v3.22.0.1
Contingencies and Commitments
12 Months Ended
Dec. 31, 2021
Contingencies and Commitments [Abstract]  
Contingencies and Commitments
Note 11—Contingencies and Commitments
A number of lawsuits involving a variety
 
of claims arising in the ordinary course of business
 
have been filed against
ConocoPhillips.
 
We also may be required
 
to remove or mitigate
 
the effects on the environment
 
of the placement,
storage, disposal or release of
 
certain chemical, mineral and petroleum
 
substances at various
 
active and inactive
sites.
 
We regularly assess the need for accounting
 
recognition or disclosure of these contingencies.
 
In the case of
all known contingencies (other than those related
 
to income taxes), we accrue
 
a liability when the loss is probable
and the amount is reasonably estimable.
 
If a range of amounts can be reasonably
 
estimated and no amount within
the range is a better estimate
 
than any other amount, then the low end of the range
 
is accrued.
 
We do not reduce
these liabilities for potential insurance
 
or third-party recoveries.
 
We accrue receivables for
 
insurance or other
third-party recoveries when applicable.
 
With respect to income tax-related
 
contingencies, we use a cumulative
probability-weighted loss
 
accrual in cases where sustaining a tax
 
position is less than certain.
for
additional information about income tax
 
-related contingencies.
Based on currently available information,
 
we believe it is remote that future
 
costs related to known
 
contingent
liability exposures will exceed
 
current accruals by an amount that
 
would have a material adverse
 
impact on our
consolidated financial statements.
 
As we learn new facts concerning contingencies,
 
we reassess our position both
with respect to accrued liabilities and other potential
 
exposures.
 
Estimates particularly sensitive to future
 
changes
include contingent liabilities recorded
 
for environmental
 
remediation, tax and legal matters.
 
Estimated future
environmental remediation
 
costs are subject to change due to
 
such factors as the uncertain
 
magnitude of cleanup
costs, the unknown time and extent of such
 
remedial actions that may be required,
 
and the determination of our
liability in proportion to that of other responsible
 
parties.
 
Estimated future costs
 
related to tax and legal
 
matters
are subject to change as events
 
evolve and as additional information
 
becomes available during the administrative
and litigation processes.
Environmental
We are subject to international,
 
federal, state and
 
local environmental laws
 
and regulations and record
 
accruals for
environmental liabilities based on
 
management’s best estimates
 
.
 
These estimates are based on currently
 
available
facts, existing technology,
 
and presently enacted laws and regulations,
 
taking into account stakeholder
 
and
business considerations.
 
When measuring environmental liabilities,
 
we also consider our prior experience in
remediation of contaminated
 
sites, other companies’ cleanup experience, and data
 
released by the U.S. EPA
 
or
other organizations.
 
We consider unasserted claims in our determination
 
of environmental liabilities,
 
and we
accrue them in the period they are both probable and
 
reasonably estimable.
Although liability of those potentially responsible
 
for environmental remediation
 
costs is generally joint and
several for federal
 
sites and frequently so for other
 
sites, we are usually only one of many companies
 
cited at a
particular site.
 
Due to the joint and several liabilities, we could
 
be responsible for all cleanup costs related
 
to any
site at which we have been designated
 
as a potentially responsible party.
 
We have been successful to
 
date in
sharing cleanup costs with other financially sound
 
companies.
 
Many of the sites at which we are potentially
responsible are still under investigation
 
by the EPA or
 
the agency concerned.
 
Prior to actual cleanup, those
potentially responsible normally assess the
 
site conditions, apportion responsibility and determine
 
the appropriate
remediation.
 
In some instances, we may have
 
no liability or may attain a settlement
 
of liability.
 
Where it appears
that other potentially responsible parties may
 
be financially unable to bear their proportional share,
 
we consider
this inability in estimating our potential liability,
 
and we adjust our accruals accordingly.
 
As a result of various
acquisitions in the past, we assumed certain environmental
 
obligations.
 
Some of these environmental obligations
are mitigated by indemnifications
 
made by others for our benefit, and some of the indemnifications
 
are subject to
dollar limits and time limits.
We are currently participating
 
in environmental assessments
 
and cleanups at numerous federal
 
Superfund and
comparable state and
 
international sites.
 
After an assessment of environmental
 
exposures for cleanup and other
costs, we make accruals on an
 
undiscounted basis (except
 
those acquired in a purchase business combination,
which we record on a discounted
 
basis) for planned investigation
 
and remediation activities for sites where
 
it is
probable future costs will be incurred
 
and these costs can be reasonably estimated.
 
We have not reduced
 
these
accruals for possible insurance recoveries.
 
In the future, we may be involved
 
in additional environmental
assessments, cleanups and proceedings.
 
See
for a summary of our accrued environmental
 
liabilities.
Litigation and Other Contingencies
We are subject to various
 
lawsuits and claims including but not limited to matters
 
involving oil and gas royalty
 
and
severance tax payments,
 
gas measurement and valuation
 
methods, contract disputes,
 
environmental damages,
climate change, personal injury,
 
and property damage.
 
Our primary exposures for such matters
 
relate to alleged
royalty and tax underpayments
 
on certain federal, state
 
and privately owned properties,
 
claims of alleged
environmental contamination
 
and damages from historic operations
 
,
 
and climate change.
 
We will continue to
defend ourselves vigorously
 
in these matters.
Our legal organization
 
applies its knowledge, experience and professional
 
judgment to the specific characteristics
of our cases, employing a litigation management
 
process to manage and monitor the legal
 
proceedings against us.
 
Our process facilitates the
 
early evaluation and quantification
 
of potential exposures in individual cases.
 
This
process also enables us to track those
 
cases that have been scheduled for
 
trial and/or mediation.
 
Based on
professional judgment and experience
 
in using these litigation management
 
tools and available information
 
about
current developments in all our cases,
 
our legal organization regularly
 
assesses the adequacy of current accruals
and determines if adjustment of existing
 
accruals, or establishment of new accruals, is
 
required.
We have contingent
 
liabilities resulting from throughput agreements
 
with pipeline and processing companies not
associated with financing arrangements.
 
Under these agreements, we may be required
 
to provide any such
company with additional funds through
 
advances and penalties for fees related
 
to throughput capacity not utilized.
 
In addition, at December 31, 2021, we had performance
 
obligations secured by letters
 
of credit of $
337
million (issued as direct bank letters of credit)
 
related to various
 
purchase commitments for materials,
 
supplies,
commercial activities and services incident to the ordinary
 
conduct of business.
In 2007, ConocoPhillips was unable to reach
 
agreement with respect to the empresa
 
mixta structure mandated
 
by
the Venezuelan government’s
 
Nationalization Decree.
 
As a result, Venezuela’s
 
national oil company,
 
Petróleos de
Venezuela, S.A. (PDVSA),
 
or its affiliates, directly assumed control
 
over ConocoPhillips’ interests
 
in the Petrozuata
and Hamaca heavy oil ventures and
 
the offshore Corocoro development
 
project.
 
In response to this expropriation,
ConocoPhillips initiated international
 
arbitration on November 2, 2007, with the ICSID.
 
On September 3, 2013, an
ICSID arbitration tribunal held that Venezuela
 
unlawfully expropriated ConocoPhillips’
 
significant oil investments in
June 2007.
 
On January 17, 2017, the Tribunal reconfirmed
 
the decision that the expropriation
 
was unlawful.
 
In
March 2019, the Tribunal unanimously
 
ordered the government of Venezuela
 
to pay ConocoPhillips approximately
$
8.7
 
billion in compensation for the government’s
 
unlawful expropriation of the company’s
 
investments in
Venezuela in 2007.
 
On August 29, 2019, the ICSID Tribunal
 
issued a decision rectifying the award and
 
reducing it
by approximately $
227
 
million.
 
The award now stands at
 
$
8.5
 
billion plus interest.
 
The government of Venezuela
sought annulment of the award,
 
which automatically stayed
 
enforcement of the award.
 
On September 29, 2021,
the ICSID annulment committee lifted the
 
stay of enforcement
 
of the award.
 
The annulment proceedings have
been suspended as a result of Venezuela’s
 
non-payment of advances
 
to cover the costs of these proceedings.
In 2014, ConocoPhillips filed a separate
 
and independent arbitration under the rules
 
of the ICC against PDVSA
under the contracts that had established
 
the Petrozuata
 
and Hamaca projects.
 
The ICC Tribunal issued
 
an award in
April 2018, finding that PDVSA owed ConocoPhillips
 
approximately $
2
 
billion under their agreements in connection
with the expropriation of the projects
 
and other pre-expropriation fiscal
 
measures.
 
In August 2018, ConocoPhillips
entered into a settlement with PDVSA to recover the full amount of this ICC award, plus interest through the
payment period, including initial payments totaling approximately $500 million within a period of 90 days from the
time of signing of the settlement agreement. The balance of the settlement is to be paid quarterly over a period of
four and a half years.
 
Per the settlement, PDVSA recognized
 
the ICC award as a judgment in various
 
jurisdictions,
and ConocoPhillips agreed to suspend
 
its legal enforcement actions.
 
ConocoPhillips sent notices of default to
PDVSA on October 14 and November 12, 2019, and
 
to date PDVSA has failed to
 
cure its breach.
 
As a result,
ConocoPhillips has resumed legal enforcement
 
actions.
 
To date,
 
ConocoPhillips has received approximately
 
$
768
million in connection with the ICC award.
 
ConocoPhillips has ensured that
 
the settlement and any actions taken
 
in
enforcement thereof meet all
 
appropriate U.S. regulatory
 
requirements, including those related
 
to any applicable
sanctions imposed by the U.S. against
 
Venezuela.
In 2016, ConocoPhillips filed a separate
 
and independent arbitration under the rules
 
of the ICC against PDVSA
under the contracts that had established
 
the Corocoro Project.
 
On August 2, 2019, the ICC Tribunal
 
awarded
ConocoPhillips approximately
 
$
33
 
million plus interest under the Corocoro
 
contracts.
 
ConocoPhillips is seeking
recognition and enforcement
 
of the award in various jurisdictions.
 
ConocoPhillips has ensured that all the actions
related to the award meet
 
all appropriate U.S. regulatory
 
requirements, including those related
 
to any applicable
sanctions imposed by the U.S. against
 
Venezuela.
The Office of Natural Resources
 
Revenue (ONRR) has conducted audits
 
of ConocoPhillips’ payment of royalties
 
on
federal lands and has issued multiple orders
 
to pay additional royalties
 
to the federal government.
 
ConocoPhillips
and the ONRR entered into a settlement
 
agreement on March 23, 2021, to resolve
 
the dispute.
 
All orders and
associated appeals have been withdrawn
 
with prejudice.
Beginning in 2017, governmental and
 
other entities in several states
 
in the U.S. have filed lawsuits against
 
oil and
gas companies, including ConocoPhillips,
 
seeking compensatory damages and equitable relief
 
to abate alleged
climate change impacts.
 
Additional lawsuits with similar allegations
 
are expected to be filed.
 
The amounts
claimed by plaintiffs are unspecified and
 
the legal and factual issues involved
 
in these cases are unprecedented.
 
ConocoPhillips believes these lawsuits are
 
factually and legally meritless and are
 
an inappropriate vehicle to
address the challenges associated with climate
 
change and will vigorously defend
 
against such lawsuits.
Several Louisiana parishes and the State
 
of Louisiana have filed
43
 
lawsuits under Louisiana’s
 
State and Local
Coastal Resources Management
 
Act (SLCRMA) against oil and gas
 
companies, including ConocoPhillips, seeking
compensatory damages for contamination
 
and erosion of the Louisiana coastline allegedly
 
caused by historical oil
and gas operations.
 
ConocoPhillips entities are defendants
 
in
22
 
of the lawsuits and will vigorously defend
 
against
them.
 
Because Plaintiffs’ SLCRMA theories are
 
unprecedented, there is uncertainty
 
about these claims (both as to
scope and damages) and we continue to
 
evaluate our exposure in these lawsuits
 
.
In October 2020, the Bureau of Safety and
 
Environmental Enforcement
 
(BSEE) ordered the prior owners of Outer
Continental Shelf (OCS) Lease P-0166,
 
including ConocoPhillips, to decommission
 
the lease facilities, including two
offshore platforms located
 
near Carpinteria, California.
 
This order was sent after the current
 
owner of OCS Lease
P-0166 relinquished the lease and
 
abandoned the lease platforms and facilities.
 
BSEE’s order to
 
ConocoPhillips is
premised on its connection to Phillips Petroleum
 
Company,
 
a legacy company of ConocoPhillips,
 
which held a
historical
25
 
percent interest in this
 
lease and operated these facilities, but
 
sold its interest approximately
30
 
years
ago.
 
ConocoPhillips continues to evaluate
 
our exposure in these lawsuits.
On May 10, 2021, ConocoPhillips filed arbitration
 
under the rules of the Singapore International
 
Arbitration Centre
(SIAC) against Santos KOTN
 
Pty Ltd. and Santos Limited for
 
their failure to timely pay the $
200
 
million bonus due
upon FID of the Barossa development project
 
under the sale and purchase agreement.
 
Santos KOTN
 
Pty Ltd. and
Santos Limited have filed a response
 
and counterclaim, and the arbitration
 
is underway.
In July 2021, a federal securities class action
 
was filed against Concho, certain
 
of Concho’s officers,
 
and
ConocoPhillips as Concho’s
 
successor in the United States District Court
 
for the Southern District of Texas.
 
On
October 21, 2021, the court issued an order appointing
 
Utah Retirement Systems
 
and the Construction Laborers
Pension Trust
 
for Southern California as lead plaintiffs
 
(Lead Plaintiffs).
 
On January 7, 2022, the Lead Plaintiffs filed
their consolidated complaint alleging that
 
Concho made materially false and misleading
 
statements regarding
 
its
business and operations in violation of the federal
 
securities laws and seeking unspecified damages, attorneys’
fees, costs, equitable/injunctive
 
relief, and such
 
other relief that may be deemed appropriate.
 
We believe the
allegations in the action are without merit, and we
 
intend to vigorously defend
 
this litigation.
Long-Term Throughput
 
Agreements and Take
 
-or-Pay Agreements
We have certain throughput
 
agreements and take-or-pay
 
agreements in support of financing arrangements.
 
The
agreements typically provide for
 
natural gas or crude oil transportation
 
to be used in the ordinary course of
business.
 
The aggregate amounts of estimated
 
payments under these various agreements
 
are: 2022—$
7
 
million;
2023—$
7
 
million; 2024—$
7
 
million; 2025—$
7
 
million; 2026—$
7
 
million; and 2027 and after—$
43
 
million.
 
Total
 
payments under the agreements were
 
$
27
 
million in 2021, $
25
 
million in 2020 and $
25
 
million in 2019.