BP Station Owners to Get Financial Relief

Small-business retailers can expect a break from BP on prices.

ByABC News
June 28, 2010, 5:58 PM

June 28, 2010— -- A few days after the BP-operated Deepwater Horizon drilling rig blew up and began leaking oil into the Gulf of Mexico in April, Eli Achi braced for the backlash.

But Achi, a native of Lebanon who independently owns and operates a BP service station in Arlington, Mass., never thought the disaster would last this long, or that his business would suffer this badly.

"Business is way, way down," he said. "People don't want to buy gas from me. And it just keeps getting worse. BP has done nothing to help."

That soon could change.

Starting this week, BP plans to roll out a series of initiatives aimed at helping the independent retailers of its gasoline, including a program that will allow regional BP gas distributors to offer some selected retailers a discount, according to John Kleine, executive director of the BP Amoco Marketers Association. Amoco, as well as Arco, are owned by BP.

Kleine said that money will also be available for targeted marketing campaigns, but only for those gas station owners hardest hit.

"This is not a one-size-fits-all initiative," Kleine said. "Each situation is different."

The plan, which follows a meeting last week between BP marketing officials and distributors, who are also hurting, is going to be aimed at distributors and will begin to be communicated to them this week, Kleine said. Some 475 BP gasoline distributors deliver product by tanker to some 10,000 BP fill-up stations/convenience stores, most of which are independently owned. The distributors, who buy from terminals, will get a break on prices, and, in turn, will have discretion to give discounts to individual station owners.

"Some store owners need help more than others," Kleine said. "This is a dynamic problem that requires flexibility, but relief is coming."