PetroChina, Shell To Buy Australian Gas Producer for AUD 3.5 Bln

Mardi, mars 30th, 2010

PetroChina Company Limited (PetroChina), China’s largest oil and gas producer, announced on Monday that it has agreed a joint bid with Shell to acquire Arrow Energy Limited after raising the offer to AUD 3.5 billion, reported Xinhua.

CS CSG (Australia) Pty Ltd, the 50-50 joint venture owned by PetroChina International Investment Company Ltd, a subsidiary of PetroChina, and Shell Energy Holdings Australia Ltd., a subsidiary of Royal Dutch Shell plc, agreed with Arrow to acquire 100 percent of its shares, according to the statement posted on PetroChina’s website.

CS CSG will pay 4.70 Australian dollars per share in cash for all of the equities in the leading Australian coal-seam gas producer, according to the statement.

The joint venture announced a cash-per-share offer of 4.45 Australian dollars on March 8.

Under the deal, CS CSG would own Arrow’s Coal Seam Gas (CSG) assets in Queensland and domestic power business.

The joint venture would also be also entitled to own Shell’s Queensland CSG assets and its site for a proposed liquefied natural gas (LNG) plant on Curtis Island at Gladstone.



China pulls out of $40 billion Australia gas deal

Lundi, janvier 11th, 2010

Energy giant PetroChina Co. Ltd. has pulled out of a $40 billion deal to buy natural gas from a project off Australia, leaving Woodside Petroleum Ltd. looking for new customers, reported AP.

Reasons for letting the preliminary agreement lapse were not given, but analysts said Tuesday it was probably because PetroChina had become dissatisfied with the cost in the two years since the deal was signed.

Woodside informed Australia’s stock exchange on Monday that an early stage agreement for the Browse Basin liquefied natural gas project off Western Australia state had not been settled by a Dec. 31 deadline and had now lapsed.

Under the September 2007 agreement, PetroChina would potentially buy up to three million metric tons (3.3 million tons) of LNG per year from the project for up to 20 years.

At the time, it was one of Australia’s largest export deals with an estimated worth of AU$45 billion ($40 billion).

PetroChina would probably look for other sources of gas, said Yang Wei, an oil industry analyst at Guotai Junan Securities in Shanghai.

« I think it’s probably that the price is not right. It’s too expensive, » he said.

Woodside said an agreement for CPC Corporation Taiwan to buy up to three million metric tons of LNG per year for up to 20 years from the Browse project was still in place, and the company was looking for more customers.

Source : Konaxis