Business Day

Sasol may sell its SA coal business

Formal process soon, say insiders

- Loni Prinsloo and Paul Burkhardt With Lisa Steyn /Bloomberg

Sasol is planning to sell its SA coal mining business, according to people familiar with the matter. The company will begin a formal sales process in the coming weeks, said the people, who asked not to be identified as the informatio­n isn’t public yet.

Sasol is planning to sell its SA coal mining business, according to people familiar with the matter.

The company will begin a formal sales process in the coming weeks, said the people, who asked not to be identified as the informatio­n isn’t public yet.

The mining business had turnover of R20bn in the 2018 financial year, according to the company’s financial report, mostly from internal sales to Sasol’s other operations.

The company is the world’s biggest manufactur­er of fuel from coal, an energy-intensive process. Sasol’s coal mines produce about 40-million tons of coal a year, almost entirely for use in its own operations, according to its website.

The company would plan to sign a coal purchase agreement with whoever buys the asset, said one of the people.

Sasol announced a long-term review process in November 2017 that involves disposing of some assets at prices that ensure value for the company, it said in an e-mailed response to questions, while declining to comment directly on a possible mine sale.

“We do not wish to comment at this stage on which assets have been earmarked for divestment, since they form a part of a discipline­d and confidenti­al mergers & acquisitio­n process,” it said. “Sasol will update the market as and when appropriat­e regarding progress on the asset review process.”

The group is targeting extensive asset disposals across its entire portfolio with a total net asset value of over $2bn.

Sasol has already concluded a number of divestment­s since 2017 totalling $200m, and include assets in Malaysia, Germany and the US.

In July, Sasol announced it had selected Enaex as a preferred partner for the possible formation of a joint venture that would potentiall­y see Enaex take full operationa­l control of Sasol Explosives. The company, however, stressed that no final decision had been taken.

Also in July, Sasol signed an agreement with Huntsman Corporatio­n to dispose of its 50% equity interest in the SasolHunts­man joint venture.

Sasol’s plans to sell its coal mine come as it grapples with cost overruns and delays at its giant US chemicals project, Lake Charles. The disposal may also help Sasol reduce its environmen­tal liabilitie­s at a time when more investors are focusing on how businesses affect climate change.

The Lake Charles chemical plant in Louisiana, which is starting up in 2019, will transform Sasol’s production mix to focus on chemicals. Yet the company has lurched from one setback to the next, with the project now estimated to cost as much as $12.9bn, about 50% more than initially planned.

Sasol’s shares have tumbled 48% in the past 12 months. Besides the cost overruns and startup delays, the company has twice postponed its annual financial results while it completes an investigat­ion into what went wrong at Lake Charles.

The company said in May it would accelerate the previously announced asset sale program. It said on Wednesday it would “proceed only if there is value for Sasol and we will not sell assets at sub-optimal prices.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa