BP to splash £7.9bn on fossil fuel spending and slash green energy investment

A BP garage

BP is set to increase its oil and gas expenditure by $10bn (£7.9bn), cut back on renewable energy investments, and sell off $20bn of underperforming assets as part of a significant strategic revamp aimed at enhancing its struggling share price.

In a long-awaited and postponed announcement from CEO Murray Auchincloss, the British petrochemical titan informed shareholders on Wednesday that it would no longer adhere to the ambitious transition goals it established five years ago, as reported by City AM.

Under Auchincloss's predecessor, BP committed in 2020 to decrease its oil and gas production by 40 per cent while concurrently increasing its renewable target over the subsequent decade. It also vowed to eventually become fully net zero by 2050.

However, Wednesday's announcement – made just two weeks after activist investor Elliot Management acquired a £3.8bn stake in the London-listed oil major – signifies a drastic shift from those objectives, aligning the group's energy mix more closely with that of UK competitor Shell.

The company has been under increasing pressure from shareholders to strengthen its more profitable oil and gas sectors at the expense of the renewable strategy implemented under Looney.

Its share price has significantly trailed those of its main competitors, dropping 14 per cent between 2023 and 2025, while Shell's share price rose 10 per cent during the same period.

Auchincloss remarked: "Today we have fundamentally reset BP's strategy. We are reducing and reallocating capital expenditure to our highest-returning business to drive growth, and relentlessly pursuing performance improvements and cost efficiency."

In a strategic shift, BP has announced plans to slash its renewable spending by $5bn annually, aiming for a budget of $1.5bn to $2bn. The company also intends to divest $20bn worth of businesses within the next two years, potentially including the lubricants division Castrol, which is currently under strategic review.

To strengthen its financial position, BP is embarking on a debt reduction initiative, targeting a decrease in net debt from $23bn to a range of $14bn to $18bn by 2023. "This is a reset BP, with an unwavering focus on growing long-term shareholder value," Auchincloss further stated.

Ahead of its capital markets day, BP's share price had been on an upward trajectory. Following a weak full-year results announcement two weeks prior, shares surged by as much as 12 per cent, buoyed by Auchincloss's commitment to a "fundamental reset" alongside the earnings report.