Wednesday 27 November 2013

Sinopec, Apache in Talks to Invest in Canada LNG Project

     According to a report from the Wall Street Journal:
China's largest refiner is in early talks with U.S.-based oil-and-gas producer Apache Corp.  to buy a minority stake in a liquefied natural-gas project on Canada's Pacific coast, people familiar with the matter said Tuesday.
The LNG project, known as Kitimat, is one of several LNG projects that China Petrochemical Corp. is looking at in the region, one of the people said. The management team of the Chinese company, known as Sinopec, has yet to authorize the investment, and it could select another Canadian LNG project to invest in, the person said.
Although the size and value of the stake hasn't been determined, Sinopec's investment would go toward paying for the cost of the project, one of the people said. Apache last year pegged the cost at $15 billion.
Apache Corp. in February upped its stake in Kitimat from 40% to 50%, which valued the project at $4.05 billion. The assets in Kitimat, a coastal town in British Columbia, include an LNG processing plant, pipelines and 644,000 acres of undeveloped shale resources. Apache will operate the upstream assets, while its partner--U.S.-based Chevron Corp., which own the other 50%--will operate the downstream assets.
The move comes as China looks to double the share of natural gas in its energy mix to 10% by 2020 from less than 5% now. Although China has ambitious plans for unconventional fuels such as shale gas, large-scale production is at least a decade away, creating opportunities for importers of LNG--the chilled and exportable form of natural gas. Sinopec is China's largest refiner by output.
Sinopec could also be a buyer of LNG produced by the project.

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