Simon Henry
Management
Thank you, operator. Good afternoon and good morning to those in the U.S. Welcome to the Royal Dutch Shell First Quarter 2010 Results Presentation. Let me take you through the results in the portfolio developments for the first quarter and we will leave plenty of time for your questions. Firstly, could you take a moment just to read the definitions of the cautionary note. Our CCS earnings, Current Cost of Supply earnings, actually the identified items for the quarter were $4.8 billion. That’s an earning per share increase of some 61% from the first quarter of 2009. Our results have stepped up from last year and profitability has certainly increased from the low levels that we saw in the fourth quarter of 2009. This year-over-year improvement has been driven by higher oil prices and higher chemicals margins, but that is combined with increased sales volumes and thus as a result of our operating programs, our operating performance and our growth programs. These are better results from Shell but we are not relying on economic recovery or seasonal effects from here on in. The macro environment will be what it will be. We continue with our focus on growing our cash flow, underpinned by new projects and lower costs. Back in March, we outlined our strategy for the next several years. We are working on improving our near-term performance, delivering a new wave of growth into 2012 and maturing the next generation of projects for growth for 2013 and beyond, and we have made progress on all three of these themes so far this year. We have successful start-ups at two new projects in the quarter - deep water oil and gas production in the Perdido platform in the Gulf Mexico, and new ethylene capacity came on stream in Singapore. We are delivering on the downstream asset sales in what is still a difficult environment with an agreement to sell our New Zealand position and we are making good progress against our target to reduce costs by $1 billion by 2010. We are abetting a culture of continuous improvement, commerciality and cost control in our day-to-day activities. Looking to the longer term, we are building on our 2009 exploration success with new discoveries. And we have taken up new gas positions in China and Australia, and new Brazil biofuels joint venture which includes, of course, more downstream potential. Overall, it is a good start to 2010. Let me give you some details on performance in the quarter and I’ll start with the macro environment. If you look at the macro picture compared with the first quarter of last year, the oil prices were significantly higher than the $44 a year ago. Brent averaged $76 a barrel and actual gas prices increased in most regions but were slightly lower in Europe. The industry refining margins were significantly lower than year ago levels and that's in most regions, although refining margins did improve from the fourth quarter of ‘09 and they were supported in this by a high level of industry, downtime to maintenance in the first quarter. The chemicals margins increased in all regions compared to the first quarter of 2009, with the most pronounced improvements coming from Asia and Europe. So it’s a pretty complicated picture overall but some trackers up and some down. But overall, the trends were positive for us in the quarter. Turning now to our earnings. The earnings for the quarter did include identified one-off items of $75 million. Excluding those items, the current cost of supply earnings were $4.8 billion and the earnings per share increased by 61% and that's compared with the first quarter a year ago. The quarter was characterized by higher earnings in upstream and a decline in the downstream. That’s mainly a result of higher oil prices and chemical margins, the higher volumes in the upstream and the lower refining margins in the downstream. The cash flow from operations for the quarter was $4.8 billion, but excluding the net movements in working capital was just over $10 billion. Now, let me talk about the individual business performance in a bit more detail. Firstly on the upstream. The upstream earnings increased by 132% to $4.3 billion in the first quarter of 2010. The higher oil prices, the higher oil and gas production and the higher LNG sales volumes were the main drivers in the upstream results and these are partly offset by the lower realized gas prices in Europe. Some of you have asked to see our gas realizations including our large affiliate company in the Netherlands, the NAM. So, we have now included the NAM realizations in the European information in our supplementary tables for you to use. And hopefully this helps you with your modeling and on that basis you will note that the European price went down year-on-year. The upstream production increased by 6% first quarter to first quarter and we reached some 3.6 million barrels of oil equivalent per day. If you set aside what we call uncontrollable factors, things like the OPEC quota, the weather and look at the underlying performance, then the barrels from the new fields and ramp-ups contributed some 200,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day and that more than offset the 150,000 barrels a day impact from the natural field decline. Our LNG sales volumes grew by 38% first quarter to first quarter and over 4.2 million tonnes in the quarter. That's our highest volume ever. That’s driven by increases from Sakhalin II in Russia and from Nigeria LNG where we had a limited restart at the Soku gas plant and improved the gas supply picture for Nigeria LNG. Looking into the second quarter, while the weather-related gas sales added some $200 million to Q1 earnings comparison, this is unlikely to repeat of course in the second quarter. Let me also remind you that the Athabasca Oil Sands Project in Canada that produces between 70 and 80,000 barrels per day for Shell. That went into a planned shutdown significant turnaround in mid-March and that will restart again in June. We’re also expecting some Q2 downtime in the Gulf of Mexico on a planned basis, in fact that was in April and some operational issues in Nigeria. So overall in the first quarter, much better earnings performance from the upstream. But we are in a delivery window particularly for the group with a sequence of 13 new projects, 12 of which are in the upstream and they will come on stream in 2010 and 2011. These projects underpin the cash flow and production growth targets for 2012 that we discussed back in March. And last year's start-ups, Sakhalin in Russia and BC-10 in Brazil deep water, they've both had very successful ramp-ups, contributed to Q1 uplift of around 120,000-barrels of oil equivalent per day. Both of these projects are currently producing above the planned expected levels. In the last few weeks, we've had a successful start-up at Perdido in the Gulf of Mexico. I’ll remind you, Perdido is the industry's first production from the Lower Tertiary reservoirs in the Gulf of Mexico. This spar development is expected to produce around 100,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day in some 2.5 kilometers of water depth. This really is a high-tech first development, with many industry firsts incorporated in the design and more importantly, I expect this to be a highly profitable hub development with additional growth potential in the future as we have now developed that new infrastructure in the region. The next suite of start-ups includes the mine expansion in Athabasca in Canada and our two gas projects in Qatar. These projects remain on track and they will underpin our growth across 2011 and 2012. Turning to the downstream earnings, in contrast to the upstream where we had the large increase, the downstream earnings declined by 36% compared with the year ago levels to $0.8 billion. This decline was due to losses in refining, a low contribution year-on-year for marketing and trading, partially offset by strong earnings in chemicals. However, we pointing out the downstream earnings have rallied somewhat from the low point that we saw in the fourth quarter of 2009 at the backend of last year. So starting for a change of chemicals. The chemicals earnings have improved from a loss making position a year ago. This is due to the shift to more flexible feedstocks i.e. gas in our Gulf Coast portfolio and to more favorable market conditions worldwide. In Singapore the new chemicals plant, which is integrated with the Bukom refinery, it came online in November last year with the mono-ethylene glycol production and the main ethylene cracker production started there at the end of March this year. The first quarter 2010 chemicals earnings were pretty close to the full performance in 2009 and it’s good to see that. In refining, the industry conditions were sharply weaker on a Q1 versus Q1 basis. But we did see a reduction in the losses compared with the fourth quarter of 2009. Our first quarter refinery intake, it fell by some 5% as a result of weak demand and turnaround. The first quarter of 2010 also saw an unusually high level of maintenance downtime in our refineries and our availability was 89% versus a 92% availability a year ago. The market and trading earnings, they decreased from a year ago levels when we benefited from parachute effects from the falling oil prices that we saw in that quarter. However, marketing earnings, they did increase from the fourth quarter of 2009, returning back to more normal levels with higher earnings from retail, from lubricants and from commercial fuels. Overall, through the last couple of years of digital market environment, our marketing portfolio has been pretty resilient in the face of that tough environment. So, those are the earnings, turning to the cash flow and the balance sheet. The upstream and the downstream cash inflows and outflows have been brought in balance over the last 12 months. However, we’ve been running a cash deficit at the group level as we have used the balance sheet to maintain the growth spending programs to top off the pension funds and to pay an attractive dividend. I'm pleased to see the cash flow from operations, excluding those net movements in working capital reached $10.4 billion in the first quarter, more than double the cash flow in the last quarter of last year. However, we have continued to increase borrowings and this will likely continue in 2010. The balance sheet gearing was 17.1% at the end of the first quarter, a slight increase from the end ‘09 levels and around the middle of our guidance range of 0% to 30% of gearing. So we watch the cash position and the balance sheet very closely, and we’re putting particular emphasis on costs and capital discipline within the company. We reduced Shell's underlying operation costs by some $2 billion in 2009, and we're on track to deliver a further $1 billion of the underlying cost savings in 2010. This will come from headcount reduction, around 2000 positions in 2010, ‘11, in addition to the 5,000 staff reduction that we saw in 2009. It will also come from simplifying and standardizing our activities and help to reduce the supply chain costs that form such a large part of our total cost base. So we've made progress here and there is clearly more to come. So let me update you on portfolio developments and there have been quite a few of these here in what has been a rather busy start to the year. Exploration made three new discoveries and drilled a successful appraisal on the 2009 Vito discovery, all of this in the Gulf of Mexico. 2009, ‘10 drilling to date has delineated over 350 million barrels of oil equivalent resource for Shell in the Gulf Mexico and we continue to evaluate these discoveries. We’re looking at options to fast track the development of these exciting new finds with over 150,000 barrels per day of oil equivalent production potential. Elsewhere in the world, we built up new gas potential in the Asia-Pacific region with tight and shale gas acreage additions in China and the bid for the coalbed methane to LNG player, Arrow Energy in Australia. This is a joint bid with PetroChina and still obviously subject to final approvals. In the downstream, we announced a potentially $12 billion Memorandum of Understanding with Cosan, a Brazilian company, to create the joint venture for our Brazilian activities. That is both downstream and ethanol, sugar to ethanol and we will work with Cosan on biofuels growth. On the disposal side, we completed the divestments of our New Zealand downstream activities and we’ve agreed to sell three production licenses in Nigeria to a domestic company subject to government approval there. We’ve also announced a review of 21 downstream countries in Africa as part of our plans to exit from 35% of the number of retail markets we are present in by the end of 2012. These positions, they can be profitable, in fact they are profitable in their own right, but we want to focus on scale in our own operations. So as you can see, we’ve been pretty busy on the portfolio side already in 2010. So just let me summarize and then we will go for questions. I am pleased with the performance in the quarter despite a difficult environment. We are in that window, the delivery window for new growth. We are making progress on the strategic themes, the shorter term performance focus, the delivery of the growth projects and the generation of the new investment options. At the same time, we’re keeping an eye on the medium and longer term. We’re picking up new assets on a very selective basis and continue to invest at relatively high levels for more exploration barrels. The priorities are for a more competitive performance for growth and for sharper, more focused delivery of strategy. By taking these steps, each of which you can see appears in the Q1 results, we are bringing our company and shareholders into a period of production and cash flow growth into 2012 in pursuit of the targets we discussed in March. With that, I’d like to move to your questions. It would be good if we could restrict ourselves to a couple each please so that everybody gets a chance. Could I ask operator, please could you poll for questions? Thank you.