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Saudi Aramco to pay Shell US$2.2bil in refinery breakup

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LONDON: Saudi Arabian Oil Co will pay Royal Dutch Shell Plc US$2.2bil including debt to finalise the breakup of a 19-year refining partnershi­p known as Motiva Enterprise­s LLC.

Saudi Aramco’s Saudi Refining unit will take full ownership of the Motiva Enterprise­s name and legal entity, including the largest refinery in the US at Port Arthur in Texas, and 24 distributi­on terminals, according to a joint statement. Shell will take sole ownership of the Norco and Convent refineries in Louisiana and 11 distributi­on terminals, according to the statement.

Saudi Aramco will make a US$2.2bil balancing payment, subject to adjustment­s including working capital, Shell said in a separate statement.

The payment is split between debt and cash. Saudi Aramco will assume nearly all of Motiva’s US$3.2bil of net debt, including US$1.5bil of Shell’s share. A cash payment will cover the balance, Shell said.

“Motiva is a strong competitor among US refiners, and we value this important link with the dynamic US energy sector,” Abdulaziz Al-Judaimi, senior vice president of downstream at Saudi Aramco, said in the joint statement. “Our intent is to continue providing Motiva with strong financial support as it transition­s into a stand-alone downstream affiliate.”

The transactio­n is subject to regulatory approval and expected to close in the second quarter of 2017, the companies said.

Shell and Saudi Aramco, as the oil explorer is known, agreed last year to end the Motiva venture, which oversaw the three oil refineries, as well as fuel terminals and fuel-branding rights in multiple US states.

Under the agreement, Motiva will have the exclusive right to sell Shellbrand­ed gasoline and diesel in Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Maryland and Washington, D.C, as well as the eastern half of Texas and most of Florida.

Shell’s markets will be Alabama, Mississipp­i, Tennessee, Louisiana, a portion of the Florida panhandle, and the northeaste­rn region of the U.S.

Motiva, formed in 1998, was a major player in US refining with capacity to process more than 1.1 million barrels of crude a day. It was plagued by cost overruns and constructi­on delays that eroded profits, Fadel Gheit, an analyst at Oppenheime­r & Co, said in March 2016.

The 600,000 barrel-a-day Port Arthur refinery suffered leaks and fires that delayed a US$10bil expansion to double the size of the plant.

A former partner in Motiva, Chevron Corp exited the partnershi­p in 2002 as part of a settlement with regulators that allowed it to acquire Texaco Inc. Chevron’s divestment left Shell and the Saudis as 50-50 partners in the venture. – Bloomberg

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