Perfil (Sabado)

CGC buys Sinopec assets in Argentina

Argentine firm, majority owned by Eduardo Eurnekian’s Corporació­n América Internatio­nal, closes deal for local unit of China Petroleum & Chemical Corp.

- BY CAROLINA MILLAN,

Argentina’s Cia General de Combustibl­es SA has acquired Sinopec Argentina Exploratio­n and Production, giving the producer additional oil output from the southern part of the country.

CGC, majority owned by billionair­e Eduardo Eurnekian’s Corporació­n América Internatio­nal, closed the deal for the local unit of China Petroleum & Chemical Corp on Wednesday, the Buenos Aires-based company said in a statement. Terms weren’t disclosed.

The purchase includes Sinopec’s assets in southern Argentina’s San Jorge and Cuyana basins, and allows CGC to boost daily production by 35 percent compared to levels in late 2019.

The deal is valued at US$240 million including debt, according to a person with knowledge of the matter. The purchase will be financed with bridge syndicated loans, said the person, who asked not to be identified because details of the transactio­n are private.

The deal comes when the world’s oil majors have been seeking to sell noncore assets, especially those requiring significan­t exploratio­n budgets, in recent years to focus more on cash generation. Sinopec had sought to sell its Argentine assets since 2017.

BIG BET

CGC’S purchase is part of its big bet to explore untapped convention­al oil and gas reserves in the southern province of Santa Cruz, where it already has operations, rather than the famed Vaca Muerta shale deposit in Patagonia. With the deal, the company’s proven oil reserves will increase by 50 percent and crude will account for 37 percent of total production – up from 15 percent previously – with natural gas making up the rest.

“We’re convinced of the enormous and diverse potential offered by our country’s geology, not just in shale but especially in tight and convention­al,” CGC Chief Executive Officer Hugo Eurnekian said in the statement. “This step is proof of it.”

The 100-year old company, which is 70 percent held by Corporació­n América Internatio­nal and 30 percent owned by publicly traded holding company Sociedad Comercial del Plata, has taken several steps to boost production in the south of Argentina. In 2015, it paid US$101 million to buy more than 20 natural gas and oil fields from Petroleo Brasileiro SA. In the following years, it tripled gas production by developing two key unconventi­onal tight gas fields.

The transactio­n also marks a further shift in investment in Argentina, in which local investors are taking advantage of opportunit­ies as foreign firms seek to curb their exposure to the South American nation. During the past few years, companies including Walmart Inc and Latam Airlines Group SA have been among multinatio­nals selling local operations as they grapple with currency controls, three years of recession and inflation that’s expected to end the year near 50 percent.

 ?? BLOOMBERG/SCOTT EELLS ?? Eduardo Eurnekian.
BLOOMBERG/SCOTT EELLS Eduardo Eurnekian.

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