Tag Archives: hydrocarbons

SOCAR-Fugro joint venture to upgrade Azerbaijan’s refinery

NOV. 11 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — Azerbaijan’s state-owned energy company SOCAR said its joint venture with Dutch oil and gas services company Fugro will work on the modernisation of a refinery near Baku. SOCAR Fugro will provide geophysical and geotechnical services for the modernisation work. Azerbaijan has earmarked around $1b for reconstruction work on the country’s largest refinery.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 256, published on Nov. 13 2015)

 

Petronas ups Turkmen output

NOV. 11 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — Petronas Carigali said it wants to increase oil production in the Turkmen section of the Caspian Sea. By year-end, output at the Diyarbekir offshore field should reach 10,000 barrels/day and the company plans to add another 7,000 barrels/day from the Garagol-Western Deniz field. Petronas Carigali is the Turkmen subsidiary of the Malaysian oil and gas company Petronas.

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(News report from Issue No. 256, published on Nov. 13 2015)

 

Stock market: GHG, Nostrum, KAZ Minerals

NOV. 10 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — As the Bulletin reports on its front page, Georgia Healthcare Group (GHG) listed on the London Stock Exchange with an initial share price of 170p on Nov. 9. The company listed 29% of its shares, valuing the company around £218m ($331m). By Friday its shares had dropped to 181p.

Oil and commodities companies lost ground on the London stock market after Brent and copper prices fell by 6% and 4.5% this week.

Linked to this fall in the price of Brent crude futures, Kazakhstan-focused Nostrum Oil & Gas shares were down 16% closing at 367.5p. Nostrum recorded an 8% fall on Thursday, placing its shares among the worst performers on the FTSE 250.

Cooper producer KAZ Minerals, formerly known as Kazakhmys, faired worse. Its shares fell by 20% over the week, closing at 80p.

Tethys Petroleum shares jumped by 53% on Monday following Olisol’s letter of intent to acquire its stakes, but finished the week down to 4.25p.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 256, published on Nov. 13 2015)

Tethys does deal with Kazakh investment group Olisol

NOV. 9 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — Canadian oil and gas company Tethys Petroleum said it has entered into a non-binding agreement worth around $34m with Kazakhstan-based Olisol Investments, allowing it to refinance its debt and inject cash into exploration projects.

Tethys operates oil and gas projects in Kazakhstan, Tajikistan and Georgia.

Olisol upped its previous offer per share from 0.16 to 0.17 Canadian dollars, for a total of 25.5m Canadian dollars. In addition, Olisol will lend Tethys $15m. Last month, an Olisol statement said that it had worked with Tethys since 2009 and that it wanted to created a fully integrated oil and gas company in Kazakhstan.

Tethys, which was close to reaching a deal with London-listed Nostrum Oil & Gas earlier in September and has also attracted interest from AGR Energy, a company owned by the Kazakh Assaubayev family, said it was happy with the deal.

“We are pleased to have reached conditional agreement with Olisol on a potentially transformational refinancing,” the company statement quoted Tethy’s CEO, John Bell, as saying.

Analysts, though, were cautious on the real value of the deal.

“There is a lot of movement around Tethys, with offers being made and later being pulled. I would remain cautious of the whole situation, until a deal is signed,” Stephane Foucaud, managing director at First- Energy Capital investment firm, told the Bulletin.

“It is still unclear what kind of securities will Olisol use as a warranty for its interim financing. In these deals debt can often be used as a weapon.”

Perhaps most importantly for Tethys shareholders is that the deal spares it from working with AGR Energy and the Assaubayev family which has a mixed reputation in Kazakh business circles.

Tethys’ share price surged in London and Toronto on the day of the announcement, although it lost ground later.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 256, published on Nov. 13 2015)

 

Tajikistan reports on transparency in mining sector

OCT. 30 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – The Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI), an intergovernmental organisation set up to improve transparency in mining and oil sectors, published its first report on Tajikistan which the authors said shone some light on the murky Tajik extractive sector.

Anti-corruption lobby groups have previously criticised the Tajik government for siphoning off cash from its metals sector and while the report was considered a step forward for transparency in Tajikistan, there were still many blank spots.

And the authors of the report made this clear.

“Three of the 14 companies in the EITI Report are partially state owned. Considerable details related to these companies are missing from the report due to the currently weak government systems for recording all company payments,” they wrote in the EITI report.

Tajikistan had been supposed to present its first report to the EITI in February, a deadline it missed.

A presentation on the report will be made in Dushanbe on Nov. 25.

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(News report from Issue No. 255, published on Nov. 6 2015)

Roxi output drops in Kazakhstan

NOV. 3 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — London-listed Roxi Petroleum said technical issues in one of its main new wells in the BNG area in western Kazakhstan have slowed production. It didn’t give any more details. In a trading update, Roxi also said it would drill a new well nearby for $8.5m to speed up the beginning of operations. Roxi showed stagnant operational results in H1 2015.

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(News report from Issue No. 255, published on Nov. 6 2015)

 

Air Liquide and Kazakh refineries cooperate

NOV. 5 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — French company Air Liquide will form a joint venture with Kazakhstan’s state-owned Kazmunaigas to increase production of industrial gases at the country’s refineries. The agreement, signed during President Nursultan Nazarbayev’s visit to France, will improve the performance of Kazakhstan’s three refineries at Atyrau, Pavlodar and Shymkent.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 255, published on Nov. 6 2015)

 

Stock market: Roxi Petroleum, KAZ Minerals

NOV. 5 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — Stock markets saw commodities-focused companies lose terrain this week, despite a brief surge in oil prices above $50/barrel on Tuesday.

Kazakhstan-focused oil company Roxi Petroleum lost 16% in one week closing at 7.88p, perhaps driven down by technical issues slowing down its drilling operations at the BNG contract area in the western part of the country.

After peaking at 122.4p on Tuesday, mining company KAZ Minerals shares were down 8.5% to 105.7p on Friday. KAZ Minerals used to be called Kazakhmys.

In Toronto, Centerra Gold shares lost 3.5% to 7.15 Canadian dollars, continuing a 3-week slump following debates on the formation of a new government in Kyrgyzstan. The Kumtor gold mine in Kyrgyzstan is Centerra’s main asset and the company is a major taxpayer in the country. Centerra has said, though, that production at Centerra would be down this year on earlier forecasts.

A new government has now been formed in Kyrgyzstan, hopefully giving Centerra a stable partner to work with.

Shares in Bank of Georgia were down 4.5% to £19.11 on Friday.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 255, published on Nov. 6 2015)

 

Iran makes deals with Turkmenistan

NOV. 5 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Iran’s oil minister, Bijan Namdar Zanganeh, said trade between Iran and Turkmenistan would boom as the country opened up and made more deals with its neighbours in Central Asia. Local media quoted him as saying that Turkmen- Iranian trade measured $4b last year. He said bilateral trade worth $60b was possible within a decade.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 255, published on Nov. 6 2015)

Petrol queues grow in Uzbek capital

NOV. 5 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Photographs and anecdotal evidence from Uzbekistan showed that queues for petrol at service stations are growing longer and longer. A collapse in the value of the Uzbek sum has hit the Uzbek economy hard. Uzbekistan also has a shortage of refining shortages.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 255, published on Nov. 6 2015)