CNOOC sells its US assets

CNOOC, the Chinese oil and gas company, wants to sell its interests in the U.S. oil fields.

Share:

CNOOC, the Chinese oil and gas company, wants to sell its interests in the U.S. oil fields.

Fear of sanctions

CNOOC’s decision comes in the context of economic uncertainty. China is indeed afraid of strong Western sanctions following its position on Russia. The Chinese government has refused for several months to condemn the invasion of Ukraine by Russia.

Thus, the United States has warned China that the consequences would be heavy if it buys Russian oil under sanctions. China also seems to continue to have a strong relationship with the Russians. The stakes are high because Russia has hydrocarbons and raw materials to secure Chinese supplies.

CNOOC has a strong presence in the Americas, with interests in the Eagle Ford and Rockies shale onshore basins. These assets are owned by U.S. shale drilling company Chesapeake Energy Corp. The U.S. company itself has put its assets up for sale, but this should not affect CNOOC’s plans.

Different options

The oil and gas giant has interests in the Gulf of Mexico: Appomattox and Stampede. China was in negotiations with the British producer Harbour Energy. The country is thus seeking an agreement to withdraw from the Gulf of Mexico and sell its assets.

CNOOC has benefited greatly from thesurge in oil prices. As a result, its third-quarter profit reportedly doubled last month. Its position as China’s largest producer is the result of the $15 billion acquisition of Canadian Nexen.

Finally, the Chinese company is looking for a buyer in the British North Sea. To date, the Norwegian company Equinor seems to be the most likely candidate to win. It would consider buying these holdings in a transaction valued between $2 and $3 billion.

 

TotalEnergies is selling half of a 604 MW Portuguese energy portfolio to the Japanese consortium MM Capital, Daiwa Energy and Mizuho Leasing for €178.5mn, retaining operation and future commercialisation of the assets concerned.
Q ENERGY France secures a bank financing of €109 million arranged by BPCE Energeco to build four new energy production facilities, totalling 55 MW of wind and solar capacity by the end of 2024.
Shell announces amendment of two annual reports after notification by Ernst & Young of non-compliance with SEC auditor partner rotation rules; however, financial statements remain unchanged.
The Financial Superintendency of Colombia approves an amendment to Ecopetrol’s local bonds and commercial paper program, enabling issuance of sustainable, indexed, or in-kind repayable instruments.
ABO Energy is selling its subsidiary ABO Energy Hellas and an energy project portfolio of approximately 1.5 gigawatts to HELLENiQ ENERGY Holdings, thus refocusing its strategic resources towards other markets, notably Germany, without major financial impact anticipated for 2025.
Iberdrola announces a supplementary dividend of €0.409 per share for 2024 under the "Iberdrola Retribución Flexible" programme, bringing the total annual remuneration to €0.645 per share, representing a year-on-year increase of 15.6%.
BHP has signed contracts with COSCO Shipping to charter two ammonia-powered Newcastlemax bulk carriers, primarily for transporting iron ore between Western Australia and Northeast Asia starting from 2028.
CBAK Energy and Anker Innovations jointly launch a battery cell manufacturing facility in Malaysia, with a commercial potential estimated at $357 million, further strengthening their strategic partnership in the lithium-ion battery sector.
German energy group Badenova plans to invest $4.64 billion in its energy networks and capacity by 2050, including $232 million committed from 2025, according to the company's recently published annual financial results.
ORIX announces the sale of the majority of its stake in Greenko to AM Green Power and commits a new USD 731mn investment in the Luxembourg-based AMG holding, confirming its strategic repositioning in next-generation energy.
Invenergy seals four further contracts with Meta to supply nearly eight hundred megawatts of solar and wind power to the group’s data centres, lifting total cooperation between the two companies to one point eight gigawatts.
Pedro Azagra leaves his role as CEO of Avangrid to become CEO of Iberdrola, while Jose Antonio Miranda and Kimberly Harriman succeed him as CEO and Deputy CEO respectively of the American subsidiary.
The US investment fund Ares Management enters Plenitude's capital by acquiring a 20% stake from Eni, valuing the Italian company at 10 billion euros and reinforcing its integrated energy strategy.
ENGIE secures a contract to reduce Airbus' industrial emissions in France, Germany, and Spain, targeting an 85% decrease by 2030 through various local energy infrastructures.
Alain Rhéaume, Chairman of Boralex’s Board of Directors for eight years, will leave his position by December, following the appointment of his successor by the governance committee of the Canadian energy group.
Norwegian group Statkraft plans an annual cost reduction of NOK2.9bn ($292 million) by 2027, citing possible job cuts amid rising financial burdens and volatility in the European energy market.
EDF merges EDF Renouvelables and its International Division into EDF power solutions, led by Béatrice Buffon, to optimise its global 31 GW low-carbon energy portfolio and strengthen its international positioning.
TotalEnergies announces a strategic partnership with Mistral AI to establish a dedicated innovation laboratory integrating artificial intelligence tools aimed at enhancing industrial efficiency, research, and customer relations.
The Energy Transitions Commission warns of economic risks tied to growing protectionism around clean technologies, while calling for global consensus on carbon pricing.
Baker Hughes has reached an agreement to sell its precision sensor product line to Crane Company for $1.15bn, thereby refocusing its operations on core competencies in industrial and energy technologies.