China firm seeks state financing for $5.5-B Caribbean oil project
(Reuters) Commodity trader Guangdong Zhenrong Energy Co. is in talks to secure funding for a $5.5-B plan to upgrade a Caribbean oil refinery and build a natural gas terminal, giving China a foothold in a strategic oil hub.
The project, which the state-owned firm aims to lead with support from the country's oil majors, would give the world's No.2 oil consumer control of the Isla refinery on the tiny island of Curacao that supplies fuel to Venezuela and crude oil to Asia.
State-owned Guangdong Zhenrong agreed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) in September with the government of Curacao, an autonomous Dutch state off Venezuela's northwest coast, to upgrade its aging refinery and build a gas terminal.
A delegation from Curacao, including government lawyers and the head of its refinery facilities, is in southern China this week to visit oil and gas plants, as parties move negotiations beyond the initial cooperation pact, two top executives at the Guangzhou-based China firm said.
"We are discussing with China Construction Bank, China Development Bank, ICBC and Bank of China to provide the bulk of the financing. Some banks have already made detailed proposals," said Chen Bingyan, a company advisor and the project's key negotiator.
Early work showed the project, including the refinery upgrade, increased oil storage and the natural gas facility which is designed to provide clean fuel to local users, would require about $5.5 B in total investment, Chen said.
The figure was below the $10 B in September's preliminary agreement, which referred to the eventual size of the investment the Chinese firm committed to spend on Curacao, he said.
The 335 Mbpd Isla refinery, located just 31 miles northwest of Venezuela, has for decades been operated by Venezuela's state oil firm PDVSA under a lease agreement, but the cash-poor company has been reluctant to meet Curacao's requests to modernize the plant, which locals blame for pollution.
China in the last decade has become one of the top buyers of Venezuelan crude and fuel through an oil-for-loans financing deal, and some of its purchases use Curacao as a transfer point.
China purchased nearly 490 Mbpd of crude oil and products from Venezuela in the first nine months this year, roughly 6% of its total purchases. C-CN-VE-FZ
Guangdong Zhenrong, an oil and metals trader with little experience in the refining or gas terminal business, is aiming to lead the upgrade project and seek technical and operational support from the country's state energy giants.
The trader hopes to be the single-largest stake holder in the project, and has entered into preliminary cooperation agreements with engineering and construction units of Beijing's top oil firms including CNPC, Sinopec and CNOOC, said Chen and a second top executive.
"As a smallest sibling, we'll lead using our relationship skills. Our bigger brothers will pitch in with their expertise," said the second executive, who asked not to be named.
Sinopec, China's largest refiner would revamp the refinery which was first built in 1918, while CNOOC, which led China's expansion of its LNG import facilities, had been identified as the potential builder and operator of the gas terminal, Chen said.
"[Guangdong Zhenrong] is just a political vehicle. It could subcontract to engineering divisions of Sinopec and CNPC ... The big oils prefer to keep a low profile, not being seen helping PDVSA directly," said Gordon Kwan of Nomura Research.
China Petroleum Engineering & Construction Corp (CPECC), a unit of CNPC is expected to lead in expanding the storage site at Bullenbay to 36 MMbbl, double the current size.
Sinopec declined to comment. CNOOC didn't immediately respond to a request for comment, while CPECC was not immediately available.
Guangdong Zhenrong, which posted sales of $10.14 B in 2014, also won approval from Myanmar earlier this year to build a long-planned $3-B refinery in the Southeast Asian nation
Reporting by Chen Aizhu; Editing by Richard Pullin
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