Shell reluctant to part
with California refinery amid asset sale
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[March 23, 2017]
By Jessica Resnick-Ault and Ron Bousso
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell is in talks with several potential
buyers for its refinery outside of San Francisco, but the Anglo-Dutch
oil giant is reluctant to part with its last asset in California, three
people familiar with the process say.
The company is in the midst of a massive asset sale, shedding properties
from Thailand to the North Sea to pay down debt following its $54
billion purchase of smaller British rival BG Group last year.
Shell, Europe's largest oil company, has sold around $15 billion of
assets over the past year as part of a planned $30 billion in asset
sales to trim debt incurred from the transaction.
Bidders for Shell's 158,000 barrel-per-day Martinez refinery, located 30
miles (48 km) northeast of San Francisco, include PBF Energy and NTR
Partners III LLC.
Still, sources familiar with the issue say the company wants to sell for
a higher price, with one saying the plant could be valued at about $900
million.
Shell, which barred potential buyers from hiring advisors during a first
round of the auction, has since allowed third parties to review
materials related to a sale, according to one person familiar with the
negotiations.
Shell declined to comment. PBF referenced its quarterly calls with
analysts, where it has said it considers all refining and logistics
assets that come on the market, but declined to comment on interest in
the specific plant. NTR did not respond to requests for comment.
Shell retained Lazard last year to advise on the overall asset sale
program. In the fall, Shell retained Deutsche Bank to find a buyer for
the Martinez facility.
EXIT FROM CALIFORNIA?
Over the past 15 years, Shell has sold refineries in Bakersfield and
Wilmington, California. Selling the Martinez plant would mark its exit
from the state.
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Shell's company logo is pictured at a gas station in Zurich April 8,
2015. BG Group's bonds traded up strongly on Wednesday on the back
of Royal Dutch Shell's US$70bn offer to buy the UK firm. REUTERS/Arnd
Wiegmann
While state-specific emissions regulations and fuel standards make it
more expensive to operate a refinery in California, the plant still drew
interest because of its location and ability to process local crude.
Among the bidders, PBF bought a refinery in Torrance, California last
year, while privately held NTR Partners has bid on other California
plants.
California's environmental regulations and pipeline connections make the
state an island, with few sources for gasoline imports.
As a result, when one plant in California is shuttered, margins at other
refineries in the state surge.
Most operators in the state own more than one plant. PBF, one of the
only California refiners with a single operation, would consider buying
a second to hedge against disruptions at its troubled Torrance refinery,
Jeff Dill, PBF's president for West Coast operations said last month.
The Martinez refinery, which has been operating since 1915, processes
crude into gasoline, jet fuel, diesel and other refined products and has
a coker unit for processing heavy crude.
The potential sale would include a pipeline that brings crude produced
in California's San Joaquin Valley to the refinery.
(Reporting By Jessica Resnick-Ault in New York and Ron Bousso in London;
Additional reporting by Jarrett Renshaw and David French in New York and
Liz Hampton in Houston; Editing by Bernadette Baum)
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