels 2,434 3,993
311 372 325 Lubricants 1,042 956
(20) (24) 51 Petrochemicals 86 120
3,009 1,201 720 3,562 5,069
Non-operating items and fair value accounting
effects (a)
(592) (188) (105) Fuels (282) (3,523)
(8) 3 4 Lubricants 2 (10)
(1) - (3) Petrochemicals (3) (1)
(601) (185) (104) (283) (3,534)
RC profit (loss) before interest and tax (b)(c)
2,126 665 239 Fuels 2,152 470
303 375 329 Lubricants 1,044 946
(21) (24) 48 Petrochemicals 83 119
2,408 1,016 616 3,279 1,535
22.6 19.1 13.6 BP average refining marker margin (RMM) ($/bbl) (d) 16.8 18.7
Refinery throughputs (mb/d)
1,403 711 618 US 755 1,306
791 745 772 Europe 774 757
318 252 312 Rest of World 295 292
2,512 1,708 1,702 1,824 2,355
95.0 95.3 95.3 Refining availability (%) (e) 95.2 94.8
Marketing sales of refined products (mb/d)
1,432 1,340 1,211 US 1,317 1,397
1,247 1,316 1,284 Europe (f) 1,253 1,228
571 549 551 Rest of World 552 583
3,250 3,205 3,046 3,122 3,208
2,393 2,527 2,596 Trading/supply sales of refined products 2,478 2,447
5,643 5,732 5,642 Total sales volumes of refined products 5,600 5,655
Petrochemicals production (kte)
900 1,081 1,114 US 3,272 3,088
993 814 999 Europe (c) 2,827 3,002
1,686 1,519 1,538 Rest of World 4,474 5,253
3,579 3,414 3,651 10,573 11,343
(a) Fair value accounting effects represent the favourable (unfavourable) impact relative to management's measure of performance. For Downstream, these arise solely in the fuels business. Further information is provided on page 21.
(b) Segment-level overhead expenses are included in the fuels business result.
(c) BP's share of income from petrochemicals at our Gelsenkirchen and Mülheim sites in Germany is reported in the fuels business.
(d) The RMM is the average of regional indicator margins weighted for BP's crude refining capacity in each region. Each regional marker margin is based on product yields and a marker crude oil deemed appropriate for the region. The regional indicator margins may not be representative of the margins achieved by BP in any period because of BP's particular refinery configurations and crude and product slate. In 2013 BP updated the RMM methodology; prior periods have been restated.
(e) Refining availability represents Solomon Associates' operational availability, which is defined as the percentage of the year that a unit is available for processing after subtracting the annualized time lost due to turnaround activity and all planned mechanical, process and regulatory maintenance downtime.
(f) A minor amendment has been made to 2012 volumes data.

Top of page 10

Rosneft

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
- 231 836 Profit before interest and tax (a)(b) 1,152 -
- (13) (44) Inventory holding (gains) losses (57) -
- 218 792 RC profit before interest and tax (b) 1,095 -
- - 16 Net charge (credit) for non-operating items 16 -
- 218 808 Underlying RC profit before interest and tax (b)(c) 1,111 -
(a) BP's share of Rosneft's earnings after finance costs, taxation and non-controlling interests is included in the BP group income statement within profit before interest and taxation. Second quarter 2013 as reported includes an amendment to first-quarter profit, which was reported based on a BP estimate.
(b) Third quarter and nine months 2013 include $5 million of foreign exchange losses arising on the dividend received.
(c) See page 3 for information on underlying RC profit.

Following the completion of the sale and purchase agreements with Rosneft and Rosneftegaz on 21 March 2013, described in Note 3, BP's investment in Rosneft is reported as a separate operating segment under IFRS. See Note 3 on page 31 for further information.

Replacement cost profit before interest and tax for the third quarter and nine months was $792 million and $1,095 million respectively. The results included a non-operating item of $16 million relating to an impairment charge. After adjusting for non-operating items, the underlying replacement cost profit before interest and tax for the third quarter and nine months was $808 million and $1,111 million respectively. The third-quarter result, compared with the second quarter, included positive impacts from foreign currency exchange, a favourable duty lag effect, and higher oil prices.

The dividend declared by Rosneft in the second quarter of 2013 was paid during the third quarter of 2013. BP received $456 million after the deduction of withholding tax. No further dividends are expected in 2013.

The Rosneft segment result included equity-accounted earnings from Rosneft, representing BP's 19.75% share in Rosneft. BP's share of the components of Rosneft's net income is shown in the table below.

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
Income statement (BP share)
- 417 1,197 Profit before interest and tax 1,724 -
- (127) (18) Finance costs (148) -
- (31) (272) Taxation (325) -
- (28) (66) Non-controlling interests (94) -
- 231 841 Net income 1,157 -
- (13) (44) Inventory holding (gains) losses, net of tax (57) -
- 218 797 Net income on a RC basis 1,100 -
- - 16 Net charge (credit) for non-operating items, net of tax 16 -
- 218 813 Net income on an underlying RC basis 1,116 -
Balance sheet 30 September 31 December
2013 2012
$ million
Investments in associates 12,165 -
Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
Production (net of royalties) (BP share) (d)(e)
- 826 828 Liquids (mb/d) (f) 588 -
- 689 793 Natural gas (mmcf/d) 526 -
- 945 965 Total hydrocarbons (mboe/d) (g) 679 -
(d) Information on BP's share of TNK-BP's production for comparative periods is provided on page 22.
(e) Nine months 2013 reflects production for the period 21 March - 30 September, averaged over the nine months.
(f) Liquids comprise crude oil, condensate and natural gas liquids.
(g) Natural gas is converted to oil equivalent at 5.8 billion cubic feet = 1 million barrels.

The commentary above contains forward-looking statements and should be read in conjunction with the cautionary statement on page 39.

Top of page 11

Other businesses and corporate

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
(1,096) (573) (674) Profit (loss) before interest and tax (1,714) (2,289)
- - - Inventory holding (gains) losses - -
(1,096) (573) (674) RC profit (loss) before interest and tax (1,714) (2,289)
523 135 289 Net charge (credit) for non-operating items 430 741
(573) (438) (385) Underlying RC profit (loss) before interest and tax (a) (1,284) (1,548)
Underlying RC profit (loss) before
interest and tax (a)
(218) (142) (309) US (572) (568)
(355) (296) (76) Non-US (712) (980)
(573) (438) (385) (1,284) (1,548)
Non-operating items
(494) (134) (297) US (435) (728)
(29) (1) 8 Non-US 5 (13)
(523) (135) (289) (430) (741)
RC profit (loss) before interest and tax
(712) (276) (606) US (1,007) (1,296)
(384) (297) (68) Non-US (707) (993)
(1,096) (573) (674) (1,714) (2,289)

(a) See page 3 for information on underlying RC profit or loss.

Other businesses and corporate comprises the Alternative Energy business, Shipping, Treasury (which includes interest income on the group's cash and cash equivalents), and corporate activities including centralized functions.

The replacement cost loss before interest and tax for the third quarter and nine months was $674 million and $1,714 million respectively, compared with $1,096 million and $2,289 million for the same periods last year.

The third-quarter result included a net non-operating charge of $289 million, primarily relating to environmental provisions, compared with a net charge of $523 million a year ago. For the nine months, the net non-operating charge was $430 million, compared with a net charge of $741 million a year ago.

After adjusting for non-operating items, the underlying replacement cost loss before interest and tax for the third quarter was $385 million compared with $573 million for the same period in 2012, primarily reflecting lower corporate costs. For the nine months, the underlying replacement cost loss before interest and tax was $1,284 million compared with $1,548 million a year ago.

In Alternative Energy, net wind generation capacity (b) at the end of the third quarter was 1,590MW (2,619MW gross), compared with 1,274MW (1,988MW gross), at the end of the same period a year ago. BP's net share of wind generation for the third quarter was 714GWh (1,236GWh gross), compared with 628GWh (964GWh gross) in the same period a year ago. For the nine months, BP's net share was 3,001GWh (5,257GWh gross), compared with 2,572GWh (4,061GWh gross), a year ago.

In our biofuels business, we have three operating mills in Brazil where ethanol-equivalent production (c) for the third quarter was 248 million litres compared with 206 million litres in the same period a year ago. For the nine months, ethanol-equivalent production was 364 million litres compared with 304 million litres a year ago.

(b)
(c) Ethanol-equivalent production includes ethanol and sugar.

Top of page 12

Gulf of Mexico oil spill

BP continues to support completion of the operational clean-up response, facilitation of economic restoration through claims processes, and facilitation of environmental restoration through natural resource damage assessment and early restoration projects relating to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

Financial update

The replacement cost loss before interest and tax for the third quarter was $30 million, compared with a $56 million loss for the same period last year. The third-quarter charge primarily reflects the ongoing costs of the Gulf Coast Restoration Organization. The cumulative pre-tax charge recognized to date amounts to $42.5 billion.

The cumulative income statement charge does not include amounts for obligations that BP considers are not possible, at this time, to measure reliably. The total amounts that will ultimately be paid by BP in relation to all the obligations relating to the incident are subject to significant uncertainty and the ultimate exposure and cost to BP will be dependent on many factors, as discussed under Provisions and contingent liabilities in Note 2 on page 27, including in relation to any new information or future developments. These could have a material impact on our consolidated financial position, results of operations and cash flows. The risks associated with the incident could also heighten the impact of the other risks to which the group is exposed, as further described under Principal risks and uncertainties on pages 35 - 42 of our second-quarter results announcement.

Trust update

During the third quarter, $1,048 million was paid out of the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill Trust (the Trust) and qualified settlement funds (QSFs), including $1,003 million for claims payments, administrative costs of the Deepwater Horizon Court Supervised Settlement Program (DHCSSP) and other resolved items, and $45 million for natural resource damage assessment. In addition, $102 million was paid out to claimants from the seafood compensation fund, for which the related provision and reimbursement asset had been previously derecognized upon funding of the QSF. At 30 September 2013, the aggregate cash balances in the Trust and the QSFs amounted to $7.1 billion, including $1.3 billion remaining in the seafood compensation fund which is yet to be distributed, and $0.9 billion held for natural resource damage early restoration.

As at 30 September 2013, the cumulative charges to be paid from the Trust, and the associated reimbursement asset recognized, amounted to $19.3 billion. This represents a decrease of $0.4 billion for the quarter which relates primarily to the derecognition of provisions in respect of business economic loss claims processed by the DHCSSP but not yet paid which can no longer be measured reliably as a result of the decision of the US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit (the Fifth Circuit) on 2 October 2013 (see Legal proceedings and investigations below). No amount is provided for business economic loss claims not yet received, processed and paid by the DHCSSP. The DHCSSP has issued eligibility notices in respect of business economic loss claims amounting to $1,029 million which have not yet been paid. See Note 2 on pages 25 - 30 and Legal proceedings on pages 35 - 37 for further details.

Legal proceedings and investigations

Phase 2 of the Trial of Liability, Limitation, Exoneration and Fault Allocation in the multi-district litigation proceedings in federal District Court (the District Court) in New Orleans (MDL 2179) commenced on 30 September 2013 to consider the issues of source control efforts and volume of oil spilled as a result of the incident. That phase completed on 18 October 2013. Post-trial briefing is scheduled for 20 December 2013 with replies due by 24 January 2014. BP does not know when the court will rule on the issues presented in either this phase or the previous phase of that trial.

On 8 July 2013, the Fifth Circuit heard BP's appeal regarding the claims administrator's implementation of the DHCSSP for the Economic and Property Damages Settlement with respect to business economic loss claims. On 2 October 2013, the Fifth Circuit (by a 2-1 vote) reversed the District Court's denial of BP's motion for a preliminary injunction and the District Court's order affirming the claims administrator's interpretation of the settlement, remanded the case for further proceedings, to be concluded by 2 December 2013, and ordered the District Court to enter a "narrowly-tailored" injunction that suspends payment to claimants affected by the misinterpretation issue and who do not have "actual injury traceable to loss from the Deepwater Horizon accident." The Fifth Circuit also retained jurisdiction to review the District Court's conclusions on remand.

On 18 October 2013, the District Court issued a preliminary injunction that, amongst other things, requires the claims administrator to temporarily suspend payments of business economic loss claims other than those claims supported by sufficiently matched accrual-basis accounting or any other business economic loss claim for which the claims administrator determines that the matching of revenue and expenses is not an issue. On 25 October 2013, the claims administrator provided a declaration outlining the criteria that the claims administrator's office will use to determine the eligibility of claims for payment. BP is reviewing this declaration and the next steps in the process.

For further details, see Legal proceedings on pages 35 - 37.

Top of page 13

Group income statement

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
92,002 94,711 96,601 Sales and other operating revenues (Note 4) 285,419 281,855
107 102 119 Earnings from joint ventures - after interest and tax 346 222
1,548 448 1,010 Earnings from associates - after interest and tax 1,742 3,353
158 207 178 Interest and other income 542 548
610 236 295 Gains on sale of businesses and fixed assets 13,072 2,285
94,425 95,704 98,203 Total revenues and other income 301,121 288,263
69,419 75,127 76,603 Purchases 223,391 218,713
7,070 7,126 6,276 Production and manufacturing expenses (a) 20,270 21,686
1,912 1,672 1,889 Production and similar taxes (Note 5) 5,556 6,085
3,253 3,162 3,415 Depreciation, depletion and amortization 9,774 9,439
Impairment and losses on sale of businesses and
486 610 767 fixed assets 1,487 5,447
290 434 511 Exploration expense 1,267 1,166
3,627 3,223 3,411 Distribution and administration expenses 9,588 9,968
(72) (135) (238) Fair value gain on embedded derivatives (404) (243)
8,440 4,485 5,569 Profit before interest and taxation 30,192 16,002
243 252 279 Finance costs (a) 813 765
Net finance expense relating to pensions and other
133 117 118 post-retirement benefits 357 406
8,064 4,116 5,172 Profit before taxation 29,022 14,831
2,717 1,990 1,580 Taxation (a) 6,362 5,130
5,347 2,126 3,592 Profit for the period 22,660 9,701
Attributable to
5,281 2,042 3,504 BP shareholders 22,409 9,529
66 84 88 Non-controlling interests 251 172
5,347 2,126 3,592 22,660 9,701
Earnings per share - cents (Note 6)
Profit for the period attributable to BP
shareholders
27.74 10.73 18.57 Basic 117.86 50.11
27.59 10.68 18.47 Diluted 117.20 49.78

(a) See Note 2 for further details of the impact of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill on the income statement line items.

Top of page 14

Group statement of comprehensive income

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 2013 2012
$ million
5,347 2,126 3,592 Profit for the period 22,660 9,701
Other comprehensive income (expense)
Items that may be reclassified subsequently to profit
or loss
762 (1,506) 662 Currency translation differences (1,431) 292
Exchange gains on translation of foreign
operations reclassified to gain or loss on sales of
12 - 9 businesses and fixed assets 9 -
61 - - Available-for-sale investments marked to market (172) 16
Available-for-sale investments reclassified to the
- - - income statement (523) -
48 (25) 104 Cash flow hedges marked to market (a) (2,062) 27
Cash flow hedges reclassified to the income
29 (1) 2 statement 1 59
3 12 10 Cash flow hedges reclassified to the balance sheet 25 12
Share of items relating to equity-accounted entities,
74 (88) 31 net of tax (24) (52)
100 26 (25) Income tax relating to items that may be reclassified 170 75
1,089 (1,582) 793 (4,007) 429
Items that will not be reclassified to profit or loss
Remeasurements of the net pension and other post-
382 2,206 310 retirement benefit liability or asset 2,466 (119)
Share of items relating to equity-accounted entities,
(1) - - net of tax - (6)
Income tax relating to items that will not be
(78) (732) (114) reclassified (845) 73
303 1,474 196 1,621 (52)
1,392 (108) 989 Other comprehensive income (expense) (2,386) 377
6,739 2,018 4,581 Total comprehensive income 20,274 10,078
Attributable to
6,662 1,956 4,485 BP shareholders 20,041 9,900
77 62 96 Non-controlling interests 233 178
6,739 2,018 4,581 20,274 10,078

(a) Nine months 2013 includes $2,061 million loss relating to the contracts to acquire Rosneft shares. See Note 3 for further information.

Top of page 15

Group statement of changes in equity

BP — shareholders' Non-controlling Total
equity interests equity
$ million
At 1 January 2013 118,546 1,206 119,752
Total comprehensive income 20,041 233 20,274
Dividends (4,266) (331) (4,597)
Repurchases of ordinary share capital (3,963) - (3,963)
Share-based payments (net of tax) 477 - 477
Share of equity-accounted entities' changes in equity (761) - (761)
Transactions involving non-controlling interests - 69 69
At 30 September 2013 130,074 1,177 131,251
BP
shareholders' Non-controlling Total
equity interests equity
$ million
At 1 January 2012 111,568 1,017 112,585
Total comprehensive income 9,900 178 10,078
Dividends (4,077) (72) (4,149)
Share-based payments (net of tax) 338 - 338
Transactions involving non-controlling interests - 31 31
At 30 September 2012 117,729 1,154 118,883

Top of page 16

Group balance sheet

30 September 31 December
$ million 2013 2012
Non-current assets
Property, plant and equipment 130,153 125,331
Goodwill 12,075 12,190
Intangible assets 25,822 24,632
Investments in joint ventures 8,838 8,614
Investments in associates 15,211 2,998
Other investments 1,670 2,704
Fixed assets 193,769 176,469
Loans 644 642
Trade and other receivables 5,928 5,961
Derivative financial instruments 3,583 4,294
Prepayments 887 830
Deferred tax assets 881 874
Defined benefit pension plan surpluses 13 12
205,705 189,082
Current assets
Loans 188 247
Inventories 29,389 28,203
Trade and other receivables 40,853 37,611
Derivative financial instruments 2,877 4,507
Prepayments 1,832 1,091
Current tax receivable 510 456
Other investments 536 319
Cash and cash equivalents 29,499 19,635
105,684 92,069
Assets classified as held for sale - 19,315
105,684 111,384
Total assets 311,389 300,466
Current liabilities
Trade and other payables 48,309 46,673
Derivative financial instruments 2,296 2,658
Accruals 7,495 6,875
Finance debt 8,620 10,033
Current tax payable 2,509 2,503
Provisions 5,405 7,587
74,634 76,329
Liabilities directly associated with assets classified as held for sale - 846
74,634 77,175
Non-current liabilities
Other payables 4,804 2,292
Derivative financial instruments 2,137 2,723
Accruals 432 491
Finance debt 41,664 38,767
Deferred tax liabilities 17,407 15,243
Provisions 28,014 30,396
Defined benefit pension plan and other post-retirement benefit plan deficits 11,046 13,627
105,504 103,539
Total liabilities 180,138 180,714
Net assets 131,251 119,752
Equity
BP shareholders' equity 130,074 118,546
Non-controlling interests 1,177 1,206
131,251 119,752

Top of page 17

Condensed group cash flow statement

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
Operating activities
8,064 4,116 5,172 Profit before taxation 29,022 14,831
Adjustments to reconcile profit before taxation to net
cash provided by operating activities
Depreciation, depletion and amortization and
3,371 3,453 3,765 exploration expenditure written off 10,587 10,029
Impairment and (gain) loss on sale of businesses and
(124) 374 472 fixed assets (11,585) 3,162
Earnings from equity-accounted entities, less dividends
(1,377) (254) (489) received (943) (2,107)
Net charge for interest and other finance expense,
122 21 170 less net interest paid 363 259
132 175 153 Share-based payments 374 265
Net operating charge for pensions and other post-
retirement benefits, less contributions and benefit
(53) (86) (67) payments for unfunded plans (437) (424)
972 1,308 (360) Net charge for provisions, less payments 1,145 1,400
Movements in inventories and other current and
(2,901) (1,796) (812) non-current assets and liabilities (a) (7,953) (8,102)
(1,960) (1,924) (1,672) Income taxes paid (4,887) (5,213)
6,246 5,387 6,332 Net cash provided by operating activities 15,686 14,100
Investing activities
(5,773) (6,111) (5,882) Capital expenditure (17,722) (16,163)
- - - Acquisitions, net of cash acquired - (116)
(380) (47) (54) Investment in joint ventures (152) (1,069)
(3) (8) (64) Investment in associates (4,955) (37)
1,400 656 307 Proceeds from disposal of fixed assets 17,743 3,188
Proceeds from disposal of businesses, net of
32 2,284 94 cash disposed 3,879 1,539
22 68 36 Proceeds from loan repayments 126 175
(4,702) (3,158) (5,563) Net cash used in investing activities (1,081) (12,483)
Financing activities
23 (1,890) (1,258) Net issue (repurchase) of shares (3,093) 61
1,206 3,039 3,245 Proceeds from long-term financing 6,347 8,056
(556) (891) (568) Repayments of long-term financing (1,747) (3,585)
94 (382) 122 Net increase (decrease) in short-term debt (1,751) 2
- - 29 Net increase (decrease) in non-controlling interests 29 -
(1,418) (1,398) (1,247) Dividends paid - BP shareholders (4,267) (4,077)
(20) (85) (140) - non-controlling interests (256) (72)
(671) (1,607) 183 Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities (4,738) 385
Currency translation differences relating to
226 12 234 cash and cash equivalents (3) (5)
1,099 634 1,186 Increase in cash and cash equivalents 9,864 1,997
15,075 27,679 28,313 Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period 19,635 14,177
16,174 28,313 29,499 Cash and cash equivalents at end of period 29,499 16,174

(a) Includes

(979) 509 (394) Inventory holding (gains) losses (292) (203)
(72) (135) (238) Fair value gain on embedded derivatives (404) (243)
(2,017) (1,430) 192 Movements related to Gulf of Mexico oil spill response (2,066) (5,317)

Inventory holding gains and losses and fair value gains on embedded derivatives are also included within profit before taxation. See Note 2 for further information on the cash flow impacts of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

Top of page 18

Capital expenditure and acquisitions

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
By business
Upstream
1,747 1,562 1,611 US (a) 4,712 4,542
3,025 2,844 3,124 Non-US 8,925 8,790
4,772 4,406 4,735 13,637 13,332
Downstream
960 777 559 US 2,175 2,573
375 397 438 Non-US 1,050 975
1,335 1,174 997 3,225 3,548
Rosneft
- - - Non-US (b) 11,941 -
- - - 11,941 -
Other businesses and corporate
127 68 54 US 146 538
100 172 136 Non-US 444 359
227 240 190 590 897
6,334 5,820 5,922 29,393 17,777
By geographical area
2,834 2,407 2,224 US (a) 7,033 7,653
3,500 3,413 3,698 Non-US (b) 22,360 10,124
6,334 5,820 5,922 29,393 17,777
Included above:
(19) - - Acquisitions and asset exchanges - 155
200 - - Other inorganic capital expenditure (a)(b) 11,941 511
(a) Third quarter and nine months 2012 includes $200 million and $511 million respectively associated with deepening our natural gas asset base.
(b) Nine months 2013 includes $11,941 million relating to our investment in Rosneft - see Note 3 for further information.

Exchange rates

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 2013 2012
1.58 1.54 1.55 US dollar/sterling average rate for the period 1.54 1.58
1.62 1.52 1.61 US dollar/sterling period-end rate 1.61 1.62
1.25 1.31 1.32 US dollar/euro average rate for the period 1.32 1.28
1.29 1.30 1.35 US dollar/euro period-end rate 1.35 1.29

Top of page 19

Analysis of replacement cost profit before interest and tax and

reconciliation to profit before taxation

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
4,907 4,400 4,158 Upstream 14,120 14,803
2,408 1,016 616 Downstream 3,279 1,535
1,282 - - TNK-BP (a) 12,500 2,798
- 218 792 Rosneft (b) 1,095 -
(1,096) (573) (674) Other businesses and corporate (1,714) (2,289)
7,501 5,061 4,892 29,280 16,847
(56) (199) (30) Gulf of Mexico oil spill response (251) (869)
(64) 129 263 Consolidation adjustment - UPII 819 (148)
7,381 4,991 5,125 RC profit before interest and tax 29,848 15,830
Inventory holding gains (losses)
12 (4) 7 Upstream 1 (108)
982 (515) 393 Downstream 286 278
65 - - TNK-BP (net of tax) - 2
- 13 44 Rosneft (net of tax) 57 -
8,440 4,485 5,569 Profit before interest and tax 30,192 16,002
243 252 279 Finance costs 813 765
Net finance expense relating to pensions and
133 117 118 other post-retirement benefits 357 406
8,064 4,116 5,172 Profit before taxation 29,022 14,831
RC profit before interest and tax
1,422 1,206 560 US 3,537 (889)
5,959 3,785 4,565 Non-US 26,311 16,719
7,381 4,991 5,125 29,848 15,830
(a) BP ceased equity accounting for its share of TNK-BP's earnings from 22 October 2012. See Note 3 on page 31 for further information.
(b) BP's investment in Rosneft is accounted under the equity method from 21 March 2013. See Rosneft on page 10 for further information.

IFRS requires that the measure of profit or loss disclosed for each operating segment is the measure that is provided regularly to the chief operating decision maker for the purposes of performance assessment and resource allocation. For BP, both replacement cost (RC) profit or loss before interest and tax and underlying RC profit or loss before interest and tax (see page 3 for further information) are provided regularly to the chief operating decision maker. In such cases IFRS requires that the measure of profit disclosed for each operating segment is the measure that is closest to IFRS, which for BP is RC profit or loss before interest and tax. In addition, a reconciliation is required between the total of the operating segments' measures of profit or loss and the group profit or loss before taxation.

RC profit or loss reflects the replacement cost of supplies. The RC profit or loss for the period is arrived at by excluding from profit or loss inventory holding gains and losses and their associated tax effect. RC profit or loss for the group is not a recognized GAAP measure.

Inventory holding gains and losses represent the difference between the cost of sales calculated using the average cost to BP of supplies acquired during the period and the cost of sales calculated on the first-in first-out (FIFO) method after adjusting for any changes in provisions where the net realizable value of the inventory is lower than its cost. Under the FIFO method, which we use for IFRS reporting, the cost of inventory charged to the income statement is based on its historic cost of purchase, or manufacture, rather than its replacement cost. In volatile energy markets, this can have a significant distorting effect on reported income. The amounts disclosed represent the difference between the charge (to the income statement) for inventory on a FIFO basis (after adjusting for any related movements in net realizable value provisions) and the charge that would have arisen if an average cost of supplies was used for the period. For this purpose, the average cost of supplies during the period is principally calculated on a monthly basis by dividing the total cost of inventory acquired in the period by the number of barrels acquired. The amounts disclosed are not separately reflected in the financial statements as a gain or loss. No adjustment is made in respect of the cost of inventories held as part of a trading position and certain other temporary inventory positions.

Management believes this information is useful to illustrate to investors the fact that crude oil and product prices can vary significantly from period to period and that the impact on our reported result under IFRS can be significant. Inventory holding gains and losses vary from period to period due principally to changes in oil prices as well as changes to underlying inventory levels. In order for investors to understand the operating performance of the group excluding the impact of oil price changes on the replacement of inventories, and to make comparisons of operating performance between reporting periods, BP's management believes it is helpful to disclose this information.

Top of page 20

Non-operating items (a)

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
Upstream
Impairment and gain (loss) on sale of businesses and
492 65 (374) fixed assets (411) (35)
(48) - (21) Environmental and other provisions (21) (48)
- - - Restructuring, integration and rationalization costs - -
73 135 238 Fair value gain (loss) on embedded derivatives 404 244
(1) (57) (69) Other (135) (318)
516 143 (226) (163) (157)
Downstream
Impairment and gain (loss) on sale of businesses and
(115) (310) (11) fixed assets (287) (2,853)
(171) - (132) Environmental and other provisions (141) (171)
(21) (2) - Restructuring, integration and rationalization costs (4) (45)
- - - Fair value gain (loss) on embedded derivatives - -
(8) (11) (14) Other (29) (30)
(315) (323) (157) (461) (3,099)
TNK-BP
Impairment and gain (loss) on sale of businesses and
38 - - fixed assets 12,500 (55)
(50) - - Environmental and other provisions - (50)
- - - Restructuring, integration and rationalization costs - -
- - - Fair value gain (loss) on embedded derivatives - -
- - - Other - -
(12) - - 12,500 (105)
Rosneft
Impairment and gain (loss) on sale of businesses and
- - (16) fixed assets (16) -
- - - Environmental and other provisions - -
- - - Restructuring, integration and rationalization costs - -
- - - Fair value gain (loss) on embedded derivatives - -
- - - Other - -
- - (16) (16) -
Other businesses and corporate
Impairment and gain (loss) on sale of businesses and
(253) (129) (87) fixed assets (217) (274)
(246) (6) (216) Environmental and other provisions (222) (261)
- - (4) Restructuring, integration and rationalization costs (6) (1)
(1) - - Fair value gain (loss) on embedded derivatives - (1)
(23) - 18 Other 15 (204)
(523) (135) (289) (430) (741)
(56) (199) (30) Gulf of Mexico oil spill response (251) (869)
(390) (514) (718) Total before interest and taxation 11,179 (4,971)
(3) (10) (9) Finance costs (b) (29) (13)
(393) (524) (727) Total before taxation 11,150 (4,984)
72 158 205 Taxation credit (charge) (c) 386 1,509
(321) (366) (522) Total after taxation for period 11,536 (3,475)
(a) Non-operating items are charges and credits arising in consolidated entities and in TNK-BP and Rosneft that are included in the financial statements and that BP discloses separately because it considers such disclosures to be meaningful and relevant to investors. They are items that management considers not to be part of underlying business operations and are disclosed in order to enable investors better to understand and evaluate the group's reported financial performance. An analysis of non-operating items by region is shown on pages 7, 9 and 11.
(b) Finance costs relate to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. See Note 2 for further details.
(c) For the Gulf of Mexico oil spill and certain impairment losses, disposal gains and fair value gains and losses on embedded derivatives, tax is based on statutory rates, except for non-deductible items. For other items reported for consolidated subsidiaries, tax is calculated using the group's discrete quarterly effective tax rate (adjusted for the items noted above, equity-accounted earnings and the deferred tax adjustments relating to a reduction in UK corporation tax rates ($99 million for the third quarter 2013) and changes in the taxation of UK oil and gas production ($256 million for the third quarter 2012)). Non-operating items reported within the equity-accounted earnings of TNK-BP and Rosneft are reported net of tax.

Top of page 21

Non-GAAP information on

f air value accounting effects

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
Favourable (unfavourable) impact relative to
management's measure of performance
25 (31) (39) Upstream (130) (101)
(286) 138 53 Downstream 178 (435)
(261) 107 14 48 (536)
99 (53) (6) Taxation credit (charge) (a) (29) 211
(162) 54 8 19 (325)

(a) Tax is calculated using the group's discrete quarterly effective tax rate (adjusted for the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, equity-accounted earnings, certain impairment losses, disposal gains and fair value gains and losses on embedded derivatives and the deferred tax adjustments relating to a reduction in UK corporation tax rates ($99 million for the third quarter 2013) and changes in the taxation of UK oil and gas production ($256 million for the third quarter 2012)).

BP uses derivative instruments to manage the economic exposure relating to inventories above normal operating requirements of crude oil, natural gas and petroleum products. Under IFRS, these inventories are recorded at historic cost. The related derivative instruments, however, are required to be recorded at fair value with gains and losses recognized in income because hedge accounting is either not permitted or not followed, principally due to the impracticality of effectiveness testing requirements. Therefore, measurement differences in relation to recognition of gains and losses occur. Gains and losses on these inventories are not recognized until the commodity is sold in a subsequent accounting period. Gains and losses on the related derivative commodity contracts are recognized in the income statement from the time the derivative commodity contract is entered into on a fair value basis using forward prices consistent with the contract maturity.

BP enters into commodity contracts to meet certain business requirements, such as the purchase of crude for a refinery or the sale of BP's gas production. Under IFRS these contracts are treated as derivatives and are required to be fair valued when they are managed as part of a larger portfolio of similar transactions. Gains and losses arising are recognized in the income statement from the time the derivative commodity contract is entered into.

IFRS requires that inventory held for trading be recorded at its fair value using period-end spot prices whereas any related derivative commodity instruments are required to be recorded at values based on forward prices consistent with the contract maturity. Depending on market conditions, these forward prices can be either higher or lower than spot prices resulting in measurement differences.

BP enters into contracts for pipelines and storage capacity, oil and gas processing and liquefied natural gas (LNG) that, under IFRS, are recorded on an accruals basis. These contracts are risk-managed using a variety of derivative instruments, which are fair valued under IFRS. This results in measurement differences in relation to recognition of gains and losses.

The way that BP manages the economic exposures described above, and measures performance internally, differs from the way these activities are measured under IFRS. BP calculates this difference for consolidated entities by comparing the IFRS result with management's internal measure of performance. Under management's internal measure of performance the inventory and capacity contracts in question are valued based on fair value using relevant forward prices prevailing at the end of the period, the fair values of certain derivative instruments used to risk manage LNG and oil and gas processing contracts are deferred to match with the underlying exposure and the commodity contracts for business requirements are accounted for on an accruals basis. We believe that disclosing management's estimate of this difference provides useful information for investors because it enables investors to see the economic effect of these activities as a whole. The impacts of fair value accounting effects, relative to management's internal measure of performance, are shown in the table above. A reconciliation to GAAP information is set out below.

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
Upstream
Replacement cost profit before interest and tax
4,882 4,431 4,197 adjusted for fair value accounting effects 14,250 14,904
25 (31) (39) Impact of fair value accounting effects (130) (101)
4,907 4,400 4,158 Replacement cost profit before interest and tax 14,120 14,803
Downstream
Replacement cost profit before interest and tax
2,694 878 563 adjusted for fair value accounting effects 3,101 1,970
(286) 138 53 Impact of fair value accounting effects 178 (435)
2,408 1,016 616 Replacement cost profit before interest and tax 3,279 1,535
Total group
Profit before interest and tax
8,701 4,378 5,555 adjusted for fair value accounting effects 30,144 16,538
(261) 107 14 Impact of fair value accounting effects 48 (536)
8,440 4,485 5,569 Profit before interest and tax 30,192 16,002

Top of page 22

Realizations and marker prices

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 2013 2012
Average realizations (a)
Liquids ($/bbl) (b)
90.62 90.51 91.20 US 92.68 97.05
108.74 99.12 107.78 Europe 104.61 110.25
104.39 97.26 107.21 Rest of World 104.07 106.25
99.00 94.92 100.66 BP Average 99.59 102.79
Natural gas ($/mcf)
2.54 3.37 2.91 US 3.07 2.22
8.46 9.37 9.72 Europe 9.61 8.44
5.31 5.89 5.67 Rest of World 5.90 5.25
4.77 5.37 5.01 BP Average 5.31 4.67
Total hydrocarbons ($/boe)
59.36 58.62 59.24 US 60.29 61.29
86.88 84.24 95.00 Europe 89.58 85.48
57.64 59.53 61.74 Rest of World 61.17 57.84
60.68 61.27 62.80 BP Average 63.09 61.69
Average oil marker prices ($/bbl)
109.50 102.43 110.29 Brent 108.46 112.21
92.10 94.07 105.79 West Texas Intermediate 98.13 96.13
109.04 104.53 110.52 Alaska North Slope 108.62 112.42
104.17 99.41 104.77 Mars 104.33 107.87
108.69 101.89 109.36 Urals (NWE - cif) 107.29 110.71
55.24 51.28 57.11 Russian domestic oil 54.63 53.86
Average natural gas marker prices
2.80 4.10 3.58 Henry Hub gas price ($/mmBtu) (c) 3.67 2.58
56.79 65.60 65.21 UK Gas - National Balancing Point (p/therm) 68.17 57.86
(a) Based on sales of consolidated subsidiaries only - this excludes equity-accounted entities.
(b) Crude oil and natural gas liquids.
(c) Henry Hub First of Month Index.

BP share of TNK-BP production for comparative periods

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
Production (net of royalties) (BP share) (a)(b)
876 - - Crude oil (mb/d) 250 879
728 - - Natural gas (mmcf/d) 246 773
1,002 - - Total hydrocarbons (mboe/d) (c) 292 1,012
(a) BP continued to report its share of TNK-BP's production and reserves following the agreement to sell its 50% share to Rosneft until the sale completed on 21 March 2013. Estimated hydrocarbon production for the nine months 2013 represents BP's share of TNK-BP's estimated production from 1 January to 20 March, averaged over the full nine months.
(b) On 21 March 2013, Rosneft acquired 100% of TNK-BP. BP's share of Rosneft production, which includes TNK-BP, is shown on page 10.
(c) Natural gas is converted to oil equivalent at 5.8 billion cubic feet = 1 million barrels.

Top of page 23

Notes

  1. Basis of preparation

(a) Basis of preparation

The interim financial information included in this report has been prepared in accordance with IAS 34 'Interim Financial Reporting'.

The results for the interim periods are unaudited and, in the opinion of management, include all adjustments necessary for a fair presentation of the results for the periods presented. All such adjustments are of a normal recurring nature. This report should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements and related notes for the year ended 31 December 2012 included in BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 .

BP prepares its consolidated financial statements included within BP Annual Report and Form 20-F on the basis of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB), IFRS as adopted by the European Union (EU) and in accordance with the provisions of the UK Companies Act 2006. IFRS as adopted by the EU differs in certain respects from IFRS as issued by the IASB, however, the differences have no impact on the group's consolidated financial statements for the periods presented.

To the greatest extent possible, the financial information presented herein has been prepared in accordance with the accounting policies expected to be used in preparing BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2013.

These accounting policies differ from those used in BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 as noted below.

Segmental reporting

On 21 March 2013, BP completed sale and purchase agreements with Rosneft and Rosneftegaz - the Russian state-owned parent company of Rosneft - for the sale of BP's 50% interest in TNK-BP to Rosneft, and for BP's further investment in Rosneft. With effect from that date, BP's 19.75% shareholding in Rosneft is accounted for using the equity method and is reported as a separate operating segment.

Comparative group income statement and group balance sheet

As noted in BP's results announcement for the first quarter 2013, in addition to the changes made to the comparative data presented in this report as a result of the adoption of the amended IAS 19 and the new standard IFRS 11 (as detailed below), the comparative group balance sheet as at 31 December 2012 also reflects an adjustment, made subsequent to releasing our unaudited fourth quarter and full year 2012 results announcement dated 5 February 2013, which was included in the balance sheet approved by the board of directors on 6 March 2013 and published in BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 . The difference relates to an adjustment of $0.8 billion that was made to decrease provisions relating to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill as at 31 December 2012, with a corresponding decrease in the reimbursement asset. There was no impact on profit or loss for the year. A further adjustment was made to the group income statement to correct a $4.7 billion understatement of revenue and purchases for the year ended 31 December 2012. There was no impact on profit or loss for the year. For further information, see BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 .

New or amended International Financial Reporting Standards adopted

BP adopted several new or amended accounting standards issued by the IASB with effect from 1 January 2013.

IFRS 10 'Consolidated Financial Statements', IFRS 11 'Joint Arrangements' and IFRS 12 'Disclosure of Interests in Other Entities' were issued in May 2011. The main impact of this suite of new standards for BP is that certain of the group's jointly controlled entities, which were previously equity-accounted, now fall under the definition of a joint operation under IFRS 11 and so we now recognize the group's assets, liabilities, revenue and expenses relating to these arrangements. Whilst the effect on the group's reported income and net assets as a result of the new requirements is not material, the change impacts certain of the component lines of the income statement, balance sheet and cash flow statement. On the balance sheet, there was a reduction in investments in joint ventures of approximately $7 billion as at 31 December 2012, which has been replaced with the recognition (on the relevant line items, principally intangible assets and property, plant and equipment) of our share of the assets and liabilities relating to these arrangements.

An amended version of IAS 19 'Employee Benefits' was issued in June 2011. The main impact for BP is that the expense for defined benefit pension and other post-retirement benefit plans now includes a net interest income or expense, which is calculated by applying the discount rate used for measuring the obligation and applying that to the net defined benefit asset or liability. This means that the expected return on assets credited to profit or loss (previously calculated based on the expected long-term return on pension assets) is now based on a lower corporate bond rate, the same rate that is used to discount the pension liability. Under the amended IAS 19, profit before tax was $767 million and $749 million lower for full year 2012 and the first nine months of 2013 respectively, with corresponding pre-tax increases in other comprehensive income. There is no impact on cash flows or on the balance sheet at 31 December 2012 or 30 September 2013.

Top of page 24

Notes

  1. Basis of preparation (continued)

The accounting policies which will be used in preparing BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2013 which differ from those used in BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 are shown in full in BP Financial and Operating Information 2008-2012 available on bp.com/investors .

There are no other new or amended standards or interpretations adopted with effect from 1 January 2013 that have a significant effect on the financial statements.

(b) Impact of the adoption of new or amended International Financial Reporting Standards

The following tables set out the adjustments made to certain selected line items of the previously reported comparative amounts as a result of the adoption of the amended IAS 19 'Employee Benefits' and the new standard IFRS 11 'Joint Arrangements'.

Annual restated information for 2012 is shown in BP Financial and Operating Information 2008-2012 available on bp.com/investors . Full restated quarterly information for 2012 was published in the quarterly supplement of BP Financial and Operating Information 2008-2012 on bp.com/investors in May 2013.

First — quarter Second — quarter Third — quarter Fourth — quarter Full — year
2012 2012 2012 2012 2012
Selected lines only As As As As As As As As As As
reported restated reported restated reported restated reported restated reported restated
$ million
(except per share amounts)
Income statement
Earnings from joint
ventures - after interest
and tax 290 151 88 (36) 235 107 131 38 744 260
Net finance income
(expense) relating to
pensions and other
post-retirement benefits 53 (136) 55 (137) 58 (133) 35 (160) 201 (566)
Profit (loss) for the period 5,976 5,828 (1,340) (1,474) 5,500 5,347 1,680 1,550 11,816 11,251
Earnings per share
Basic (cents) 31.17 30.39 (7.29) (7.99) 28.54 27.74 8.48 7.80 60.86 57.89
Diluted (cents) 30.74 29.97 (7.29) (7.99) 28.39 27.59 8.43 7.75 60.45 57.50
Replacement cost profit
(loss) before interest
and tax
Upstream
US 2,534 2,534 (1,584) (1,584) 1,178 1,178 4,790 4,790 6,918 6,918
Non-US 4,445 4,449 4,497 4,497 3,732 3,729 2,882 2,898 15,556 15,573
6,979 6,983 2,913 2,913 4,910 4,907 7,672 7,688 22,474 22,491
Downstream
US 158 158 (1,984) (1,984) 1,106 1,106 478 478 (242) (242)
Non-US 698 701 248 252 1,297 1,302 845 851 3,088 3,106
856 859 (1,736) (1,732) 2,403 2,408 1,323 1,329 2,846 2,864
Group
US 1,935 1,935 (4,246) (4,246) 1,422 1,422 1,069 1,069 180 180
Non-US 5,781 5,789 4,967 4,971 5,956 5,959 3,443 3,464 20,147 20,183
7,716 7,724 721 725 7,378 7,381 4,512 4,533 20,327 20,363
Balance sheet
Property, plant and
equipment 119,991 124,379 117,565 121,960 119,687 124,288 120,488 125,331 120,488 125,331
Intangible assets 22,000 22,570 22,345 22,919 23,184 23,766 24,041 24,632 24,041 24,632
Investments in joint
ventures 15,862 8,578 15,672 8,532 15,920 8,843 15,724 8,614 15,724 8,614
Net assets 119,220 119,315 113,323 113,415 118,773 118,883 119,620 119,752 119,620 119,752
Cash flow statement
Profit (loss) before
taxation 8,923 8,756 (1,815) (1,989) 8,239 8,064 3,462 3,300 18,809 18,131
Net cash provided by
(used in) operating
activities 3,367 3,406 4,403 4,448 6,287 6,246 6,340 6,379 20,397 20,479
Net cash provided by
(used in) investing
activities (4,329) (4,308) (3,462) (3,473) (4,672) (4,702) (499) (592) (12,962) (13,075)
Increase (decrease) in
cash and cash
equivalents 25 90 789 808 1,160 1,099 3,507 3,461 5,481 5,458

Top of page 25

Notes

  1. Gulf of Mexico oil spill

(a) Overview

As a consequence of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, BP continues to incur various costs and has also recognized liabilities for future costs. The information presented in this note should be read in conjunction with

BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 - Financial statements - Note 2, Note 36 and Note 43 and Legal proceedings on pages 162 - 169 and on pages 35 - 37 of this report.

The group income statement includes a pre-tax charge of $39 million for the third quarter in relation to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill and $280 million for the first nine months of 2013. The third-quarter charge reflects the ongoing costs of the Gulf Coast Restoration Organization. The cumulative pre-tax income statement charge since the incident amounts to $42,487 million.

The cumulative income statement charge does not include amounts for obligations that BP considers are not possible, at this time, to measure reliably. For further information, including developments in relation to the interpretation of business economic loss claims under the PSC settlement and the derecognition of the provision for those claims which can no longer be measured reliably, see Provisions below.

The total amounts that will ultimately be paid by BP in relation to all the obligations relating to the incident are subject to significant uncertainty and the ultimate exposure and cost to BP will be dependent on many factors, as discussed under Provisions below, including in relation to any new information or future developments. These could have a material impact on our consolidated financial position, results of operations and cash flows. The risks associated with the incident could also heighten the impact of the other risks to which the group is exposed as further described under Principal risks and uncertainties on pages 35 - 42 of our second-quarter 2013 results announcement.

The amounts set out below reflect the impacts on the financial statements of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill for the periods presented. The income statement, balance sheet and cash flow statement impacts are included within the relevant line items in those statements as set out below.

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
Income statement
56 199 30 Production and manufacturing expenses 251 869
(56) (199) (30) Profit (loss) before interest and taxation (251) (869)
3 10 9 Finance costs 29 13
(59) (209) (39) Profit (loss) before taxation (280) (882)
(51) 42 (44) Taxation (7) 25
(110) (167) (83) Profit (loss) for the period (287) (857)
30 September 2013 — Of which: 31 December 2012 Of which:
amount related amount related
$ million Total to the trust fund Total to the trust fund
Balance sheet
Current assets
Trade and other receivables 2,861 2,861 4,239 4,178
Current liabilities
Trade and other payables (1,029) (1) (522) (22)
Provisions (3,457) - (5,449) -
Net current assets (liabilities) (1,625) 2,860 (1,732) 4,156
Non-current assets
Other receivables 2,286 2,286 2,264 2,264
Non-current liabilities
Other payables (2,977) - (175) -
Provisions (6,159) - (9,751) -
Deferred tax 2,989 - 4,002 -
Net non-current assets (liabilities) (3,861) 2,286 (3,660) 2,264
Net assets (liabilities) (5,486) 5,146 (5,392) 6,420

Top of page 26

Notes

  1. Gulf of Mexico oil spill (continued)
Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
Cash flow statement - Operating activities
(59) (209) (39) Profit (loss) before taxation (280) (882)
Adjustments to reconcile profit (loss) before
taxation to net cash provided by operating
activities
Net charge for interest and other finance
3 10 9 expense, less net interest paid 29 13
546 1,390 (576) Net charge for provisions, less payments 1,118 1,216
Movements in inventories and other current
(2,017) (1,430) 192 and non-current assets and liabilities (2,066) (5,317)
(1,527) (239) (414) Pre-tax cash flows (1,199) (4,970)

Net cash from operating activities relating to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, on a post-tax basis, amounted to an outflow of $4 million and $193 million in the third quarter and nine months of 2013 respectively. For the same periods in 2012, the amounts were an outflow of $134 million and $3,011 million respectively.

Trust fund

BP established the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill Trust (the Trust), funded in the amount of $20 billion, to satisfy legitimate individual and business claims, state and local government claims resolved by BP, final judgments and settlements, state and local response costs, and natural resource damages and related costs. The Trust is available to fund the qualified settlement funds (QSFs) established under the terms of the settlement agreements (comprising the Economic and Property Damages Settlement Agreement (EPD Settlement Agreement) and the Medical Benefits Class Action Settlement) with the Plaintiffs' Steering Committee (PSC) administered through the De e p wa t e r H o ri zon C o urt S u pe r vised S e t tlem e nt P r o gr a m (DHCSSP), and the separate BP claims programme - see below for further information. Fines and penalties are not covered by the trust fund .

The funding of the Trust was completed in the fourth quarter of 2012. The obligation to fund the $20-billion trust fund, adjusted to take account of the time value of money, was recognized in full in 2010 and charged to the income statement .

An asset has been recognized representing BP's right to receive reimbursement from the trust fund. This is the portion of the estimated future expenditure provided for that will be settled by payments from the trust fund. We use the term 'reimbursement asset' to describe this asset. BP will not actually receive any reimbursements from the trust fund, instead payments will be made directly from the trust fund, and BP will be released from its corresponding obligation. The reimbursement asset is recorded within other receivables on the balance sheet apportioned between current and non-current elements. The table below shows movements in the reimbursement asset during the period to 30 September 2013. The increase in the provision of $1,888 million for the first nine months relates principally to business economic loss claims processed by the DHCSSP between finalization of the

BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 and finalization of the second-quarter 2013 provisions, as well as increases in the provision for claims administration costs. Since the second-quarter results announcement dated 30 July 2013, a provision of $379 million has been derecognized relating to business economic loss claims that can no longer be estimated reliably (for further details, see Provisions below). The amount of the reimbursement asset at 30 September 2013 is equal to the amount of provisions and payables recognized at that date that will be covered by the trust fund - see below.

Third Nine
quarter months
$ million 2013 2013
Opening balance 6,597 6,442
Net increase (decrease) in provision for items covered by the trust fund (23) 1,888
Derecognition of provision for items that can no longer be estimated reliably (379) (379)
Amounts paid directly by the trust fund (1,048) (2,804)
At 30 September 2013 5,147 5,147
Of which - current 2,861 2,861
- non-current 2,286 2,286

Top of page 27

Notes

  1. Gulf of Mexico oil spill (continued)

Any increases in estimated future expenditure that will be covered by the trust fund (up to an aggregate of $20 billion) have no net income statement effect as a reimbursement asset is also recognized, as described above. As at 30 September 2013, the cumulative charges, and the associated reimbursement asset recognized, amounted to $19,305 million. Thus, a further $695 million could be charged in subsequent periods for items covered by the trust fund with no net impact on the income statement. Additional liabilities in excess of this amount regarding claims under the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 (OPA 90), claims that are currently administered by the DHCSSP, or otherwise, including the various claims described in Legal proceedings on pages 35 - 37 of this report and on pages 162 - 169 of BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 , would be expensed to the income statement. Information on those items that currently cannot be estimated reliably is provided under Provisions below.

Under the terms of the EPD Settlement Agreement with the PSC, several QSFs were established in 2012. These QSFs each relate to specific elements of the agreement, have been and will continue to be funded through payments from the Trust, and are available to make payments to claimants in accordance with those elements of the agreement.

As at 30 September 2013, the aggregate cash balances in the Trust and the QSFs amounted to $7.1 billion, including $1.3 billion remaining in the seafood compensation fund which has yet to be distributed and $0.9 billion held for natural resource damage early restoration. Should the cash balances in the trust fund not be sufficient, payments in respect of legitimate claims and other costs will be made directly by BP.

The EPD Settlement Agreement with the PSC provides for a court-supervised settlement programme which commenced operation on 4 June 2012. See Provisions below for further information on the current status of the EPD Settlement Agreement. In addition, a separate BP claims programme began processing claims from claimants not in the Economic and Property Damages class as determined by the EPD Settlement Agreement or who have requested to opt out of that settlement. Payments made to claimants through the BP claims programme are paid directly from the Trust. A separate claims administrator has been appointed to pay medical claims and to implement other aspects of the Medical Benefits Class Action Settlement. For further information on the PSC settlements, see Legal proceedings on pages 35 - 37 of this report and on pages 166 -1 68 of BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012.

(b) Provisions and contingent liabilities

BP has recorded certain provisions and disclosed certain contingent liabilities as a consequence of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. These are described below and in more detail in BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012

  • Financial statements - Notes 2, 36 and 43.

Provisions

BP has recorded provisions relating to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill in relation to environmental expenditure, spill response costs, litigation and claims, and Clean Water Act penalties. Movements in each class of provision during the third quarter and first nine months of 2013 are presented in the tables below.

Spill Litigation — and Clean — Water Act
$ million Environmental response claims penalties Total
At 1 July 2013 1,663 205 5,862 3,510 11,240
Decrease in provision – items
covered by the trust fund (23) (23)
Derecognition of provision for items
that can no longer be estimated
reliably (379) (379)
Utilization – paid by BP (9) (49) (116) (174)
– paid by the trust fund (45) (1,003) (1,048)
At 30 September 2013 1,609 156 4,341 3,510 9,616
Of which – current 275 98 3,084 3,457
– non-current 1,334 58 1,257 3,510 6,159
Of which – payable from the
trust fund 1,253 47 3,796 5,096

Top of page 28

Notes

  1. Gulf of Mexico oil spill

(continued)

Spill Litigation — and Clean — Water Act
Environmental response claims penalties Total
$ million
At 1 January 2013 1,862 345 9,483 3,510 15,200
Increase (decrease) in provision -
items not covered by the trust fund (24) (66) 258 - 168
Increase in provision - items
covered by the trust fund 24 - 1,864 - 1,888
Derecognition of provision for items
that can no longer be estimated
reliably - - (379) - (379)
Unwinding of discount 1 - - - 1
Reclassified to other payables - - (3,933) - (3,933)
Utilization - paid by BP (46) (123) (390) - (559)
- paid by the trust fund (208) - (2,562) - (2,770)
At 30 September 2013 1,609 156 4,341 3,510 9,616

Environmental

The environmental provision includes amounts for BP's commitment to fund the Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative, estimated natural resource damage (NRD) assessment costs and early NRD restoration projects under the $1-billion framework agreement.

Spill response

The spill response provision relates primarily to ongoing shoreline operational activity.

Litigation and claims

The litigation and claims provision includes amounts that can be estimated reliably for the future cost of settling claims by individuals and businesses for removal costs, damage to real or personal property, lost profits or impairment of earning capacity and loss of subsistence use of natural resources ("Individual and Business Claims"), other than as noted below, and claims by state and local government entities for removal costs, physical damage to real or personal property, loss of government revenue and increased public services costs ("State and Local Claims") under OPA 90, except as described under Contingent liabilities below . Claims administration costs and legal fees have also been provided for.

BP has provided for its best estimate of the cost associated with the PSC settlement agreements with the exception of the cost of business economic loss claims. As disclosed in BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 , as part of its monitoring of payments made by the DHCSSP, BP identified multiple business economic loss claim determinations that appeared to result from an interpretation of the EPD Settlement Agreement by the claims administrator that BP believes was incorrect. On 5 rch 2013, the federal district court in New Orleans (the District Court) affirmed the claims administrator's interpretation of the agreement and rejected BP's position as it relates to business economic loss claims and BP's related motions for injunctions and other relief.

BP appealed to the US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit (the Fifth Circuit). On 2 October 2013, the Fifth Circuit (by a 2-1 vote) reversed the District Court's denial of BP's motion for a preliminary injunction and the District Court's order affirming the claims administrator's interpretation of the settlement, remanded the case for further proceedings, to be concluded by 2 December 2013, and ordered the District Court to enter a "narrowly-tailored" injunction that suspends payment to claimants affected by the misinterpretation issue and who do not have "actual injury traceable to loss from the Deepwater Horizon accident."

The Fifth Circuit also retained jurisdiction to review the District Court's conclusions on remand.

On 18 October 2013, the District Court issued a preliminary injunction that, amongst other things, requires the claims administrator to temporarily suspend payments of business economic loss claims other than those claims supported by sufficiently matched accrual-basis accounting or any other business economic loss claim for which the claims administrator determines that the matching of revenue and expenses is not an issue. On 25 October 2013, the claims administrator provided a declaration outlining the criteria that the claims administrator's office will use to determine the eligibility of claims for payment. BP is reviewing this declaration and the next steps in the process.

As at 30 June 2013, BP held a provision for business economic loss claims which had been processed and for which eligibility notices had been issued but had not yet been paid by the DHCSSP. Pending the implementation of the Fifth Circuit's directions to the District Court on remand, there is now significant uncertainty as to the amount of claims which have been processed but not yet paid by the DHCSSP that will be determined to be payable in the future. BP has derecognized the remaining provision for business economic loss claims which have been processed but not yet paid, as BP considers that no reliable estimate can now be made for these claims.

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Notes

  1. Gulf of Mexico oil spill (continued)

Given: (i) the inherent uncertainty as to the interpretation of the EPD Settlement Agreement that currently exists and will continue until new policies and procedures are implemented in response to the Fifth Circuit's ruling and thereafter until the impact of such policies and procedures on the value and volume of future claims becomes clear; (ii) the lack of sufficient claims data under the DHCSSP from which to extrapolate any reliable trends - the number of claims received and the average claims payments have been higher than previously assumed by BP, which may or may not continue; and (iii) uncertainty as to the ultimate deadline for filing business economic loss claims, which is dependent on the date at which all relevant appeals are concluded, management is unable to estimate reliably either future claims based on the claims data received to date, or whether and to what extent determined but unpaid claims will be paid, and therefore believes that no reliable estimate can currently be made of any business economic loss claims not yet received, processed and paid by the DHCSSP. A provision will be established when a reliable estimate can be made of the liability as explained more fully below.

As reported in BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2011 , the estimated cost of the PSC settlement for Individual and Business Claims was originally $7.8 billion. BP's estimate at the time of the second-quarter results announcement dated 30 July 2013 of the total cost of those elements of the PSC settlement that it considered could be reliably estimated, which for business economic loss claims included only those claims for which eligibility notices had been issued by the DHCSSP prior to finalization of the second-quarter 2013 provisions, was $9.6 billion. Following the derecognition of the provision in respect of processed but unpaid business economic loss claims, the current estimate for the total cost of those elements of the PSC settlement that BP considers can be reliably estimated is $9.2 billion.

The total cost of the PSC settlement is likely to be significantly higher than the amount recognized to date of $9.2 billion because the current estimate does not reflect business economic loss claims not yet received, processed and paid. The DHCSSP has issued eligibility notices in respect of business economic loss claims of $1,029 million which have not yet been paid. Of this amount, eligibility notices in respect of claims amounting to $650 million have been issued since the second-quarter 2013 provisions were finalized. Furthermore, a significant number of business economic loss claims have been received but have not yet been processed, and further claims are likely to be received.

The provision recognized for litigation and claims includes an estimate for State and Local Claims. Although the provision recognized is BP's current reliable best estimate of the amount required to settle these obligations, significant uncertainty exists in relation to the outcome of any litigation proceedings and the amount of claims that will become payable by BP. See Legal proceedings on page 166 of BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 and Contingent liabilities below for further details .

Clean Water Act penalties

A provision was recognized in 2010 for the estimated civil penalties for strict liability under the Clean Water Act, which are based on a specified range per barrel of oil released. No adjustments have been made subsequently to this estimate. The penalty rate per barrel used to calculate the provision is based upon the company's conclusion, amongst other things, that it did not act with gross negligence or engage in wilful misconduct. The amount and timing of the amount to be paid ultimately is subject to significant uncertainty since it will depend on what is determined by the court in the federal multi-district litigation proceedings in New Orleans (MDL 2179) as to gross negligence, the volume of oil spilled and the application of penalty factors, or upon any settlement, if one were to be reached. The trial court has wide discretion in its determination as to whether a defendant's conduct involved gross negligence as well as in its determinations on the volume of oil spilled and the application of penalty factors. See

BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 - Financial statements - Note 36 for further details.

Provision movements and analysis of income statement charge

A net decrease in the provision for the estimated cost of the settlement with the PSC and various other costs of $402 million for the third quarter and a net increase of $1,677 million for the nine months was recognized. These amounts included the derecognition of $379 million relating to business economic loss claims that can no longer be estimated reliably. The provisions relating to the agreement with the US government to resolve all criminal claims and relating to the Gulf Region Health Outreach Program, amounting to $3.9 billion, were reclassified to payables during the first quarter, upon court approval. Utilization of the provision of $3,329 million during the first nine months of 2013 included $2,451 million paid out under the PSC settlement from the Trust.

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Notes

  1. Gulf of Mexico oil spill (continued)

The total charge in the income statement is analysed in the table below.

Third Nine
quarter months
$ million 2013 2013
Net increase (decrease) in provisions (23) 2,056
Derecognition of provision for items that can no longer be estimated reliably (379) (379)
Recognition of reimbursement asset, net 402 (1,509)
Other net costs charged (credited) directly to the income statement 30 83
Loss before interest and taxation 30 251
Finance costs 9 29
Loss before taxation 39 280

Items not provided for and uncertainties

BP considers that it is not possible, at this time, to measure reliably other obligations arising from the incident, namely any obligation in relation to Natural Resource Damages claims (except for the estimated costs of the assessment phase and the costs relating to early restoration agreements referred to above), claims asserted in civil litigation including any further litigation through excluded parties from the PSC settlement including as set out in Legal proceedings on pages 35 - 37 of this report and pages 161 - 171 of BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 , the cost of business economic loss claims under the PSC settlement not yet received, processed and paid by the DHCSSP, any further obligation that may arise from state and local government submissions under OPA 90 and any obligation in relation to other potential private or governmental litigation, fines or penalties (except for the Clean Water Act civil penalty claims and governmental claims as described above under Provisions ), nor is it practicable to estimate their magnitude or possible timing of payment. These items are therefore disclosed as contingent liabilities - see below and BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 - Financial statements - Note 43.

Significant uncertainties exist in relation to the amount of claims that are to be paid and will become payable, including claims payable under the DHCSSP and State and Local Claims. There is significant uncertainty in relation to the amounts that ultimately will be paid in relation to current claims, and the number, type and amounts payable for claims not yet reported. In addition, there is further uncertainty in relation to the new policies and procedures to be implemented relating to business economic loss claims in response to the Fifth Circuit's 2 October 2013 decision (see Litigation and claims above and Legal Proceedings on pages 35 - 37) and the outcomes of any further litigation including in relation to potential opt-outs from the settlement or otherwise.

Furthermore, significant uncertainty exists in relation to the amount of fines that will ultimately be levied on BP (including any determination of BP's culpability based on any findings of negligence, gross negligence or wilful misconduct), the outcome of litigation proceedings, and any costs arising from any longer-term environmental consequences of the oil spill, which will also impact upon the ultimate cost for BP. The amount and timing of any amounts payable could also be impacted by any further settlements which may or may not occur.

Further information on provisions is provided in BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 - Financial statements -Note 36.

Contingent liabilities

As described above, business economic loss claims that have not yet been received, processed and paid are not provided for.

Furthermore, since 6 March 2013, BP has been named as a defendant in more than 2,200 additional civil lawsuits brought by individuals, corporations and government entities related to the incident, and further actions are likely to be brought. See Legal proceedings on page 43 of our second-quarter results announcement dated 30 July 2013 for further information. Until further fact and expert disclosures occur, court rulings clarify the issues in dispute, liability and damage trial activity nears or progresses, or other actions such as possible settlements occur, it is not possible given these uncertainties to arrive at a range of outcomes or a reliable estimate of the liabilities that may accrue to BP in connection with or as a result of these lawsuits. Therefore no amounts have been provided for these additional civil lawsuits as at 30 September 2013.

At 30 September 2013 the magnitude and timing of all possible obligations in relation to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill continue to be subject to a very high degree of uncertainty. Furthermore, for those items where a provision has been recorded, significant uncertainty also exists in relation to the ultimate exposure and cost to BP.

See also BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 - Financial statements - Note 43.

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Notes

  1. Disposal of TNK-BP and investment in Rosneft

Disposal of TNK-BP

In BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 the transaction to sell BP's investment in TNK-BP and acquire an investment in Rosneft was described as consisting of three tranches under which BP would receive $25.4 billion (including the $0.7 billion dividend received from TNK-BP in December 2012) and Rosneft shares representing a 3.04% stake in Rosneft; BP would then use $4.8 billion of the cash to acquire a further 5.66% in Rosneft from Rosneftegaz and $8.3 billion to acquire a further 9.80% stake in Rosneft from a Rosneft subsidiary. On completion, the transactions between BP, Rosneft and the Rosneft subsidiary were instead settled on a net basis, so that BP received the 9.80% stake in Rosneft directly rather than receiving and immediately paying $8.3 billion in cash. The net result was the same.

The gain on disposal of BP's investment in TNK-BP, recognized in the TNK-BP segment in the first quarter, was $12.5 billion. Part of the gain arising on the disposal, amounting to $3.0 billion, was deferred due to BP selling its investment in TNK-BP to Rosneft, which in turn is now accounted for by BP as an associate. The deferred gain is released to BP's income statement over time as the TNK-BP assets are depreciated or amortized.

Disposal proceeds of $4.9 billion were used to purchase the 5.66% stake in Rosneft from Rosneftegaz ($4.8 billion described above plus $0.1 billion of interest). The net cash inflow relating to the transaction included in net cash flow from investing activities in the cash flow statement was $11.8 billion.

Investment in Rosneft

BP's investment in Rosneft is included in the balance sheet within investments in associates. The investment is measured at cost less the deferred gain described above (in roubles), plus post-acquisition changes in BP's share of Rosneft's net assets.

During the first quarter a charge of $2.1 billion (fourth quarter 2012 $1.4 billion credit) was recognized in other comprehensive income in relation to the agreements for BP to acquire shares in Rosneft which were accounted for as derivatives in a cash flow hedge. The resulting cumulative charge of $0.7 billion recognized in other comprehensive income would only be recognized in the income statement if the investment in Rosneft were either sold or impaired. The cash flow hedge derivatives were valued using the quoted Rosneft share price at the time the deal completed, of $7.60 per share.

BP's share of the fair value of Rosneft's identifiable net assets, and the consequent impact on the depreciation and amortization recognized via equity accounting in BP's income statement, are provisional at 30 September. BP has not yet completed its fair value exercise associated with its acquisition of shares in Rosneft. Any adjustments required following completion of this work will be reported in a future period.

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Notes

  1. Sales and other operating revenues
Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
By business
16,851 16,418 16,810 Upstream 51,446 52,796
85,299 88,348 90,481 Downstream 265,613 260,249
460 414 454 Other businesses and corporate 1,288 1,415
102,610 105,180 107,745 318,347 314,460
Less: sales and other operating revenues
between businesses
9,767 10,116 10,512 Upstream 31,489 30,772
595 109 440 Downstream 789 1,178
246 244 192 Other businesses and corporate 650 655
10,608 10,469 11,144 32,928 32,605
Third party sales and other operating revenues
7,084 6,302 6,298 Upstream 19,957 22,024
84,704 88,239 90,041 Downstream 264,824 259,071
214 170 262 Other businesses and corporate 638 760
Total third party sales and other operating
92,002 94,711 96,601 revenues 285,419 281,855
By geographical area
33,782 34,624 35,619 US 105,524 104,656
67,917 69,863 71,843 Non-US 210,022 206,036
101,699 104,487 107,462 315,546 310,692
Less: sales and other operating revenues
9,697 9,776 10,861 between areas 30,127 28,837
92,002 94,711 96,601 285,419 281,855
  1. Production and similar taxes
Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
237 218 223 US 813 1,034
1,675 1,454 1,666 Non-US 4,743 5,051
1,912 1,672 1,889 5,556 6,085

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Notes

  1. Earnings per share and shares in issue

Basic earnings per ordinary share (EpS) amounts are calculated by dividing the profit or loss for the period attributable to ordinary shareholders by the weighted average number of ordinary shares outstanding during the period. During the quarter the company repurchased 176 million ordinary shares at a cost of $1,236 million as part of the share repurchase programme announced on 22 March 2013. The number of shares in issue is reduced when shares are repurchased, but is not reduced in respect of the period-end commitment to repurchase shares subsequent to the end of the period, for which an amount of $580 million has been accrued at 30 September 2013. The calculation of EpS is performed separately for each discrete quarterly period, and for the year-to-date period. As a result, the sum of the discrete quarterly EpS amounts in any particular year-to-date period may not be equal to the EpS amount for the year-to-date period.

For the diluted EpS calculation the weighted average number of shares outstanding during the period is adjusted for the number of shares that are potentially issuable in connection with employee share-based payment plans using the treasury stock method. If the inclusion of potentially issuable shares would decrease the loss per share, the potentially issuable shares are excluded from the diluted EpS calculation.

Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
Results for the period
Profit for the period attributable to BP
5,281 2,042 3,504 shareholders 22,409 9,529
- 1 - Less: preference dividend 1 1
Profit attributable to BP ordinary
5,281 2,041 3,504 shareholders 22,408 9,528
Inventory holding (gains) losses, net
(747) 358 (326) of tax (235) (110)
RC profit attributable to BP ordinary
4,534 2,399 3,178 shareholders 22,173 9,418
Net (favourable) unfavourable impact of
non-operating items and fair value
483 312 514 accounting effects, net of tax (11,555) 3,800
Underlying RC profit attributable to BP
5,017 2,711 3,692 shareholders 10,618 13,218
Number of shares (thousand) (a)
Basic weighted average number of
19,037,433 19,015,720 18,867,320 shares outstanding 19,012,247 19,012,634
3,172,905 3,169,287 3,144,553 ADS equivalent 3,168,708 3,168,772
Weighted average number of shares
outstanding used to calculate diluted
19,139,830 19,108,668 18,967,190 earnings per share 19,120,033 19,140,343
3,189,972 3,184,778 3,161,198 ADS equivalent 3,186,672 3,190,057
19,051,867 18,935,572 18,821,216 Shares in issue at period-end 18,821,216 19,051,867
3,175,311 3,155,929 3,136,869 ADS equivalent 3,136,869 3,175,311

(a) Excludes treasury shares and the shares held by the Employee Share Ownership Plans (ESOPs) and includes certain shares that will be issued in the future under employee share plans.

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Notes

  1. Analysis of changes in net debt (a)
Third Second Third Nine Nine
quarter quarter quarter months months
2012 2013 2013 $ million 2013 2012
Opening balance
47,647 46,425 46,990 Finance debt 48,800 44,208
15,075 27,679 28,313 Less: cash and cash equivalents (b) 19,635 14,177
Less: FV asset of hedges related to
1,067 1,083 460 finance debt 1,700 1,133
31,505 17,663 18,217 Opening net debt 27,465 28,898
Closing balance
49,071 46,990 50,284 Finance debt 50,284 49,071
16,174 28,313 29,499 Less: cash and cash equivalents 29,499 16,174
Less: FV asset of hedges related to
1,572 460 734 finance debt 734 1,572
31,325 18,217 20,051 Closing net debt 20,051 31,325
180 (554) (1,834) Decrease (increase) in net debt 7,414 (2,427)
Movement in cash and cash equivalents
873 622 952 (excluding exchange adjustments) 9,867 2,002
Net cash inflow from financing
(744) (1,766) (2,799) (excluding share capital and dividends) (2,849) (4,473)
Movement in finance debt relating to
- 632 - investing activities (c) 632 -
- 20 (17) Other movements (123) (11)
129 (492) (1,864) Movement in net debt before exchange effects 7,527 (2,482)
51 (62) 30 Exchange adjustments (113) 55
180 (554) (1,834) Decrease (increase) in net debt 7,414 (2,427)
(a) Net debt is a non-GAAP measure - see page 4 for further information.
(b) The cash balance at 31 December 2012 included $709 million relating to the dividend received from TNK-BP in the fourth quarter 2012 which met the criteria to be treated as restricted cash until completion of the sale of BP's interest in TNK-BP to Rosneft. This is no longer restricted because the transaction completed in March 2013.
(c) During the third quarter 2013 no disposal transactions were completed in respect of which deposits had been received in advance (second quarter 2013 $632 million and third quarter 2012 nil), and no deposits were received in respect of disposals expected to complete within the next year. At 30 September 2013, finance debt includes no deposits received in advance relating to disposal transactions (nil at 30 June 2013 and $30 million at 30 September 2012).

At 30 September 2013, $144 million of finance debt ($139 million at 30 June 2013 and $142 million at 30 September 2012) was secured by the pledging of assets. The remainder of finance debt was unsecured.

At 30 September 2013, the company had in place committed bank standby facilities totalling $7.4 billion ($7.4 billion at 30 June 2013) with $7 billion available to draw and repay until the first half of 2018 and $0.4 billion available to draw and repay until April 2016. No drawings have ever been made against any of the standby facilities.

  1. Inventory valuation

A provision of $636 million was held at 30 September 2013 ($229 million at 30 June 2013) to write inventories down to their net realizable value. The net movement in the provision during the third quarter 2013 was an increase of $407 million (second quarter 2013 was an increase of $35 million and third quarter 2012 was a decrease of $373 million).

  1. Statutory accounts

The financial information shown in this publication, which was approved by the Board of Directors on 28 October 2013, is unaudited and does not constitute statutory financial statements. BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 has b e en filed w ith the Registrar of Companies in England and Wales. The report of the auditor on those accounts was unqualified and contained an emphasis of matter paragraph relating to significant uncertainty over provisions and contingencies related to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. The report of the auditor on those accounts did not contain a statement under section 498(2) or section 498(3) of the UK Companies Act 2006.

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Legal proceedings

The following discussion sets out the material developments in the group's material legal proceedings during the recent period. For a full discussion of the group's material legal proceedings, see 162 - 171 of

BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 .

Matters relating to the Deepwater Horizon accident and oil spill (the Incident)

Federal multi-district litigation proceeding in New Orleans (MDL 2179)

As disclosed in B P Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 , on 25 February 2013 the first phase (Phase 1) of a Trial of Liability, Limitation, Exoneration and Fault Allocation in MDL 2179 commenced in the federal district court in New Orleans (the District Court). The presentation of evidence in Phase 1, which completed on 17 April 2013, addressed issues arising out of the conduct of various parties allegedly relevant to the loss of well control at the Macondo well, the ensuing fire and explosion on the Deepwater Horizon on 20 April 2010, the sinking of the vessel on 22 April 2010 and the initiation of the release of oil from the Deepwater Horizon or the Macondo well during those time periods, including whether BP or any other party was grossly negligent. The parties completed post-trial briefing in respect of Phase 1 on 12 July 2013. On 13 August 2013, BP moved for leave to supplement the Phase 1 record to include Halliburton's agreement to plead guilty to destroying evidence relating to Halliburton's internal examination of the Incident and the US government's press release announcing the Halliburton plea agreement. The US government, the Plaintiffs' Steering Committee and Halliburton have also submitted briefs addressing the implications of Halliburton's plea agreement. The District Court has yet to rule on BP's motion. BP is not currently aware of the timing of the court's ruling in respect of issues addressed in Phase 1.

The second trial phase (Phase 2), which commenced on 30 September 2013, addressed the amount of oil that was spilled as a result of the Incident and source control efforts. Phase 2 completed on 18 October 2013.

Post-trial briefing is scheduled for 20 December 2013 with replies due by 24 January 2014. BP is not currently aware of the timing of the court's ruling in respect of issues addressed in Phase 2.

The District Court has wide discretion in its determination as to whether a defendant's conduct involved gross negligence as well as in its determinations on the volume of oil spilled and the application of penalty factors.

For further information, see page 164 of BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 .

US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) matters

On 28 November 2012, the EPA notified BP that it had temporarily suspended BP p.l.c., BP Exploration & Production Inc. (BPXP) and a number of other BP subsidiaries from participating in new federal contracts. In addition, as a result of BP's agreement with the Department of Justice to resolve all federal criminal charges against BP, on 1 February 2013 the EPA issued a notice that BPXP was mandatorily debarred at its Houston headquarters. For further information, see page 163 of BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 . On 15 February 2013, BP filed an administrative challenge with the EPA seeking to lift the 28 November 2012 suspension of 22 BP entities and the 1 February 2013 statutory debarment of BPXP at its Houston headquarters. On 19 July 2013, the EPA affirmed its suspension and debarment decisions. BP maintains that the EPA's actions do not have an adequate legal basis and do not reflect BP's present status as a responsible government contractor. On 12 August 2013, BP filed a lawsuit in the US District Court for the Southern District of Texas challenging the EPA's suspension and debarment decisions. BP plans to continue to work with the EPA in preparing an administrative agreement that will resolve these suspension and debarment issues.

Plaintiffs' Steering Committee (PSC) Settlements

The Economic and Property Damages Settlement was approved by the District Court in a final order and judgment on 21 December 2012, and the Medical Benefits Class Action Settlement was approved by the District Court in a final order and judgment on 11 January 2013. For further information, see page 166 - 168 of BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 . Since 17 January 2013, groups of purported members of the Economic and Property Damages Settlement Class have filed notices of appeal to the US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit (the Fifth Circuit) of the final order and judgment approving the Economic and Property Damages Settlement. On 12 July 2013, five of the seven remaining groups appealing from the Economic and Property Damages Settlement filed their opening briefs, one group filed a motion to voluntarily dismiss its appeal, and one group failed to file a brief. On 29 July 2013, the Fifth Circuit dismissed the appeal of the group that had failed to file a brief and, on 31 July 2013, the Fifth Circuit granted the other group's motion to voluntarily dismiss its appeal. On 2 August 2013, BP filed a motion with the Fifth Circuit requesting that it expedite the appeal from the Economic and Property Damages Settlement, and the court granted BP's motion on 6 September 2013. On 12 September 2013, one additional group of appellants moved to voluntarily dismiss its appeal. Following the Fifth Circuit's 2 October 2013 ruling in respect of business economic loss claims (discussed below), the Fifth Circuit directed the parties to submit letter briefs addressing the implications of the 2 October 2013 decision for the appeal from the Economic and Property Damages Settlement, and the parties submitted their letter briefs on 11 October 2013. Briefing in the appeal from the Economic and Property Damages Settlement case is otherwise complete, and oral argument is currently scheduled for 4 November 2013.

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Legal proceedings (continued)

Two groups of purported members of the Medical Benefits Settlement Class have appealed from the final order and judgment approving the Medical Benefits Class Action Settlement. On 25 June 2013, one of the groups of appellants voluntarily dismissed its appeal of the Medical Benefits Class Action Settlement. On 11 July 2013, the one remaining group appealing from the Medical Benefits Class Action Settlement case filed its opening brief, and BP filed its brief on appeal on 3 September 2013. On 30 September 2013, the Fifth Circuit remanded the appeal to the District Court for the limited purpose of allowing the District Court to determine whether the appellants are members of the Medical Benefits Settlement Class.

As part of its monitoring of payments made by the court-supervised claims processes operated by the Deepwater Horizon Court Supervised Settlement Program (DHCSSP) for the Economic and Property Damages Settlement, BP identified multiple business economic loss claim determinations that appeared to result from an interpretation of the Economic and Property Damages Settlement Agreement by that settlement's claims administrator that BP believes was incorrect. This interpretation produced a higher number and value of awards than the interpretation BP used in making its initial estimate of the total cost of the Economic and Property Damages Settlement. Pursuant to the mechanisms in the Economic and Property Damages Settlement Agreement, the claims administrator sought clarification from the District Court on this matter and on 5 March 2013, the District Court affirmed the claims administrator's interpretation of the agreement and rejected BP's position as it relates to business economic loss claims (the March Ruling).

BP appealed the District Court's March Ruling and related rulings to the Fifth Circuit. On 2 October 2013, the Fifth Circuit (by a 2-1 vote) reversed the District Court's denial of BP's motion for a preliminary injunction and the District Court's order affirming the claims administrator's interpretation of the settlement, remanded the case for further proceedings, to be concluded by 2 December 2013, and ordered the District Court to enter a "narrowly-tailored" injunction that suspends payment to claimants affected by the misinterpretation issue and who do not have "actual injury traceable to loss from the Deepwater Horizon accident." The Fifth Circuit also retained jurisdiction to review the District Court's conclusions on remand.

On 18 October 2013, the District Court issued a preliminary injunction that, amongst other things, requires the claims administrator to temporarily suspend payments of business economic loss claims other than those claims supported by sufficiently matched accrual-basis accounting or any other business economic loss claim for which the claims administrator determines that the matching of revenue and expenses is not an issue. On 25 October 2013, the claims administrator provided a declaration outlining the criteria that the claims administrator's office will use to determine the eligibility of claims for payment. BP is reviewing this declaration and the next steps in the process.

On 2 July 2013, the District Court appointed Judge Louis Freeh as Special Master to lead an independent investigation of the DHCSSP in connection with allegations of potential ethical violations or misconduct within the DHCSSP. On 6 September 2013, Judge Freeh submitted a report to the District Court in which he found that the conduct of two attorneys in the office of the claims administrator may have violated federal criminal statutes regarding fraud, money laundering, conspiracy or perjury. In an order issued the same day, the District Court instructed Judge Freeh to promptly recommend, design, and test enhanced internal compliance, anti-corruption, anti-fraud and conflicts of interest policies and procedures to ensure the integrity of the DHCSSP, and to assist the claims administrator in the implementation of such policies and procedures. On 23 September 2013, BP filed a response to Judge Freeh's report and requested that the District Court enter a preliminary injunction temporarily suspending all payments from the DHCSSP until such time as improved anti-fraud and other efficiency controls are implemented at the DHCSSP to the satisfaction of Judge Freeh, the claims administrator and the District Court. The District Court has not yet ruled on BP's request for a preliminary injunction.

For information about BP's current estimate of the total cost of the PSC settlements, s ee Note 2. For further information about the PSC settlements, see pages 166 - 168 of BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 .

MDL 2185 and other securities-related litigation

In April and May 2012, six cases (three of which were consolidated into one action) were filed in state and federal courts by one or more state, county or municipal pension funds against BP entities and several current and former officers and directors seeking damages for alleged losses those funds suffered because of their purchases of BP ordinary shares and, in two cases, ADSs. The funds assert various state law and federal law claims. From July 2012 to April 2013, 12 additional cases were filed in Texas state and federal courts (later consolidated into nine actions) by pension or investment funds or advisors against BP entities and current and former officers, asserting state law and other claims and seeking damages for alleged losses that those funds suffered because of their purchases of BP ordinary shares and/or ADSs, and one case was filed in New York federal court by funds that purchased BP ordinary shares and ADSs, asserting federal and state law claims. All of the cases have been transferred to federal court in Houston and, with the exception of one case that has been stayed, to the judge presiding over the federal multi-district litigation proceeding in Houston (MDL 2185). One case was voluntarily dismissed on 9 May 2013. On 3 October 2013, the judge granted in part and denied in part the defendants' motion to dismiss three of the remaining 13 cases. A subset of the claims was dismissed. The judge held that English law governs the plaintiffs' remaining claims (with the exception of federal law claims based on purchases of ADSs and a potential claim under Ohio state law against BP p.l.c. by certain Ohio funds). Such claims will therefore proceed against the BP entities and five individual defendants.

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Legal proceedings (continued)

On 20 July 2012, a BP entity received an amended statement of claim for an action in Alberta, Canada, filed by three plaintiffs seeking to assert claims under Canadian law against BP on behalf of a class of Canadian residents who allegedly suffered losses because of their purchase of BP ordinary shares and ADSs. This case was dismissed on jurisdictional grounds on 14 November 2012. On 15 November 2012, one of the plaintiffs re-filed a statement of claim against BP in Ontario, Canada, seeking to assert the same claims under Canadian law against BP on behalf of a class of Canadian residents. BP moved to dismiss that action for lack of jurisdiction, and on 9 October 2013 the court denied BP's motion.

For further information about MDL 2185 and other securities-related litigation, see pages 162 - 163 of BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 .

Insurance-related proceedings

On 1 March 2012, the District Court issued a partial final judgment dismissing with prejudice all claims by BP, Anadarko and MOEX for additional insured coverage under insurance policies issued to Transocean for the sub-surface pollution liabilities that BP, Anadarko and MOEX have incurred and will incur with respect to the Macondo well oil release. BP filed a notice of appeal from the District Court's judgment to the Fifth Circuit and on 1 March 2013 the Fifth Circuit reversed the District Court's judgment, rejecting the District Court's ruling that the insurance that BP is entitled to receive as an additional insured under the Transocean insurance policies at issue is limited to the scope of the indemnity in the drilling contract between BP and Transocean. On 29 August 2013, the Fifth Circuit withdrew its 1 March 2013 opinion and certified two questions of Texas law at issue in the appeal to the Supreme Court of Texas. The Texas Supreme Court accepted the certification and announced the briefing schedule, with BP's opening brief due on 6 November 2013. A date and time for the hearing on the certified questions has not yet been determined.

Foreign government lawsuits

On 15 September 2010, three Mexican states bordering the Gulf of Mexico (Veracruz, Quintana Roo, and Tamaulipas) filed lawsuits in federal court in Texas against several BP entities. These lawsuits were subsequently transferred to MDL 2179 on 4 November 2010. The lawsuits allege that the Incident harmed the states' tourism, fishing, and commercial shipping industries (resulting in, among other things, diminished tax revenue), damaged natural resources and the environment, and caused the states to incur expenses in preparing a response to the Incident. On 9 December 2011, the District Court granted in part BP's motion to dismiss the three Mexican states' complaints, dismissing their claims under OPA 90 and for nuisance and negligence per se, and preserving their claims for negligence and gross negligence only to the extent there has been a physical injury to a proprietary interest of the states. BP, other defendants, and the three Mexican states filed cross-motions for summary judgment on 4 January 2013 on the issue of whether the Mexican states have a proprietary interest in the matters asserted in their complaints. The District Court heard oral argument on the cross-motions on 27 June 2013, and on 6 September 2013 the court granted defendants' motions. On 12 September 2013, the District Court issued a final judgment dismissing the three Mexican states' claims with prejudice. On 4 October 2013, the three Mexican states filed notices of appeal from the judgment to the Fifth Circuit.

On 5 April 2011, the State of Yucatan submitted a claim to the Gulf Coast Claims Facility (GCCF) alleging potential damage to its natural resources and environment, and seeking to recover the cost of assessing the alleged damage. On 18 September 2013, the State of Yucatan filed a lawsuit against BP in federal court in Florida, and on 10 October 2013 the lawsuit was stayed pending a decision by the Judicial Panel on Multi-district Litigation whether the State of Yucatan's action will be transferred to MDL 2179.

Other legal proceedings

As disclosed in BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012 , the US Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) and the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) have been investigating several BP entities regarding trading in the next-day natural gas market at Houston Ship Channel during September, October and November 2008. On 28 July 2011, FERC issued a Notice of Alleged Violations stating that it had preliminarily determined that several BP entities fraudulently traded physical natural gas in the Houston Ship Channel and Katy markets and trading points to increase the value of their financial swing spread positions. On 5 August 2013, the FERC staff issued an Order to Show Cause and Notice of Proposed Penalty directing BP to respond to a FERC Enforcement Staff report, which FERC issued on the same day, alleging that BP manipulated the next-day, fixed price gas market at Houston Ship Channel from mid-September 2008 to 30 November 2008. The FERC Enforcement Staff report proposes a civil penalty of $28 million and the surrender of $800,000 of alleged profits. BP filed its answer on 4 October 2013 denying the allegations and moving for dismissal.

On 8 March 2010, the US Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) issued 65 citations to BP Products and BP-Husky for alleged violations of the PSM Standard at the Toledo refinery, with penalties of approximately $3 million. These citations resulted from an inspection conducted pursuant to OSHA's Petroleum Refinery Process Safety Management National Emphasis Program. Following a trial in June 2012, on 31 July 2013, an Administrative Law Judge from the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission (the Review Commission) rendered her decision. OSHA voluntarily dismissed one citation and the judge vacated 36 citations. Five citations were downgraded and assessed an aggregate penalty of $35,000. In addition, the judge accepted the parties' pre-trial settlement of 23 citations. As a result of the settlement and the judge's decision, the total penalty in respect of the citations was reduced from the original amount of approximately $3 million to $80,000. The Review Commission has granted OSHA's petition for review of the judge's decision and is expected to issue a briefing schedule during the fourth quarter of 2013.

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Legal proceedings (continued)

A flaring event occurred at the Texas City refinery in April and May 2010. This flaring event is the subject of civil lawsuit claims for personal injury and, in some cases, property damage by roughly 50,000 individuals. These claims have been consolidated in a Texas multi-district litigation proceeding in Galveston, Texas. The first trial in the matter began in September 2013 and was completed in October 2013. Of the six plaintiffs initially scheduled for trial, two filed nonsuits before trial, the claims of one plaintiff were dismissed by the court on directed verdict, and the jury awarded no damages to the remaining three plaintiffs. In addition, this flaring event and other refinery emissions from December 2008 through 2010 are the subject of a purported class action, on behalf of some local residential property owners, filed in US federal district court in Galveston. The purported class plaintiffs claim that refinery emissions caused their residential properties to lose value. A class certification hearing was held on 4-5 April 2013, and the court denied the plaintiffs' class certification motion on 2 October 2013. The flares involved in this event are also the subject of a federal government enforcement action. BP retained these liabilities when it sold the Texas City refinery.

As disclosed in BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012, BP has been in discussions with the EPA regarding alleged historic violations of the Clean Air Act (CAA) at the Texas City refinery. On 14 August 2013, BP, the EPA and Blanchard Refining Company (the current owner and operator of the Texas City refinery) lodged with the federal court an agreement to settle certain alleged CAA violations pursuant to which BP would pay a civil penalty of $950,000 and Blanchard would correct the alleged violations. This agreement remains subject to court approval.

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Cautionary statement

Cautionary statement regarding forward-looking statements: The discussion in this results announcement contains certain forecasts, projections and forward-looking statements - that is, statements related to future, not past events - with respect to the financial condition, results of operation and businesses of BP and certain of the plans and objectives of BP with respect to these items. These statements may generally, but not always, be identified by the use of words such as 'will', 'expects', 'is expected to', 'aims', 'should', 'may', 'objective', 'is likely to', 'intends', 'believes', 'anticipates', 'plans', 'we see' or similar expressions. In particular, among other statements, certain statements regarding the expected level of organic capital expenditure in 2013 and per annum through 2020; BP's intentions in respect of its announced share repurchase programme, including the total quantum of shares expected to be purchased in connection therewith and programme timing; the expected quarterly dividend payment and timing of the payment; the expected level of reported production and the expected level of costs in the fourth quarter of 2013; the expected level of reported and underlying production for the full year 2013; the expected identities of purchasers of gas from the Shah Deniz field; the expected timing of the completion of the Whiting refinery modernization project and future prospects for the Whiting refinery; the expected level of refining margins in the fourth quarter of 2013; the expected level of fuels profitability in the fourth quarter of 2013; the timing of future dividends from Rosneft; and certain statements regarding the anticipated timing of, prospects for and BP's prospective responses to legal and trial proceedings, court decisions, potential investigations and civil actions by regulators, government entities and/or other entities or parties, and the risks associated with such proceedings; are all forward looking in nature. By their nature, forward-looking statements involve risk and uncertainty because they relate to events and depend on circumstances that will or may occur in the future. Actual results may differ from those expressed in such statements, depending on a variety of factors including the timing of bringing new fields onstream; the timing and level of maintenance and/or turnaround activity; the nature, timing and volume of refinery additions and outages; the timing, quantum and nature of divestments, including plans to divest a further $10 billion in assets before the end of 2015 and plans for the use of proceeds of such divestments; the receipt of relevant third-party and/or regulatory approvals; future levels of industry product supply; demand and pricing; OPEC quota restrictions; PSA effects; operational problems; economic and financial market conditions generally or in various countries and regions; political stability and economic growth in relevant areas of the world; changes in laws and governmental regulations; regulatory or legal actions including court decisions, the types of enforcement action pursued and the nature of remedies sought or imposed; the impact on our reputation following the Gulf of Mexico oil spill; exchange rate fluctuations; development and use of new technology; the success or otherwise of partnering; the actions of competitors, trading partners, creditors, rating agencies and others; decisions by Rosneft's management and board of directors; natural disasters and adverse weather conditions; changes in public expectations and other changes to business conditions; wars and acts of terrorism, cyber-attacks or sabotage; and other factors discussed under "Principal risks and uncertainties" in our Form 6-K for the period ended 30 June 2013 and under "Risk factors" in BP Annual Report and Form 20-F 2012, each as filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

Contacts

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Press Office David Nicholas Scott Dean
+44 (0)20 7496 4708 +1 630 420 4990
Investor Relations Jessica Mitchell Craig Marshall
bp.com/investors +44 (0)20 7496 4962 +1 281 366 3123

SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

BP p.l.c. (Registrant)

Dated: 29 October, 2013

/s/ J. BERTELSEN .............................. J. BERTELSEN Deputy Company Secretary