Shell hails profits progress

ROYAL Dutch Shell put beleaguered rival BP in the shade today with a 30% hike in first-quarter profits to 6.2 billion US dollars (£3.8 billion).

The big increase, which was marginally ahead of City expectations, reflected the latest hike in oil prices and better margins in refining.

Upstream production was down 3% but this compared with an 11% drop at BP over the same period after the oil giant was forced to sell assets in order to pay for clean-up costs in relation to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. BP announced yesterday that its profits fell 2% to 5.48 billion US dollars (£3.32 billion).

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Shell chief executive Peter Voser has responded to the difficult conditions in downstream operations through restructuring initiatives and has refocused the Anglo-Dutch firm’s efforts on emerging growth markets.

Mr Voser said: “We continue to make good progress in implementing our strategy - improving near-term performance, delivering a new wave of production growth, and maturing the next generation of growth options for shareholders.”

The big boost to Shell’s results came from a sharp turnaround in the performance of its downstream arm, which saw profits more than double to 1.65 billion US dollars (£1 billion) in the three months.