Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

BP pledges to stay in Russia amid Ukraine crisis

-

British energy giant BP vowed Thursday to remain in oil-rich Russia despite the Ukraine crisis, adding it would play a key "bridge" role between the West and Moscow.

"Clearly the situation in Ukraine is currently the focus of world attention," said chief executive Bob Dudley at BP's annual general meeting in London.

"We will seek to pursue our business activities, mindful that the mutual dependence between Russia, as an energy supplier, and Europe, as an energy consumer has been an important source of security and engagement for both parties for many decades.

"I think we play an important role and a bridge," added Dudley.

The group is the biggest foreign investor in Russia's oil sector and will continue to seek ways of developing its business there, despite simmering international tensions over Ukraine.

Pro-Russian militants have occupied government buildings in the east of Ukraine, in an echo of what happened in Crimea before the peninsula was annexed by Moscow last month.

"It is a troublesome situation and we're following it very very closely," said BP chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg at Thursday's AGM.

"For Russia we feel they are very keen on keeping all the relationships, the business relationships," added Svanberg.

BP expanded its Rosneft holding to 19.75 percent in 2012 as part of a deal in which the Russian state firm acquired the Anglo-Russian joint venture TNK-BP.

The London-listed energy major is now Rosneft's largest shareholder, after the Russian government.

British energy giant BP vowed Thursday to remain in oil-rich Russia despite the Ukraine crisis, adding it would play a key “bridge” role between the West and Moscow.

“Clearly the situation in Ukraine is currently the focus of world attention,” said chief executive Bob Dudley at BP’s annual general meeting in London.

“We will seek to pursue our business activities, mindful that the mutual dependence between Russia, as an energy supplier, and Europe, as an energy consumer has been an important source of security and engagement for both parties for many decades.

“I think we play an important role and a bridge,” added Dudley.

The group is the biggest foreign investor in Russia’s oil sector and will continue to seek ways of developing its business there, despite simmering international tensions over Ukraine.

Pro-Russian militants have occupied government buildings in the east of Ukraine, in an echo of what happened in Crimea before the peninsula was annexed by Moscow last month.

“It is a troublesome situation and we’re following it very very closely,” said BP chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg at Thursday’s AGM.

“For Russia we feel they are very keen on keeping all the relationships, the business relationships,” added Svanberg.

BP expanded its Rosneft holding to 19.75 percent in 2012 as part of a deal in which the Russian state firm acquired the Anglo-Russian joint venture TNK-BP.

The London-listed energy major is now Rosneft’s largest shareholder, after the Russian government.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Life

In Canada, there are thousands of online searches for terms like “consumer proposal” and “minimum payment” every month.

Business

Cooperation on artificial intelligence was discussed by US President Donald Trump and China's Xi Jinping at talks in Beijing last week.

Business

Technology leaders want to lead the AI revolution, but three quarters of their CEOs think IT is too busy putting out fires.

Entertainment

Australian actor Ryan Kwanten of "True Blood" chatted about starring in the thriller "Seven Snipers," which was directed by Sandra Sciberras.