2011/7/20

中国海洋石油:破たんしたOPTIカナダ買収へ−オイルサンドを強化

海洋油田開発で中国最大手の中国海洋石油(CNOOC)は、破綻したカナダのオイルサンド開発会社OPTI Canadaを現金と債務合わせ21億米ドルで買収することで合意した。CNOOCはオイルサンド埋蔵量の拡大を図る。

OPTI Canadaは1999年にイスラエルの石油会社 Ormat IndustriesがカナダのSuncor Energyとの50/50JVとして設立し、カルガリーのLong Lakeでオイルサンドの試掘を始めた。
しかし、Suncorが撤退、OPTIは上場と借入で資金を集め、カナダのNexenと組んで商業生産を開始した。
現在、OPTIが権益の35%、Nexenが65%を保有し、Nexenがオペレーターとなっている。

Long Lake ProjectはSAGD(Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage)によるビチュメン採掘の設計能力が日量72千バレルで、Upgrade設備はOrmat Industriesが開発したOrCrude法(ガス化及び水素化分解を統合)を使用し、主として低硫黄分のAPI Premium Sweet Crudeを日量58.5千バレル生産する予定。

これに続き南に隣接するKinosis鉱区の開発を計画している。SAGDを先行させるが、ビチュメン日量14万バレルの認可を得ており、まず4万バレルでスタートする。これが成功し、採算が取れるようなら Upgrade設備を建設する。

将来はCottonwood鉱区、Leimer鉱区も手掛ける。

OPTIは資金繰りが悪化、債権者との交渉を続けていたが、話し合いがまとまり、7月13日に Albertaの裁判所で再建計画手続きを開始したばかり。
再建計画では新株を発行して債務と交換することとなっている。

7月20日のOPTI発表資料によると、CNOOCによる21億ドルの買収額の内訳は以下の通り。
 ・第二先取特権の債権1,750百万ドルを1,179百万ドルで取得
 ・全株式を34百万ドルで取得(1株0.12ドル)
 ・第一先取特権の債権825百万ドルを引き継ぐ
 ・その他の債権 37.5百万ドルを引き継ぐ

取引成立には第二先取特権債権の債権者の過半の承認を要する。9月に会合を開く。株主総会の承認は不要。
カナダと中国の当局の承認とAlbertaの裁判所の承認が必要。

仮にこの取引が成立しない場合は、7月13日に開始した再建計画手続きを進めることとなる。

ーーー

中国勢の北米のエネルギーへの進出状況は以下の通り。

2005/4   中国海洋石油カナダのオイルサンド開発企業・MEGエナジーの株式の16.69%を買収
2005/6   Sinopecカナダのアルバータ州のNorthern Lightsにおけるオイルサンド事業の権益の40% をSynenco Energy から買収
2009年に50%にアップ
2009/9/10   PetroChina、カナダのオイルサンド事業に参加 (Athabasca Oil Sands)
2010/4/16   Sinopec、カナダのオイルサンドに投資 (ConocoPhillipsのオイルサンド事業会社 Syncrude Canada)
2010/10/18   CNOOC、テキサス州のEagle Ford Shale projectに参加 Niobrara shaleを追加
2011/2/16   PetroChina、カナダの天然ガス権益取得  Encana Corporation から天然ガスの権益の50%を買収

 


 2014-03-04 China Daily  

CNOOC licensed to seek Arctic oil

      Energy giant accelerates search for foreign supply

China National Offshore Oil Corp (CNOOC), the country's largest offshore oil and gas developer, has become the first Chinese firm licensed to look for oil in the Arctic, a landmark step for overseas energy exploration for the world's second-largest economy.

CNOOC has partnered with Iceland's Eykon Energy in an application for a license to explore oil and gas resources in Arctic waters since last June.

On Jan 22, Iceland's national energy authority, Orkustofnun, granted the new offshore license to the Chinese company as an operator with a 60 percent share, to Eykon Energy with a 15 percent share and to Petoro Iceland AS with a 25 percent share, the company told China Daily on Thursday.

 

As global fuel consumption increases, international oil and gas players are actively seeking large-scale untapped resources to replace the North Sea oil production region.

Based on CNOOC's expertise in deepwater oil exploration, it has been accelerating steps in foreign offshore oil and gas businesses, including the largest-ever acquisition of Nexen Inc in the energy sector.

"The permission that CNOOC got from the Iceland government proves the Chinese energy companies' upstream exploration competence," said Guo Haitao, associate dean of the School of Business Administration with the China University of Petroleum.

He said the project is still in its initial stages and will not affect China's oil and gas supply in the short run, but it will raise the country's energy exploration technology level as well as ensure supply through diversified resources in the long term.

China imported 280 million tons of crude in 2013, up 4 percent year-on-year, according to the customs office.

As the country's oil dependency on foreign supply continued to increase — reaching 58.1 percent in 2013 — China's domestic oil output remained flat at about 208 million tons.

CNOOC announced in late January that the company's output in 2013 was 412 million barrels of oil equivalent, of which 69 million barrels came from its acquisition of Nexen Inc.

It set its 2014 output target at 422 million to 435 million barrels with a year-on-year growth of 2.43 to 5.58 percent.

But as the first Chinese company that can tap oil and gas exploration in the Arctic, risks exist along with opportunities.

"CNOOC will be the major operator of the project, and risks are high," said Guo. The Arctic region has rich oil and gas resources with a proven reserve of 400 billion barrels of oil equivalent, according to the latest annual report from CNPC Economics and Technology Research Institute. "

 

The high operation costs and long payback period are major problems for investors in the region," said the report.

An industrial insider with CNOOC, who declined to be named, told China Daily that the extraction equipment in the Arctic region is different from the ones used for producing crude in deep water because of extremely low temperatures and Arctic ice.

He said the cost of the equipment fit for producing crude oil in the Arctic region will also be much higher.

In addition to the cost, environment concerns also are a problem for explorers.

In September, activists from the non-governmental organization Greenpeace scaled the Prirazlomnaya oil platform in Arctic waters, calling the company's operations a threat to the environment.

Located in the Barents Sea, Prirazlomnaya is the first Arctic offshore oil platform developed by Russia. It reportedly plans to drill 40 wells from the platform. The project started production late last year with an initial daily output of 130,000 barrels.

It took 20 years to start production since it got the exploration permission in 1993, which has shown the difficulties of operation in the Arctic region.

Royal Dutch Shell, another international oil giant, had huge investment plans in the Arctic waters off Alaska but decided to abandon drilling in late January because of a US federal court ruling.

It was the second year Shell has postponed drilling in the Chukchi Sea, where it began exploratory drilling in 2012.

The company's operation also caused concerns among environmentalists and native Alaskan communities, which took the company to court to try to stop it. Energy The permission that CNOOC has got from the Iceland government has proved the Chinese energy companies' upstream exploration competence."

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China and Norway Team Up on Iceland’s Continental Shelf

The Icelandic National Energy Authority (NEA) has finished processing the third application received in the second licensing round in the Dreki Area on the Icelandic Continental Shelf. The license will be awarded to Icelandic firm Eykon Energy, Chinese oil company CNOOC, and Norwegian state company Petoro.

The NEA expects this third license to be formally issued by the end of this year (2013). Before the licence is awarded, Petoro’s decision to take part in the license needs to be approved by Norway’s parliament.

The granting of this third licence by the NEA will conclude the licensing as a result of the second licensing round on the Icelandic continental shelf, which had a deadline for applications in April 2012. In last January (2013), the NEA granted two licences to Faroe Petroleum Norway, Iceland Petroleum and Petoro, and to Valiant Petroleum (now part of Canadian Ithaca Energy), Icelandic Kolvetni and Petoro. The licences were granted on the basis of the Icelandic Hydrocarbons Act (No. 12/2001) on Prospecting, Exploration and Production of Hydrocarbons.

The area covered by the three licenses are shown on the map (above). The new third upcoming license is marked in green (Eykon Energy, CNOOK and Petoro), the other two already issued licenses are the blue area (Ithaca Energy, Kolvetni and Petoro) and the red area (Faroe Petroleum, Iceland Petroleum and Petoro).

The Dreki Area, which is part of the Jan Mayen Ridge, is thought to have potential for hydrocarbon accumulations because of its geological similarity to hydrocarbon basins which were its next door neighbours prior to the opening of the northeast Atlantic ocean basin. The basins in question are the Jameson Land Basin onshore East Greenland, where oil is known to have been generated and preserved in sandstone bodies, and basins offshore western Norway, Shetland and in the North Sea, where oil and gas has been discovered in commercial quantities.