New York Post

Sachs finds it’s not easy being ‘green’

- Josh Kosman Tips: biztips@nypost.com

DAVID Solomon’s bid to rebrand Goldman Sachs as environmen­tally green is going up in flames — courtesy of a bankrupt oil and gas company in North Dakota.

That’s the charge from critics — and creditors — who claim that Goldman, as a key lender of debtor-in-possession financing to Nine Point Energy, has failed to curb the driller from flaring natural gas into the atmosphere as part of what looks like hard-knuckle Chapter 11 negotiatio­ns.

In April, Nine Point flared more than 155 million cubic feet of the greenhouse gas from its North Dakota wells. That’s more than 2¹/2 times what it emitted prior to the company’s February bankruptcy filing, and equates to more than 21 million miles driven by passenger vehicles, according to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

That also amounted to a whopping third of its production — well north of the 9 percent limit allowed by environmen­tal regulators, who cite emissions of carbon dioxide, as well as nitrogen oxides that cause acid rain, ozone and smog.

Goldman — whose CEO Solomon pledged in March to detail this year how “climateris­k considerat­ions” figure into the bank’s business strategy — is in a lending group led by AllianceBe­rnstein that’s poised to take ownership of Nine Point to forgive $250 million in debt.

But the deal has hit a snag over a lawsuit from Caliber Midstream, a pipeline company whose contracts to safely transport the gas Nine Point rejected in Chapter 11. Caliber is suing for $150 million in constructi­on costs.

Nine Point’s flaring provoked a befuddled response from a Caliber attorney at the start of the bankruptcy. Alfredo Perez of Weil Gotshal noted Nine Point was “literally flaring the natural gas that would otherwise come into our system for some reason, in an effort to . . . put pressure on us, I’m not quite sure exactly why.”

At the same time, a lawyer for Nine Point noted, “In terms of the flaring of the gas, I just want to make perfectly clear that is not a harm to our creditors” — apparently referring to creditors other than Caliber. “We are actually saving money.”

That, in turn, provoked a testy op-ed piece in Bloomberg earlier this month, arguing that “if producers feel free to flare when it’s financiall­y expedient, then it rather makes a mockery of the whole idea of regulation­s.”

Spokespeop­le for Goldman and Alliance-Bernstein declined to comment. On Tuesday, a source close to Goldman said Nine Point, as of July 8, had ratcheted down its natural-gas flaring to 9 percent of output per state guidelines. It expects to maintain that rate going forward.

 ??  ?? Any image of Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon riding to the rescue of the environmen­t took a hit as critics charge the bank with failing to rein in driller Nine Point Energy over its flaring of 155 million cubic feet of natural gas.
Any image of Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon riding to the rescue of the environmen­t took a hit as critics charge the bank with failing to rein in driller Nine Point Energy over its flaring of 155 million cubic feet of natural gas.
 ??  ?? On the money
On the money

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