Cape Times

Sinopec takes 75% stake in Chevron SA

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CHINA Petroleum and Chemical Corporatio­n (Sinopec) yesterday confirmed that it would pay almost $1 billion (R12.62bn) for a 75 percent stake in Chevron Corporatio­n’s South African assets and its subsidiary in Botswana.

The deal will hand China’s largest oil company its first major refinery in Africa. Chevron’s South African assets include a 100 000 barrel-per-day oil refinery in Cape Town, a lubricants plant in Durban as well as 820 petrol stations and other oil storage facilities.

Chevron Global Energy, which put the assets on sale early last year, said that Sinopec’s bid was selected in part because of the better terms and conditions it offered, including a commitment to operate the businesses as going concerns and the opportunit­y to reap strategic value for its longer-term strategy in Africa.

The deal, which includes 220 convenienc­e stores across South Africa and Botswana, is subject to regulatory approval.

With a growing middle class, demand in South Africa for refined petroleum has increased by nearly 5 percent annually over the past five years, to a current total of about 27 million tons, Sinopec said.

Sinopec in 2012 partnered South Africa’s national oil company PetroSA to help develop a new greenfield­s refinery that has subsequent­ly been shelved due to high costs. It said it would retain the whole workforce as well as the existing Caltex brand for the retail fuel stations for up to six years

before launching a rebranding strategy.

The remaining 25 percent of the assets would continue to be held by a group of local shareholde­rs, in accordance with South Africa’s black economic empowermen­t requiremen­ts.

Sinopec was the last remaining bidder in the auction which lasted more than a year and drew interest from French oil firm Total and commodity traders Glencore and Gunvor.

While the deal gives Sinopec considerab­le market share in the local downstream market, acquisitio­n comes at a time when the government is enforcing stricter emissions standards, which require refineries to make significan­t investment­s in order to comply. The government published specificat­ions for the cleaner fuels specificat­ions for petrol and diesel in 2012.

In a KPMG report released last September, the South African Petroleum Industry Associatio­n said that between 2012 and 2014 its members and their refineries invested almost R20bn in infrastruc­ture developmen­t. But there has been uncertaint­y about the determinat­ion of a cost-recovery mechanism for the investment­s to convert to cleaner fuels at refineries. – Additional reporting by Siseko Njobeni

 ?? PICTURE: HENK KRUGER ?? A Caltex petrol station in Cape Town. Sinopec will pay almost $1 billion for a 75 percent stake in Caltex parent Chevron.
PICTURE: HENK KRUGER A Caltex petrol station in Cape Town. Sinopec will pay almost $1 billion for a 75 percent stake in Caltex parent Chevron.

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