Exclusive-Shell, Exxon launch sale of major Dutch gas venture -document
Send a link to a friend
[September 06, 2022] By
Ron Bousso
LONDON (Reuters) - Shell and Exxon Mobil
have put up for sale one of Europe's largest and oldest natural gas
production ventures, betting on soaring energy prices amid tensions with
Russia to attract buyers, according to a document and industry sources.
The top two Western energy giants could raise over $1 billion from the
sale of the 50-50 NAM joint venture in the Netherlands, two industry
sources said.
It would be part of both companies' efforts to shed ageing assets that
are no longer central to their operations.
Shell and Exxon recently launched the sale process for NAM’s offshore
gas operations, which include dozens of fields and around 20 offshore
platforms, as well as a network of pipelines and three processing
plants, according to the document and sources.
NAM started producing natural gas in 1963 following the discovery of the
giant Groningen field and has been a major source of gas for the
Netherlands and Europe for decades.
Its output has nevertheless been in a steady decline since 2014 and is
set to fall further in the coming years after the Dutch government
decided to shut Groningen in order to limit seismic risk in the region.
The field is expected to shut down in 2023 or 2024 but its life could be
extended, the government has said.
Shell, Exxon and NAM declined to comment.
The offshore and onshore NAM assets up for sale produced around 2.4
million cubic metres per day of natural gas in 2021 and have potential
to increase output to 2.8 mcm per day with further investment, according
to the document.
[to top of second column] |
Exxon Mobil logo and stock graph are
seen through a magnifier displayed in this illustration taken
September 4, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
The joint venture, however, includes several late-life assets that require large
spending for dismantling and clean-up operations once they are shut down, the
sources said.
The package of assets also includes NAM's stakes in three gas processing plants
in the Den Helder Terminal in which 53% of all gas produced in the Dutch
offshore is processed, as well as stakes in several pipeline networks.
The assets are estimated to be worth between $1 billion and $1.5 billion,
sources said.
Assigning a value to such assets has become tricky in recent months amid huge
fluctuations in long-term natural gas prices after Russia, Europe's main gas
supplier, restricted exports to the region in response to Western sanctions on
Moscow following its invasion of Ukraine in February.
Still, Shell and Exxon hope that Europe's growing focus on its domestic energy
production will attract interest in the NAM joint venture, the sources said.
NAM said in October 2021 that it aims to sell its oil and gas fields in the
Netherlands in the coming years following the government's decision to shut down
the Groningen field.
(Reporting by Ron Bousso; additional reporting by Gary McWilliams in Houston,
Bart Meijer in Amsterdam; Editing by Susan Fenton)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|