The New Zealand Herald

Oil producer ‘may be insolvent’

NZ unit’s situation unsustaina­ble, says Malaysian owner

- Hamish Rutherford pointment.

Directors of Tamarind Taranaki, the New Zealand business of a Malaysian oil and gas producer say the company “may be insolvent”. Tamarind operates three oil fields according to its website: Tui, Amokura, and Pateke in the Tui Area oil field. It is the 100 per cent owner and operator of the fields.

The company’s business model is to buy oil fields late in their production life.

When buying fields from other companies, Tamarind assumes responsibi­lity for any remediatio­n costs when the field is closed.

On Monday evening the directors of the company declared in a statement posted on the Companies Office website that it “is insolvent or may become insolvent”.

On its website, Tamarind said the company needed to be restructur­ed.

“The appointmen­t of the administra­tors is as a result of a number of commercial factors including a deteriorat­ion in oil price . . . which has contribute­d to the Company’s current financial position being unsustaina­ble absent a restructur­ing.”

Tamarind said administra­tors would directly control the company’s “assets, operations and books and records” during the restructur­e.

A moratorium has been placed on payments to creditors. A meeting of creditors would be placed within eight days of the administra­tors’ ap

In September, BusinessDe­sk reported that the company had abandoned a planned drilling programme after the first of three wells was unsuccessf­ul.

The wells were meant to extend the life of the fields.

In October Offshore Energy Today reported that BW Offshore, the owners of the Umuroa, the floating production, storage and offloading facility that gathers oil from the Tui area, had been told the contract for the vessel would not be renewed beyond December 31.

Later that month the publicatio­n reported that the Norwegian company was pursuing overdue payments in relation to Umuroa, which has been gathering oil at the fields since 2007.

Tamarind’s New Zealand office and the company’s Singapore-based administra­tors have not responded to a request for comment.

Spokesman for the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment said all permit holders had obligation­s and liabilitie­s to the Crown.

“These include the payment of fees and royalties under the Crown Minerals Act 1991, the requiremen­t to keep detailed records of activity, submission of an annual report and complying with work programme obligation­s.”

The abandonmen­t obligation­s of the Tui permit require that once production is complete, the permit holder must “abandon all wells, surface facilities and operating sites in accordance with good exploratio­n and mining practice”.

The costs of abandoning a permit can be significan­t.

When New Zealand Oil & Gas sold its 27.5 per cent stake in Tui to Tamarind in 2017 it received US$750,000 ($1.18m), despite still having significan­t production potential.

A separate Tamarind entity, Tamarind NZ Onshore Ltd, holds two petroleum mining permits and two petroleum exploratio­n permits in onshore Taranaki.

 ??  ?? Owners of the Umuroa, which collects oil from the Tui area operated by Tamarind, are reportedly seeking payments related to the vessel.
Owners of the Umuroa, which collects oil from the Tui area operated by Tamarind, are reportedly seeking payments related to the vessel.

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