LONDON
(Dow Jones), Mar. 10, 2010
China's Cnooc Ltd. and French oil major Total SA are each
expected to acquire a third of Tullow Oil PLC's oil assets in
Uganda, Tullow said in a statement Wednesday.
Both companies have recently made presentations to the Ugandan
authorities and Tullow said it expects these transactions and
Tullow's purchase of Heritage Oil PLC's Uganda assets to be signed
in the coming weeks. "This will result in a unified partnership
with considerable experience and financial capability to enable
Uganda to become a significant oil producing nation," it said.
Tullow will begin the first phase of development of hydrocarbons
discovered in Uganda's Lake Albert basin this year, with oil and
gas production for the local market due to begin in 2011, the
statement said. Natural gas from the Nzizi field will be piped to a
power plant to be constructed in Uganda's Hoima district and around
10,000 barrels a day of oil from the Kasamene field will be trucked
to local markets.
Output from the whole basin could eventually exceed 200,000
barrels of oil a day, supplying a local refinery and exporting
surplus crude to regional and international markets, said
Tullow.
A farm-down deal with Cnooc and Total will help speed
development of the whole basin, said Royal Bank of Scotland analyst
Phil Corbett. "A strong partnership on equal footing in Uganda
should accelerate the development of a major resource base and,
following the net proceeds of the farm-down and the placing inflow,
the company should be well funded to pursue the considerable upside
potential in its portfolio," he said.
Following recent appraisal drilling, Tullow upgraded the
mid-range reserves estimate at its Tweneboa discovery offshore
Ghana to 400 million barrels of oil equivalent, from 250 million
boe previously.
The Jubilee field offshore Ghana remains on track to produce its
first oil by the end of this year, Tullow said. The first phase of
Jubilee will produce around 120,000 barrels of oil a day.
Tullow Wednesday reported a full-year 2009 operating profit of
GBP95 million, down 68% on the year due to lower oil and gas prices
and lower output.
Oil and gas production for the year was down 12% to 58,300
barrels of oil equivalent a day.
Tullow's gearing -- the ratio of net debt to net assets -- rose
17 percentage points to 47% as the company invested heavily in
Ghana and Uganda. Tullow will spend up to $1.5 billion buying the
Heritage Oil assets, although a large part of this cost will be
offset by the proceeds of the subsequent partnership deal with
Total and Cnooc.
"Our 2009 reported results still reflect a period of financial
transition," said Tullow's Chief Executive Aidan Heavey. "First oil
in Ghana from the Jubilee field later this year will result in
considerable production growth and increased cash flow."
Copyright (c)
2010 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.