Not so for the off-shore folks. Wouldn't this just ruin your day if you were the CEO of BP and were told this wonderful news? The Angola project came in at $4 billion over budget.
A massive BP PLC oil development off the coast of Angola has come in $4 billion over budget after being delayed by a year, The Daily Telegraph reported Monday, citing an executive.
The project, more than 100 miles offshore, was originally slated to start producing oil in late 2011 and to cost about $10 billion, the newspaper said. Instead, it began production in December, 2012 (over a year late).
While analysts thought the project would cost nearer $12 billion, the total is now expected to be "up over $14 billion" once all the wells have been drilled and connected, Gerry McGurk, BP Angola's vice president, disclosed, according to the newspaper.Actually, the reality is a bit worse than the headline. The headline: $4 billion over budget. The reality "up over $4 billion more" than projected by the company. "Up over" leaves a lot of room for further upside adjustments.
And if it were a $1,000 billion project, the $4 billion would be a rounding error. But $4 billion is 40 percent -- repeat -- 40 percent -- of the company's anticipated cost. Meanwhile, at the first link above, the cost for a Hess well in the Bakken has dropped 36% over that same time period.
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