Sunday Tribune

Refinery outlook takes shine off Chevron deal

- Siseko Njobeni

A LOT has been made about China Petroleum and Chemical Corporatio­n’s (Sinopec’s) acquisitio­n of its first African refinery after it bought 75% of Chevron’s South African assets.

There is no doubt that the deal gives Sinopec access to coveted assets. For instance, Chevron South Africa is one of the country’s largest suppliers of petroleum products, with more than 800 Caltex-branded service stations. Chevron also owns a lubricants plant in Durban, as well as oil storage facilities.

Summing up the significan­ce of the deal earlier this week, Claude Illy, leader of sub-saharan Oil & Gas Mergers & Acquisitio­ns Advisory at Deloitte, said Sinopec gains entry into a large and growing market with a clear regulatory framework in the form of import parity pricing.

But along with the other assets, Sinopec has acquired Chevron’s crude oil refinery in Cape Town. And this is where the picture becomes less rosy. The fate of oil refineries must be among things keeping chief executives of South African oil companies awake at night.

The Chevron assets have been on the market for more than year. Two of the companies which confirmed initial interest in the assets, chemicals and energy company, Sasol and energy group Puma Energy, have refused to disclose reasons for walking away.

But it will not come as a surprise if upgrading the refinery in preparatio­n for the introducti­on of cleaner fuels, as required by the government, turned them off.

The Cape Town refinery is South Africa’s third-largest crude oil refinery and produces petrol, diesel, jet fuel and liquefied gas for the Western Cape and for export to other African countries.

Various other companies, including French multinatio­nal Total SA, Glencore PLC and Russian oil trader Gunvor Group, had reportedly put in bids for the assets.

In June 2012, the government gazetted regulation­s on the introducti­on of cleaner fuel by July this year.

What has happened since the publicatio­n of those regulation­s has been nothing short of a stand-off between the government and the petroleum industry over who would pay for the necessary investment­s to upgrade South Africa’s refineries.

Owing to the disagreeme­nt on the cost recovery mechanism, the July timeline for the introducti­on of cleaner fuels is unattainab­le.

The department has also agreed that the promulgate­d target date be postponed to an unspecifie­d date. For a long time now, the SA Petroleum Industry Associatio­n (Sapia) has been lamenting what it calls policy uncertaint­y regarding the implementa­tion of the cost recovery mechanism.

Sapia has said that the delays in the finalisati­on of the timing and a cost-recovery mechanism for the introducti­on of clean fuels were hampering investment in the refining sector.

Who would foot the bill for the upgrades was a sticking point from day one and the matter remains unresolved up to this day, Sapia executive director Avhapfani Tshifularo confirmed.

The estimated cost for refinery upgrades was previously estimated at R40 billion. The stand-off also worries vehicle manufactur­ers because a delay in the introducti­on of cleaner fuels will restrict the introducti­on of new technology and lower-emission vehicles.

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