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ENERGY

Spanish oil giant Repsol swings back to profit

Spain's oil giant Repsol said on Thursday that it swung back to profit in the third quarter as the company reduced costs to adapt to a slump in oil prices which has hit production revenues.

Spanish oil giant Repsol swings back to profit

The company posted a net profit of €481 million ($$535 million) in the July-September period, compared to a net loss of 221 million euros in the same year-ago period.

The result was higher than forecast by analysts polled by Factset who predicted the company would table a net profit of €308 million.

“The efficiency and savings measures implemented by Repsol throughout the year improved earnings and bolstered the company's resilience to the current environment of depressed crude oil and gas prices,” the company said in a statement.

Repsol in October 2015 unveiled an ambitious cost-cutting programme outlined in October 2015 which involves slashing billions from capital spending by 2020 and slashing 1,500 jobs by 2018.

The company said lower spending on exploration helped it to drastically reduce its loss in its upstream operations to €28 million from €395 million in the third quarter of 2015 despite the slump in oil and gas prices.

In its downstream operations, which includes refining, earnings fell 42 percent in the third quarter to 395 million euros from a year earlier due to lower margins, the company said.

During the first nine months of the year Repol's posted a net profit of €1.12 billion, a 35 percent increase over the same time last year.

Oil prices have recovered to around $50 a barrel since producers cartel OPEC agreed at the end of September to cap output in a bid to tackle an oversupply that has hammered prices.

Nevertheless, crude prices are still only about half their mid-2014 levels.

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BUSINESS

France’s EDF hails €10billion profit, despite huge UK nuclear charge

French energy giant EDF has unveiled net profit of €10billion and cut its massive debt by increasing nuclear production after problems forced some plants offline.

France's EDF hails €10billion profit, despite huge UK nuclear charge

EDF hailed an “exceptional” year after its loss of €17.9billion in 2022.

Sales slipped 2.6 percent to €139.7billion , but the group managed to slice debt by €10billion euros to €54.4billion.

EDF said however that it had booked a €12.9 billion depreciation linked to difficulties at its Hinkley Point nuclear plant in Britain.

The charge includes €11.2 billion for Hinkley Point assets and €1.7billion at its British subsidiary, EDF Energy, the group explained.

EDF announced last month a fresh delay and additional costs for the giant project hit by repeated cost overruns.

“The year was marked by many events, in particular by the recovery of production and the company’s mobilisation around production recovery,” CEO Luc Remont told reporters.

EDF put its strong showing down to a strong operational performance, notably a significant increase in nuclear generation in France at a time of historically high prices.

That followed a drop in nuclear output in France in 2022. The group had to deal with stress corrosion problems at some reactors while also facing government orders to limit price rises.

The French reactors last year produced around 320.4 TWh, in the upper range of expectations.

Nuclear production had slid back in 2022 to 279 TWh, its lowest level in three decades, because of the corrosion problems and maintenance changes after
the Covid-19 pandemic.

Hinkley Point C is one of a small number of European Pressurised Reactors (EPRs) worldwide, an EDF-led design that has been plagued by cost overruns
running into billions of euros and years of construction delays.

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