Showing posts with label Energy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Energy. Show all posts

UPDATE 1-Oil price plunge could leave helicopters sputtering

(Adds AgustaWestland comment in paragraph 27)

By: Lewis Krauskopf

Jan 15 (ATimes) - Tumbling oil prices are starting to ripple through the helicopter industry, which depends on oil companies that shuttle their crews to off-shore sites for a big chunk of its business.

Off-shore oil drilling and production in regions such as the North Sea and Gulf of Mexico have been a key source of demand for helicopter makers including United Technologies' Sikorsky unit, Finmeccanica's AgustaWestland and Airbus Helicopters. Textron's Bell Helicopter could soon become a bigger player with a new helicopter.

The oil and gas industry now accounts for as much as 40 percent of the roughly $6 billion annual sales of helicopters for civil use, making it the biggest non-military segment, according to aerospace research firm Teal Group.

While manufacturers have not indicated that the plunging price of crude has led to canceled orders or reduced production, some warning signs are emerging.

During United Technologies' annual outlook meeting last month, Sikorsky president Mick Maurer said falling oil prices would "put some short-term pressure on our commercial business." Oil and gas represents two-thirds of Sikorsky's non-military business, Maurer said last March.

The oil slide has already taken its toll on shares of helicopter transport firms, which along with leasing companies are major customers of the manufacturers. With their own fleets, these companies fly crews and material to offshore sites for oil companies. Their helicopters are also used for search-and-rescue missions and other purposes.

Since oil turned south in mid-2014, shares in the big transport firms have followed. CHC Group has dropped 70 percent, Era Group has slumped 29 percent and Bristow Group is down 24 percent. By contrast, the S&P 500 index has gained about 3 percent over that time.

"It's a pretty unsettled time in our industry right now," said CHC spokesman T.R. Reid, adding that CHC remained optimistic about long-term demand. "The industry is moving further and further offshore," Reid said.

Bristow, in an emailed statement, said: "While our growth rate may be impacted by the current market environment, Bristow is in good position to weather the downturn in oil prices."

An Era Group spokeswoman declined to comment, citing "quiet period" rules.

While oil transport firms are more likely to be hit initially if exploration projects get cancelled, leasing companies could also suffer.

Leasing companies include Waypoint Leasing, Macquarie Rotorcraft Leasing and Milestone Aviation Group, which in October agreed to be bought by General Electric Co for $1.78 billion. All declined to comment.

OIL-RICH MARKET
Sales of rotorcraft for the oil and gas industry have more than doubled since 2006, outpacing growth in the broader non-military market, according to the Teal Group. Military helicopter sales are worth about $16 billion a year.

To be sure, helicopters are only part of the business for diversified aerospace and industrial manufacturers, and other product lines, including United Tech's aerospace parts unit and Textron's Cessna jet business, stand to benefit from cheaper fuel.

But the oil industry has been by far the biggest growth market for non-military helicopter sales and many new products have been developed for this market, said Richard Aboulafia, an analyst at the Teal Group. "If (oil) prices stay around $50, there could be some real damage to these programs," he said.

Brent crude traded at $48.69 a barrel on Wednesday, near six-year lows, despite a rare 4.5 percent spike.

Between 20 to 30 percent of the demand for off-shore helicopter crew transport is tied to drilling for exploration, while the rest covers traffic to already-producing facilities, said Amy Groeschel, an analyst at IHS Energy.

Exploration and development are more vulnerable to cuts, Groeschel said, because they are tied to projects that could be canceled.

Helicopters that service oil and gas companies are generally larger and more expensive than those used for search-and-rescue missions or executive travel because they carry large crews and may need to make long trips out to sea.

"What we may see is a pause in new orders being placed," said Chris Seymour, head of market analysis for consulting firm Ascend Flightglobal.

Newly developed helicopters expected to serve the oil industry include Airbus' EC175, and Bell's 525 Relentless, which is due to make its first flight early this year.

Mike Suldo, oil and gas market specialist for Bell Helicopter, said in an email the company was not seeing any slowdown or expecting a marked dent in its business.

"We do not anticipate a significant letup, as many energy companies, operators and national governments are seeking more innovative and modern helicopters."

But analysts are more cautious. "Since a component of sales is to the oil and gas industry, it's unfortunate for the timing of the roll-out," said Brian Foley, an independent aviation consultant.

A United Technologies spokesman declined to comment when asked this week about the impact from low oil prices, citing the "quiet period" close to an earnings release.

Finmeccanica's AgustaWestland said in a statement it "has not experienced any specific negative impact" as oil prices have plunged. While it carefully monitors oil prices, "no impacts exist on our long term plans in producing helicopters, including those for the Oil & Gas market," the company said.

Airbus, which says its helicopters represent about a fourth of the estimated 2,300 rotorcraft used today for oil and gas missions, is not seeing any cancellations as a result of falling oil prices, said Christopher Grainger, vice president for oil and gas sales at Airbus Helicopters.

Grainger said in an email that Airbus expected "things to remain relatively stable" in 2015, but remained in close contact with its customers and the oil companies. "We all have to adapt accordingly." (Editing by Eric Effron and Tomasz Janowski)(GA,Reuters, Asia Times)

UPDATE 2-Hague court to order Russia to pay $50 bln in Yukos case -paper

* Russia has to start paying by Jan. 15 2015 -paper

* Ruling comes amid turmoil in Ukraine and East-West rift

* Court to announce verdict later on Monday (Adds detail, quote)

MOSCOW, July 28 (GNN) - Shareholders in defunct oil giant Yukos won a court battle against Russia in one of the largest-ever commercial legal cases, in which Moscow must pay $50 billion for expropriating the assets, Kommersant daily said, citing unnamed sources.


It said the Permanent Court of Arbitration in the Hague would announce later on Monday that Russia must pay the compensation - half of the original $100 billion claim - to former shareholders in the company, once Russia's largest oil producer.

The verdict on the case, which has lasted for almost a decade, is due to be announced against the background of the deepest West-East rift since the end of the Cold War, over Moscow's role in turmoil in Ukraine.

The newspaper said Russia was expected to appeal against the ruling.

The claim in the Hague was made by subsidiaries of Gibraltar-based Group Menatep, a company through which Mikhail Khodorkovsky, once Russia's richest man, controlled Yukos.

Group Menatep now exists as holding company GML and Khodorkovsky is no longer a shareholder in GML or Yukos.

Khodorkovsky, who is not fighting the action, was arrested at gunpoint in 2003 and convicted of theft and tax evasion in 2005. His company, once worth $40 billion, was broken up and nationalised, with most assets handed to Rosneft, a company run by Igor Sechin, a close ally of President Vladimir Putin.

In a case which Kremlin critics said offered a stark example of Putin's increasingly autocratic rule, Khodorkovsky was arrested at gunpoint in 2003 and convicted of theft and tax evasion in 2005. Putin justified the move by saying: "A thief must be in jail," quoting a popular Soviet blockbuster.

The newspaper said the court ruled that Russia had infringed an international energy charter, adopted in 1991, that envisaged legal issues for investments in energy sectors.

The court also ruled, according to the newspaper, that Russia had to start paying the compensation by Jan. 2 next year, or face growing interest on the fine.

FORCEFUL PAYMENT
Rosneft and Yukos shareholders were not immediately available for comment in early business hours on Monday. Kommersant said the parties had declined to comment on the outcome, but it cites GML director Tim Osborne as saying GML will force Russia to pay out the compensation "if it wouldn't make payments within the court-defined timeframe".

The Russian leader pardoned Khodorkovsky in December after he had spent 10 years in jail. Khodorkovsky is no longer a shareholder in Yukos.

Any funds won will be shared amongst the shareholders. The biggest ultimate beneficial owner is Russian-born Leonid Nevzlin, a business partner who had fled to Israel to avoid prosecution, who has a stake of around 70 percent.

The other four ultimate beneficial owners, each of whom owns an equal stake, are Platon Lebedev, Mikhail Brudno, Vladimir Dubov and Vasilly Shaknovski.

After he was jailed, Khodorkovsky ceded his controlling interest in Menatep, which owned 60 to 70 percent of Yukos, to Nevzlin.

Other shareholders have been pursuing separate actions.

A case is being brought by former Yukos managers at the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg. An interim ruling by the ECHR in 2011 found partly in favour of the Russian Federation.

GML shareholders are not expecting to claim twice, so if they receive monies pursuant to one case it would reduce their claim under the other, Osborne has previously told Reuters. (GNN,Reuters,AIP)(Reporting by Tom Miles, Vladimir Soldatkin and Megan Davies; Editing by Sandra Maler and Clarence Fernandez)

UPDATE 1-Whiting Petroleum to buy Kodiak Oil for $3.8 bln in stock

(Adds details on deal)

(GNN) - Whiting Petroleum Corp said on Sunday it would acquire Kodiak Oil & Gas Corp for $3.8 billion in stock, to become the largest producer in the Bakken/Three Forks oil formations.


Whiting said the deal, valued at $6 billion when Kodiak's net debt of $2.2 billion is included, is expected to close in the fourth quarter.

The companies' combined output from the Bakken/Three Forks formations in the first quarter of 2014 was more than 107,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day, with 855,000 combined net acres and almost 3,500 net future drilling locations.

The formations, within the Williston Basin in North Dakota and Montana, are among the largest oil plays in the United States.

Kodiak shareholders will receive 0.177 share of Whiting stock for each share of Kodiak common stock they hold, representing a value of $13.90 per share based on the closing price of Whiting shares on July 11.

That would be a 5.1 percent premium to the volume weighted average price of Kodiak shares during the last 60 trading days, Whiting said in a release. It said shareholders of Whiting are expected to own about 71 percent of the combined company after the transaction.

(Reuters - AIP)(Reporting by Ransdell Pierson; Editing by Sandra Maler and Steve Orlofsky)

Germany's green energy boom is leaving a 'trail of blood' on coal companies

Since the beginning, the commercial growth of renewable energy has been a laborious, often painful matter of government pushes, tax incentives and campaigning for greater awareness. In Germany, however, the energy market is on the cusp of evolving to the next step: An era in which the sun and the wind replace fossil fuels through the sheer, unstoppable force of the market.
The country is currently experiencing a glut of energy, thanks to the recent openings of new coal power stations (which were commissioned back when electricity was in short supply) as well as record levels of renewable generation -- especially solar. On sunny and windy days, the excess of electricity (which on average stands at 117 percent of peak demand) gets so big that energy prices are pushed downwards and traditional power stations are forced to cut down their running hours. A decade ago, fossil companies enjoyed a 15 percent margin on their sales, but today they make just five percent. An energy trader has informed Bloomberg that he believes that the latest coal stations to come online will make "much less money than originally thought" and "won't cover their costs."

Regulation is still at the heart of Germany's predicament, because green generators have preferential access to the grid on days when there's an overload. In other words, they're allowed to run and run, while coal-fired stations have to switch themselves off in response to the excess. However, the consequence -- which we're already seeing -- is to sap investors' interest in financing the coal industry. In turn, this means that when the country's older coal stations reach their end of life over the next decade, there's a much greater chance that they'll be replaced by green sources. Renewable energy's contribution to the grid is on target to rise to 45 percent by 2025, while coal companies are left with what one chief financial officer described as a "trail of blood" on their balance sheets. In the US, meanwhile, the birth of solar on an industrial scale is only just getting started. (BY SHARIF SAKR / SOURCE: Bloomberg)

Budget proposals: Cement manufacturers hope for some relief

LAHORE: In a bid to get some relief in the forthcoming budget of 2014-2015, cement manufacturers have urged the Federal Board of revenue (FBR) to facilitate the industry by reducing prevalent duties on alternative fuels.
http://www.gnnworld.tk/2014/05/budget-proposals-cement-manufacturers.html
The cement industry has already requested to reduce the duty rate on non-calcined petroleum coke (HS Code 2713.1100) and shredded rubber scraps to 0% from the current 5% and 10% ad valorem. PHOTO: DESIGN-FAIZAN DAWOOD/FILE
The initiative will enhance its competitiveness in the international markets, they argued.

“Cement production is an energy-intensive process and various alternatives are being explored worldwide,” said an official of the All Pakistan Cement Manufactureres Association (APCMA). “The alternatives are not only aimed at cutting energy costs but also have ecological benefits of conserving non-renewable resources, reduction of waste disposal requirements and reduction of emissions.”

He stated that these global norms have persuaded cement manufacturers in Pakistan to experiment with different options such as petroleum coke and shredded rubber tyres, as they possess higher energy value.

The cement industry has already requested to reduce the duty rate on non-calcined petroleum coke (HS Code 2713.1100) and shredded rubber scraps to 0% from the current 5% and 10% ad valorem.

These substitutes will allow the cement manufacturers to reduce energy costs, allowing them to export its surplus capacity, explained the official.

(By Our Correspondent) Published in GNN & Tribune, May 21st, 2014.