Woodside Lifts Stake in Gas Field, Consolidating Position in Western Australia
February 13 2018 - 6:36PM
Dow Jones News
By Robb M. Stewart
MELBOURNE, Australia--Woodside Petroleum Ltd. (WPL.AU) is
consolidating its hold on a promising natural-gas field off
Australia's west coast, buying Exxon Mobil Corp.'s stake in the
asset as it seeks to tap resources it can process through existing
operations.
The move by Woodside, Australia's largest independent oil and
gas company, comes as it pushes toward giving the go-ahead for
several developments in the region in anticipation that global
demand for liquefied natural gas will continue to surge and outpace
available supplies in the coming years.
Woodside signed a deal Wednesday to buy Exxon's 50% interest in
an offshore block that contains the bulk of the Scarborough
natural-gas field for up to US$744 million, including a US$300
million payment when a final investment decision on developing the
asset is made.
It is part of a push toward lower-cost development to boost
production that includes expanding the existing Pluto LNG operation
and connecting with the North West Shelf LNG facilities, it
said.
To help pay for the acquisition and to raise additional funding,
Woodside launched an about 2.5 billion Australian dollars (US$1.97
billion) equity raising, tapping investors with an offer of one new
share for each nine shares held.
"The acquisition of the additional interest in Scarborough
provides greater alignment, control and certainty over a low-cost,
high value opportunity ahead of a global LNG supply gap," Chief
Executive Peter Coleman said.
In recent years, Woodside has focused on rebuilding its resource
base, including a US$2.8 billion deal in 2015 with Apache Corp.
that included a 13% stake in the Wheatstone project and a US$350
million deal last year to buy ConocoPhilips's (COP) interest in
three promising oil discoveries off Senegal. The US$34 billion
Wheatstone LNG project began producing in October and delivered its
first cargo to Japanese buyers in November.
Analysts have more recently been seeking signs the company is
laying the foundation for the next leg in production growth.
Reporting an 18% rise in annual profit despite a dip in
production, Mr. Coleman said 2017 had been a good year for the
company as it made progress on its various projects, including
working with venture partners on building a hub out of their
operations for gas fields off Western Australia that makes use of
existing infrastructure at the onshore Pluto LNG plant.
With the deal for Exxon's Scarborough assets, Woodside will hold
a controlling 75% interest in the main block of the field, plus 50%
stakes in three adjacent blocks. It bought BHP Billiton Ltd.'s
Scarborough assets in 2016 in a US$400 million deal.
The bulk of Woodside's profit is derived from liquefied natural
gas operations in Western Australia, where it operates the North
West Shelf project that has been operating since 1984 and the Pluto
LNG plant that began producing in 2012. Its partners in the
ventures include BHP Billiton, Chevron Corp. and Royal Dutch Shell
PLC.
Mr. Coleman said feasibility concluded during the last year on
expanding the Pluto LNG operation, and progress was made
negotiating with partners on the North West Shelf and prospective
Browse project to process natural gas through the North West
Shelf's Karratha plant, a vast operation with an export capacity of
16.9 million tons of LNG a year.
A final investment decision on the Browse development is set for
2021, after Woodside, Shell, BP PLC and others in 2016 abandoned an
ambitious proposal to build a floating LNG operation. Woodside said
it also expected a development plan for the SNE field in Senegal to
be ready for an investment decision next year, while progress had
been made on a drilling program in Myanmar.
News of the Scarborough acquisition came as Woodside said it
recorded a net profit of US$1.02 billion in 2017 against a
year-earlier profit of US$868 million. That was slightly below the
US$1.06 billion median of analyst forecasts compiled by The Wall
Street Journal.
With a slide in production over the year, sales and trading and
processing revenue was down 4.1% for the year to US$3.91 billion
from US$4.08 billion in 2016.
Production declined 11% in 2017 to 84.4 million barrels of oil
equivalent, although the company has forecast a recovery to between
85 million and 90 million barrels this year as projects led by the
Chevron-led Wheatstone gas-export venture in Western Australia ramp
up.
The Perth-based energy said it would pay a final dividend of
US$0.49 a share for a full-year payout of US$0.98, up 18% on the
year before.
Write to Robb M. Stewart at robb.stewart@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
February 13, 2018 18:21 ET (23:21 GMT)
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