Norwegian state-controlled Equinor's profits soared in the third quarter, supported by increased gas prices and a strong result from its gas and power trading segment.
The company made a profit of $9.37bn in July-September, a near eight-fold increase on the year and 44pc higher on the quarter. "High production combined with continued high price levels resulted in very strong financial results," chief executive Anders Opedal said. "The earnings enable us to continue investing in the energy transition."
The average gas price for Equinor's Norwegian output was $42.34/mn Btu in the third quarter, more than triple on the year and 66pc higher on the quarter. The firm's average liquids price for July-September was $92.90/bl, up by 34pc on the year but lower by 13pc on the quarter.
Equinor's oil and gas production — including the effects of oil prices on production-sharing agreements — was 1.89mn b/d of oil equivalent (boe/d) in the third quarter, up by 1.6pc from a year earlier and by 2.3pc from the previous three months. Gas production in Norway increased by 11pc on the year, partly owing to the restart of the Snohvit field in June, the company said. It estimates that full-year oil and gas output for 2022 will be around 1pc higher than in 2021.
Power generation stood at 491GWh in the quarter, with 197GWh of this from the Triton Power gas plants in the UK. Equinor's renewable power output, at 294GWh in July-September, was down by 3.3pc on the year and by 9.5pc on the quarter as a result of lower wind and increased maintenance.
Equinor's projects remain on track. The second phase of the Johan Sverdrup oil field in the North Sea and the Njord Future oil project in the Norwegian Sea will be on stream this quarter. In renewables, the 88MW Hywind Tampen floating wind farm offshore Norway is on track to start up in 2023. And in the UK, the first phase of the 3.6GW Dogger Bank offshore wind farm is also expected to start next year.
The company warned that "inflationary pressure" have increased operating costs this year, and said some projects are affected by "global supply chain bottlenecks". It estimates organic capital expenditure (capex) for this year will come in at around $8.5bn. It has kept its capex guidance at an average of $10bn/yr for 2022-23and $12bn/yr for 2024-25.
On the back of the strong results, Equinor has decided to raise its extraordinary cash dividend to $0.70/share for the third quarter, from $0/50/share in the second quarter. The company introduced the bonus shareholder payout to reflect the high oil and gas prices environment. It is keeping its regular quarterly dividend payment at $0.20/share and it is initiating the fourth and final tranche of its $6bn share buyback programme for 2022.