Tag Archives: hydrocarbons

Energy company in Azerbaijan loses revenues

JULY 15 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — SOCAR Trading, the Geneva-based subsidiary of Azerbaijan’s state owned energy company, posted lower revenues in 2015 and warned that it expected a $9m loss from debt accumulated by Samir, the operator of Moroccan refinery Mohammedia. A Moroccan court declared Samir bankrupt for piling up billions of dollars of debt. SOCAR Trading revenues were down 42% in 2015 to $22.65b.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

Stock market: Tethys Petroleum, Olisol

JULY 22 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Tethys Petroleum’s share price has fallen steadily in the past four months, as the Olisol share buy-in becomes a reality. This week it closed at 1.63p/share in London on Thursday, down 6.9% on the previous week.

The Guernsey-based oil and gas company operates chiefly in Kazakhstan and Tajikistan. In May it reached a final financing agreement with Kazakhstan-based Olisol, which is poised to buy a 42% stake in the company once the deal becomes concrete.

Last week, the company announced the appointment of a new Chief Commercial Officer, Kazakhstan-born Alexander Skripka, who is also a director and shareholder of Olisol.

Mr Skripka had previously worked for state-owned Kaztransgas, the main gas distributor in the country. The link with a state-owned company is perhaps a sign of just how embedded Olisol is in the elite circles of Kazakhstan’s oil and gas sector.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

Azerbaijan’s energy company production falls

JULY 18 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Azerbaijan’s state-owned energy company SOCAR posted a fall in oil and gas production data in June, in line with this year’s downward trend. In H1 2016, SOCAR produced 3.7m tonnes of oil and 3.2b cubic metres of gas, down 8.6% and 6.2% respectively. Sustained low oil prices, the sharp depreciation of the manat currency in December and a storm at a platform in the Caspian Sea which caused a fire and killed several people have all contributed to lower production.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

Iran boosts gas for Armenia

JULY 20 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Iran increased gas supplies to Armenia to make up for a drop in Armenian imports from Russia, imposed by repairs to a pipeline crossing Georgia.

The deal highlights the rivalry between Moscow and Tehran for gas supply contracts to Armenia and, more widely, the South Caucasus.

For one month from July 10, repair work will halt gas flows along the Russia-Georgia-Armenia pipeline, Kazak-Saguramo.

Analysts have said the maintenance work on the pipeline from Russia has given Iran a chance to position itself as a reliable alternative supplier of gas.

Armenia imported 818m cubic metres of gas in the first half of 2016 from Russia, a drop of 7.7% from 2015. This is around five times more than Iran currently exports to Armenia.

Levon Yolyan, Armenia’s minister of energy, was due to visit Iran on July 25, to negotiate the gas supplies.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

DESFA deal with Azerbaijan’s energy company in danger

JULY 20 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — A deal for Azerbaijan’s state-owned energy company SOCAR to lead a takeover of Greece’s gas pipeline network DESFA could collapse after the Greek government agreed a lower-than-expected gas price rise. SOCAR has been working on putting together the deal to buy up Greece’s pipeline network since 2013.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

Azerbaijan’s energy company says Greek gas network deal may collapse

JULY 20 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — A deal for Azerbaijan’s state-owned energy company SOCAR to lead a €400m takeover of Greece’s gas pipeline network DESFA could collapse after the Greek government agreed a lower-than-expected domestic gas price rise.

Anar Mammadov, CEO of SOCAR’s Greek subsidiary, said after a meeting with Panos Skourletis, Greece’s energy minister that the gas price increase undermined DESFA’s profitability.

“If implemented, those changes would reduce the value of the company and its future profitability

dramatically,” he told media. “The only thing I can say right now is that I can’t see how the tender could be salvaged if those changes are implemented as planned.”

The Greek parliament still has to approve the price rise for it to be implemented.

In 2013, SOCAR won a bid to buy 66% of DESFA, Greece’s gas distributor. The deal was later frozen by the European Commission, citing the so-called Third Energy Package, a 2009 regulation designed to counter vertical integration between gas suppliers and distributors.

In recent months, though, Italy’s Snam has come forward as a potential partner for SOCAR. Snam would buy 17% and SOCAR would take 49%, which mean the takeover complies with the EU’s requirements.

Buying DESFA is important to Azerbaijan because Greece will play a major role hosting part of a pipeline network that will pump gas from the Caspian Sea to Europe.

The EU has called this new pipeline network a vital strategic goal to reduce its reliance on gas supplies from Russia with which it has had increasingly strained relations.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

 

Kazakh energy company spat worsens

JULY 19 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — In an increasingly vicious argument, Kazakhstan’s state-owned energy company Kazmunaigas accused independent directors of its London-traded upstream subsidiary KMG EP, of misrepresenting its position over a buy-out scheme it was trying to promote. Kazmunaigas’ letter, published by Kazakhstan’s stock exchange, said that its purchase offer for KMG EP’s GDRs still stands and that the independent directors had overesti- mated KMG EP’s operational performance.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

Turkmenistan reorganises its oil and gas ministry

JULY 15 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — In a move that took observers by surprise, Turkmenistan abolished its oil and gas ministry which had, officially, run the most profitable economic sector in the country, part of a wider structural reform of the government.

At a cabinet meeting, President Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov justified the move as an effort to improve management and governance systems n the energy sector.

Turkmenistan is considered an important stakeholder in the world’s energy nexus, and the move shook analysts. It holds the fourth-largest gas reserves in the world and exports gas mostly to China via pipeline. For over a decade, European and US lobby groups have pushed for a Trans-Caspian Pipeline to pump Turkmen gas to Europe. Turkmenistan is also building TAPI, a gas pipeline to export gas to India, via Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Simon Pirani, senior research fellow at the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, said that aside from internal causes, which are hard to guess, a range of external factors could have played in Turkmenistan’s decision to reorganise its hydrocarbon sector.

“The continuing relationship with China, despite lower off-take of gas than Turkmen officials had hoped, the improved ties with Iran and the quite bad relationship with Russia could all be relevant factors,” he told The Conway Bulletin.

The change, however, is unlikely to shift the way that Turkmenistan does business, a system that revolves around the whims and decisions of President Berdymukhamedov.

“Companies and international organisations are aware that Turkmenistan is a centralised system,” Mr Pirani said.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

Skyland says finds gas in Georgia

JULY 8 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Australia’s Skyland Petroleum said it started production at Block XIG, a gas field 10km south of Tbilisi. Skyland owns 20% of the project, Georgia Oil and Gas (GOG) owns 60% and state-owned Georgian Oil and Gas holds the rest. Last month, Skyland said it started operations at its first well at the Kyzyl-Tumshuk oil and gas field in southern Tajikistan.

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(News report from Issue No. 289, published on July 15 2016)

Boardroom battle for control of Kazakhstan’s KMG EP heats up

ALMATY, JULY 14 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Intensifying its fight for more control over its London-traded subsidiary KMG EP, Kazakhstan’s state-owned energy company Kazmunaigas increased by 14% its earlier buyout offer to minority shareholders and retracted demands to cut the company’s independence.

Under pressure to boost income from oil and gas sales, Kazmunaigas wants to increase its 58% stake in KMG EP. KMG EP’s assets are more profitable than the assets owned by Kazmunaigas.

The problem for Kazmunaigas, though, is that its initial buyout offer of $7.88/GDR met with strong resistance from independent shareholders at KMG EP last month. The increase to $9/GDR, which Kazmunaigas issued without an explicit explanation, also appeared to attract a withering response.

“An increase in the price of the Purchase Offer would not be consistent with the prior statements made by Kazmunaigas that it ‘is not seeking to acquire any significant additional holdings in KMG EP through this offer’,” the independent directors said in a note.

They accused Kazmunaigas of underhand tactics to try to force more control over KMG EP. Specifically, the minority shareholders rallied against a new corporate governance structure proposed by Kazmunaigas that would reduce independent control of KMG EP. Kazmunaigas wanted to impose a veto against the appointment of independent directors but has now dropped these demands.

The ongoing saga within the most powerful industrial structure in Kazakhstan acts as a rare window on Kazakhstan’s corporate governance culture after a series of high profile scandals ahead of planned new IPOs, including Kazakhtelecom, the state- owned telecoms company.

KMG EP’s GDRs have traded at between $6 to $9 in the past 12 months.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 289, published on July 15 2016)