BP (BP) has moved forward with a potential stake sale in two Gulf of Mexico developments, marking an early portfolio move under Chief Executive Officer Meg O'Neill, Reuters reported Friday, citing four people with knowledge of the matter.
The company has spent more than a year evaluating a potential sale of minority interests in its Tiber and Kaskida projects, assets that could be worth billions of dollars, according to the report.
People familiar with the matter said BP has now launched a formal sale process, although they did not disclose how many of the assets the company intends to offer, Reuters reported.
Energy producers frequently sell minority stakes in projects under development to free up cash for other investments while retaining exposure to future production.
After facing investor criticism over its renewable energy push and weak share performance, BP redirected its focus toward oil and gas growth last year. O'Neill, the company's first external chief executive appointment in more than a century, took charge in April.
The two developments are each expected to produce about 80,000 barrels of oil per day. Kaskida project is slated to begin production in 2029, while Tiber is scheduled to follow in 2030, according to the report.
As the company increasingly leans on the US to drive expansion, it aims to lift domestic upstream production to around 1 million barrels of oil equivalent per day by 2030, nearly half of its global target of 2.3-2.5 million boe/d.
BP didn't immediately respond to' request for comment.
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