Business | Oil & Gas
BP sells Pakistan assets to China
BP sold fields in Pakistan to Hong Kong investment group United Energy Group as part of its plan to pay for the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.
London: BP sold fields in Pakistan to Hong Kong investment group United Energy Group as part of its plan to pay for the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.
UEG will pay $775 million (Dh2.84 billion) in cash, including a $100 million deposit, and the deal is expected to close in the first half of 2011, BP said yesterday in a statement in London. The net production of the assets is about 35,000 barrels of oil equivalent a day.
The sale brings BP closer to its goal of disposing of as much as $30 billion of assets worldwide after the worst US oil spill forced the company to set aside $40 billion for cleanup and litigation. The company has divested about $21 billion of fields so far.
"It looks like a good fair price," said Jason Kenney, an analyst at ING Wholesale Banking in Edinburgh. "BP continues with the programme well ahead of expectations. At this rate, I wouldn't be surprised if BP manages to offload more than its target."
BP rose 2 per cent to 467.7 pence as of 12.04pm in London, the highest since May 28. The shares are down 29 per cent since the April 20 accident.
The purchase is UEG's first venture in Pakistan, BP said. The Chinese company's biggest shareholder is billionaire Zhang Hongwei, who is also the chairman of Jinzhou Port Company, a port services company, and Orient Group, a maker of building materials.
Proved reserves in the Pakistan sale are 43.1 million barrels of oil equivalent as of the end of 2009, BP said. The company retained stakes in three unexplored offshore fields operated by Pakistan's state-owned Oil and Gas Development Company.
"Today's agreement is further evidence of the rapid progress BP has made toward the divestment target we set out last summer," BP Chief Executive Officer Robert Dudley said in a statement.
"We now have agreements to secure the majority of our divestment target."
Business Editor's choice
-
China breaks West's solar monopoly
Some countries in the world, especially Germany and the United States, have made considerable efforts to invest in developing solar energy cells
-
Burberry store spree will cut profit
Trenchcoat maker forges ahead with investment strategy targeting emerging markets
-
Laws needed to spur region bond markets
UAE Central Bank calls for creation of a centralised Sharia board to facilitate the sale of sukuk

