The Jerusalem Post

As US shale sinks, pipeline woes go downstream

- • By TOM HALS

WILMINGTON, Delaware (Reuters) – Within weeks, two low-profile legal disputes may determine whether an unpreceden­ted wave of bankruptci­es expected to hit US oil and gas producers this year will imperil the $500 billion pipeline sector as well.

In the two court fights, US energy producers are trying to use Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection to shed long-term contracts with the pipeline operators that gather and process shale gas before it is delivered to consumer markets.

The attempts to shed the contracts by Sabine Oil & Gas and Quicksilve­r Resources are viewed by executives and lawyers as a litmus test for deals worth billions of dollars annually for the so-called midstream sector.

Pipeline operators have argued the contracts are secure, but restructur­ing experts say that if the two producers manage to tear up or renegotiat­e their deals, others will follow. That could add a new element of risk for already hard-hit investors in midstream companies, which have plowed up to $30 billion a year into infrastruc­ture to serve the US fracking boom.

“It’s a hellacious problem,” said Hugh Ray, a bankruptcy lawyer with McKool Smith in Houston. “It will end with even more bankruptci­es.”

A judge on New York’s influentia­l bankruptcy court said on February 2 she was inclined to allow Houston-based Sabine to end its pipeline contract, which guaranteed it would ship a minimum volume of gas through a system built by a Cheniere Energy subsidiary until 2024. Sabine’s lawyers argued they could save $35 million by ending the Cheniere contract and then save millions more by building an entirely new system.

Fort Worth, Texas-based Quicksilve­r’s request to shed a contract with another midstream operator, Crestwood Equity Partners, is set for February 26.

The concerns have grown more evident in recent days, raised in law firms’ client memos and investment banks’ research notes.

Last week, executives from Williams Companies Inc. and Enbridge Inc., two of the world’s largest pipeline operators, sought to allay growing investor fears, saying they were reviewing contracts or securing additional credit guarantees to minimize the impact of the biggest oil bust in a generation.

MORE VULNERABLE THAN THOUGHT

So far, relatively few oil and gas producers have entered bankruptcy, and most were smaller firms. But with oil prices down 70 percent since mid-2014 and natural-gas prices in a prolonged slump, up to a third of them are at risk of bankruptcy this year, consultanc­y Deloitte said in a February 16 report.

Midstream operators have been considered relatively secure as investors and analysts focus on risks to the hundreds of billions of dollars in equity and debt of firms most directly exposed to commodity prices.

That’s because firms such as Enterprise Products, Kinder Morgan and Plains All American relied upon multiyear contracts (the kind targeted in the two bankruptci­es) that guarantee pipeline operators fixed fees to transport minimum volumes of oil or gas.

Now, with US oil output shrinking and gas production stalling, many of the cashstrapp­ed producers entering bankruptcy will be seeking to rid themselves of pricey agreements, particular­ly those with so-called minimum-volume commitment­s that require paying for space even if it is not used.

“They will be probably among the first things thrown out,” said Michael Grande, the director for US midstream energy and infrastruc­ture at Moody’s.

RUN WITH THE LAND

In bankruptcy court, Sabine’s lawyers argued for undoing a pipeline and gathering contract with Cheniere unit Nordheim Eagle Ford Gathering that is worth tens of millions of dollars in coming years.

Instead, a different midstream operator would be hired to build a new system that Sabine’s lawyer told the bankruptcy court would literally “wrap around” Nordheim’s existing infrastruc­ture.

If Sabine gets the ruling it wants, it would immediatel­y save the $35m. owed to Cheniere as a “deficiency fee” for failing to meet minimal-volume commitment­s since the gathering system went into effect in September 2014.

Ryan Bennett, a Kirkland & Ellis attorney representi­ng Sabine, told Bankruptcy Judge Shelley Chapman at a February 2 hearing that Sabine had plenty of options once it shed the Cheniere contract.

“Maybe we do renegotiat­e with Nordheim. Maybe we buy their gathering system after this is all over,” he told Chapman.

Nordheim, like many midstream operators, has long considered its gas-gathering and transporta­tion agreements to be nearly bankruptcy proof.

The Cheniere affiliate argued the contracts with Sabine went beyond a typical commercial agreement and transferre­d to Nordheim Sabine’s ownership right to collect and transport the gas collected within a certain area.

The midstream operator’s lawyer compared it to a property deed restrictio­n that forever limited the height of building. Such restrictio­ns are said to “run with the land” and generally cannot be rejected in bankruptcy.

Sabine’s lawyers seemed to sway the judge when they countered that the contract language never transferre­d ownership rights, and if it did, it applied to mineral rights, not land rights.

Chapman did not say when she would rule but told the hearing she was inclining toward ruling in Sabine’s favor. She encouraged the parties to reach a deal.

ALL IN THE FAMILY NO MORE

Lawyers told Reuters some gathering agreements did not appear well protected against bankruptcy, in part because the contracts were written when one company owned both energy production and midstream operations. In recent years, the industry has undergone significan­t reshufflin­g, and many energy producers spun off gathering systems.

For example, the Quicksilve­r agreement was struck when the midstream operator was part of the Quicksilve­r corporate family.

In October 2010, Quicksilve­r sold its gas gathering and processing operations in Texas to a master limited partnershi­p – a once-popular type of tax-advantaged corporate structure – affiliated with Crestwood Equity Partners for $700m. The gathering operations included a pipeline agreement with Quicksilve­r that expired in 2020.

Earlier this month, Quicksilve­r asked US Bankruptcy Judge Laurie Silverstei­n to end that deal in order to save the sale of its US assets to BlueStone Natural Resources for $245m. If Quicksilve­r fails to break the pipeline agreement, it would have to settle for a lesser bid that includes just $93m. in cash, according to court documents.

PAIN SPREADING

The infrastruc­ture that midstream firms have built remains in high use so far, including the more than 19,000 kilometers of new pipelines commission­ed since 2010. US oil production is expected to fall only modestly, and most analysts expect prices to rebound somewhat in coming years.

Still, the pain is accruing already. Plains All American said this month that it expected a default from one unidentifi­ed customer who contracted for 10% of its BridgeTex pipeline, which transports crude from west Texas to the Houston area. Reuters later identified the customers as a little-known, privately held merchant called Stampede Energy.

Analysts at Credit Suisse said Williams Partners could lose up to $400m. in earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortizati­on, or EBITDA, if Chesapeake Energy Corp., the second-largest US natural-gas producer, uses creditor protection to shed its minimum-volume agreements.

 ?? (Andrew Cullen/Reuters) ?? A NATURAL-GAS flare burns near an oil well as the sun sets outside Watford City, North Dakota, last month. So far, relatively few oil and gas producers have entered bankruptcy, and most were smaller firms. But with oil prices down 70 percent since mid-2014 and natural-gas prices in a prolonged slump, up to a third of them are at risk of bankruptcy this year, consultanc­y Deloitte said in a report.
(Andrew Cullen/Reuters) A NATURAL-GAS flare burns near an oil well as the sun sets outside Watford City, North Dakota, last month. So far, relatively few oil and gas producers have entered bankruptcy, and most were smaller firms. But with oil prices down 70 percent since mid-2014 and natural-gas prices in a prolonged slump, up to a third of them are at risk of bankruptcy this year, consultanc­y Deloitte said in a report.

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