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BP selling Colombian business to fund clean-up

Gulf of Mexico - BP secures more clean-up funds
Gulf of Mexico - BP secures more clean-up funds

Oil giant BP today raised more cash to meet the huge cost of the Gulf of Mexico spill after agreeing the $1.9 billion sale of its Colombian oil and gas exploration business.

The deal will bring the funds raised by disposals to almost $9 billion so far after it sold assets in the US, Canada and Egypt to US firm Apache two weeks ago.

BP is targeting $30 billion in sales after it last week revealed the spill had cost it $32.2 billion so far - sending the firm to its first quarterly loss in 18 years.

The buyer of BP's Colombian assets is a consortium between Ecopetrol, the country's national oil company, and Canada's Talisman. The sales represent the majority of BP's interests in the country, where it has had a presence for more than 20 years.

'It now makes sense for the assets to go to owners more willing than BP to invest in their future development,' commented BP's outgoing chief executive Tony Hayward.

The oil company is also looking to dispose of production assets in Vietnam and Pakistan to fund the Gulf clean-up.

The latest estimates from the US Government suggest 4.1 million barrels of oil has escaped into the Gulf since the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded and sank on April 20, with the loss of 11 lives.

BP is about to launch efforts to plug the well in a 'static kill' operation which will involve pumping mud and cement into the well in a bid to force the oil back into the reservoir after delays caused by a hydraulic leak yesterday.

The company managed to place a temporary cap over the leak last month. If the static kill is successful, the relief wells being drilled to intercept the leaking well - previously seen as the only permanent solution to the crisis - may not be needed after all.