Regulatory Alerts
A new tax law granting tax credits to oil companies appears to have survived a close referendum battle on Wednesday, with partial vote counts in showing that efforts to repeal the legislation trailing behind. The legislation, Senate Bill 21, only narrowly made it through the Senate last year, advertising itself as a way to attract investment for new wells to produce more for the trans-Alaska pipeline. However, critics say it provides no guarantees that oil companies will invest in Alaska.
Mozambique has approved favorable new petroleum laws that open the way for new oil and gas bids as well as a special tax break for offshore fields operated by US Anadarko Petroleum and Italy’s Eni. According to the new legislation, at least 25 percent of gas produced must be for local consumption. Mozambique also approved this week another bill on taxation for the Rovuma-1 and Rovuma-4 areas. Anadarko operates the Rovuma-1 field, in which the state owned oil company Empresa Nacional de Hidrocarbonetos, owns a stake. The fuel will feed liquefied natural gas export plants for shipment to world markets. The government is finalizing the process for new oil and gas bids, which is scheduled to be concluded by the end of 2014. The bottom line is that the new bill will mean lower taxes for Eni and Anadarko.
European exports of certain energy-related equipment and technology to Russia will be subject to prior authorization by EU member state authorities, as…
Regulatory Alerts
A new tax law granting tax credits to oil companies appears to have survived a close referendum battle on Wednesday, with partial vote counts in showing that efforts to repeal the legislation trailing behind. The legislation, Senate Bill 21, only narrowly made it through the Senate last year, advertising itself as a way to attract investment for new wells to produce more for the trans-Alaska pipeline. However, critics say it provides no guarantees that oil companies will invest in Alaska.
Mozambique has approved favorable new petroleum laws that open the way for new oil and gas bids as well as a special tax break for offshore fields operated by US Anadarko Petroleum and Italy’s Eni. According to the new legislation, at least 25 percent of gas produced must be for local consumption. Mozambique also approved this week another bill on taxation for the Rovuma-1 and Rovuma-4 areas. Anadarko operates the Rovuma-1 field, in which the state owned oil company Empresa Nacional de Hidrocarbonetos, owns a stake. The fuel will feed liquefied natural gas export plants for shipment to world markets. The government is finalizing the process for new oil and gas bids, which is scheduled to be concluded by the end of 2014. The bottom line is that the new bill will mean lower taxes for Eni and Anadarko.
European exports of certain energy-related equipment and technology to Russia will be subject to prior authorization by EU member state authorities, as the bloc increases sanctions against Russia. Export licenses will be denied if the equipment is provided under a contractual obligation which post-dates the European Council's announcement of 29 July and the products are destined for deep water oil exploration and production, arctic oil exploration or production and shale oil projects in Russia, according to one expert. The sanctions will largely apply to new contracts, with existing contractual obligations allowed to carry on for a limited (still undefined) period.
Transparency & Compliance
Anti-corruption group Global Witness is claiming a lack of transparency in Angola’s use of payments by BP and its partners for a development project. BP and partners including Cobalt International Energy agreed to contribute $350 million, in installments, to be used for a research and technology center, Global Witness said in a statement. BP and Cobalt agreed in December 2011 to provide $350 million to construct a research institute in Angola, as a condition of gaining drilling rights for an offshore block of the African country's coast. So far, the companies have paid half that amount, and the anti-corruption group maintains that there is no indication that the project exists.
A new report from the US-based Natural Resource Governance Institute alleges that sub-Saharan governments are selling crude in dubious deals worth hundreds of billions of dollars without accounting for them. The report says that sub-Saharan Africa’s top 10 oil-producing countries have sold more than $254 billion in crude through their state-owned oil companies over the past three years, and that the biggest purchasers were large Swiss trading firms, including Glencore, Arcadia and Trafigura. These three accounted for one-quarter of the aforementioned purchases between 2011 and 2013. The institute is calling for new regulations for nationally owned oil companies and big trading firms to disclose their oil deals. “The sales to Swiss traders were worth an estimated $55 billion - more than twice as much money as these 10 countries - Angola, Cameroon, Chad, Côte d‘Ivoire, Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Ghana, Nigeria and South Sudan - received in net foreign aid,” the report said.
Geopolitical/Conflict Developments
• According to the Turkish Energy Ministry, some 6.5 million barrels of Iraqi Kurdish crude oil have been shipped to world markets via Turkey's Ceyhan port so far since May, and a seventh tanker is now being loaded. As we have noted before, some of these shipments have been held up due to pressure from Baghdad, but it is finding its way to markets and the flow will not likely be staunched at this point. Most recently, a delivery of crude oil from Iraqi Kurdistan arrived at Croatia’s Adriatic Sea port of Omisalj. The tanker had 80,000 cubic meters of crude on board. The crude was purchased by Hungary’s MOL, for its refinery. MOL party owns Croatia’s two refineries and has invested in oilfields in Iraqi Kurdistan. The Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in northern Iraq is in the process of increasing the capacity of the pipeline running to Turkey from 120,000 to 300,000 barrels a day, citing the threat of the crisis in Iraq.
• In Ukraine, coal plants are closing down, or facing significantly reduced output, as supply lines are cut. Some that we know of will run out of coal in 15-35 days. The conflict is already dealing a severe blow to the industry. As always, oligarchs are meddling in affairs here as well, attempting to position themselves in the post-Yanukovych playing field, using new puppets in the government to crush rivals in the power-generation sector, to the detriment of the state and the war effort itself. (For more information, contact our intelligence wing, OP Tactical).
• Turkey has decided to suspend drilling in six oil fields operated by Turkish state-run company TPAO in Iraq. This includes fields in Basra, Siba and Mansuriye. Non-essential staff were already evacuated in June as the Islamic State (IS) advanced. Iraq is now attempting to boost production in its fields in the south, as the IS advances cuts off production in the north. A key field in the south is West Qurna II, which has more than doubled its production since March, up from 120,000 to 280,000. The field is operated by Russian Lukoil Holdings.
• Hamas is claiming to have fired two rockets at Noble’s Israeli gas installation, Noa. We doubt the veracity of this report, and Israeli military reports say there have been no incidents of this nature. The gas installation is owned by Noble Energy and its Israeli partner, Delek, and is situated in a largely depleted gas field. The statement by Hamas is more indicative of where this six-week conflict could lead, than it is of the actual present-day reality. Noa is only about 19 miles off the Gaza Strip coast. Other, more important offshore gas installations are further away. The Tamar field, which only recently launched production (again, Noble) is about 50 miles offshore from the port of Haifa. Experts say, however, that Hamas rockets could reach the Tamar platform and escalate the conflict further.
Discovery & Development
• Argentina’s shale prospects are heating up with another new discovery on 14 August by YPF in the Neuquen basin, showing shale oil in the Agrio formation. George Soros has also boosted the prospects here by doubling his stake in state-owned YPF. Our assessment is that Argentina will pull out of its debt problem and the stigma of the seizure of Spanish Repsol’s YPF shares is being reduced significantly.
• US-based Apache Corp reports that an exploration well offshore Western Australia state had found as much as 300 million barrels of crude. Apache predicts this could turn out to be one of Australia’s largest discoveries in decades. Drilling was in the Phoenix South-1 well in the offshore Canning Basin. The well was drilled in 133 meters of water.
• Uruguay’s state-run oil company Ancap began exploring for petroleum reserves in Salto along with the American company Schuepbach Energy Uruguay. On 13 August 2014, Ancap President José Coya, Director of Exploitation and Production Héctor de Santa Ana, and Schuepbach Director Martin Schuepbach officially announced the initiative in San Antonio. Samples are being sent to laboratories in the U.S. for analysis, which is expected to be completed by the end of 2014, according to our partners at Southern Pulse.
Deals, Mergers & Acquisitions
• Turkish state-run Vakifbank and private Isbank will lend $1 billion to state oil company TPAO so it can buy Total's stake in an Azeri gas project, an energy official told Reuters on condition of anonymity. With the purchase of Total’ shares, TPAO becomes the second-largest shareholder in Azerbaijan’s Shah Deniz field, after BP. The Shah Deniz oil field produces 120 million barrels of crude per day. Shah Deniz is operated by BP with a share of 28.83%. TPAO holds 19% and the Azeri state-run oil company, SOCAR, holds 16.67%.
• Kuwait has concluded a new 10-year deal with China’s Sinopec Corp to nearly double supplies by offering to ship the oil and sell on a more competitive cost-and-freight basis. State-run Kuwait Petroleum Corp will export 300,000 barrels per day (bpd) of crude oil under the agreement, which would amount to 15% of Kuwaiti petroleum exports and estimated to be worth $120 billion. The previous contract, which expired, was for between 160,000 bpd and 170,000 bpd.
• Mexican conglomerate Alfa SAB de CV said it paid C$189.4 ($172.7 million) to increase its total stake in Pacific Rubiales Energy Corp to 17.07%.
• Russian oil company Rosneft is preparing to acquire the bulk of U.S. bank Morgan Stanley's physical oil trading operations
• Norwegian energy firm Det Norske Oljeselskap is set to acquire Marathon Oil Corp's Norwegian business
• Vine Oil & Gas LP of Dallas, and Blackstone Energy Partners, an affiliate of Blackstone, have announced an agreement to acquire the Haynesville assets of SWEPI LP and Shell Gulf of Mexico Inc., affiliates of Royal Dutch Shell plc, for $1.2 billion. The assets comprise over 107,000 net acres in North Louisiana in the core of the Haynesville Shale natural gas shale basin.
• Brightoil Petroleum Holdings Ltd has just completed a $1.05 billion purchase of Anadarko Petroleum Corp's oilfield stakes in China, and plans to make another major acquisition in the next 12 months.
• According to our partners at Southern Pulse, the Colombian government delayed the sale of its majority stake (58% of shares) in the electricity company Isagen for up to a year on 13 August 2014. Finance Minister Mauricio Cárdenas explained that the purpose of the delay is to increase the number of bidders in the auction, which would raise the selling price. Originally, there were seven foreign companies interested in buying the state-owned company when the announcement was made, but that number has gone down to three.