Sonde Resources Corp

Exploration and production of oil and natural gas.

Free
Message: Centrica buys Suncor's Trinidad holdings

Centrica buys Suncor's Trinidad holdings

posted on Feb 25, 2010 06:33PM

Suncorp has sold PetroCanada's Trinidad properties to Centrica, which put in the highest bid during the CCAA protection process that SNG went through last year to buy the 45% share of Block 5(C) from SNG, until British Gas matched the price that Centrica offered under the existing JOA which enabled British Gas to ultimately acquire SNG's 45% of Block 5(C). Centrica is the mother company which owns British Gas. The question is now how much of a priority will the development of Block 5(C) be going forward? Will Block 5(C's) development be on the back burner for the next 5 or 10 years while Centrica sells its natural gas to the LNG Train in Trinidad & Tobago and reaches the 4th Train's capacity? If so this would require British Gas to wait a long time until the still debated 5th LNG Train is built in Trinidad to absorb Block 5(C's) capacity. On the other hand if this comes to pass it will give Canadian Superior a longer breathing period to come up with the money to bring on more wells on Block 5(C) and build production facilities which may work out to our benefit down the road. Oh well, if SNG can't sell its natural gas from Block 5(C) to Trinidad's LNG facility, it could always sell it all to it's own Liberty natural gas project in New Jersey when it is up and running. I just love it when a plan comes together.

Suncor's Trinidad assets to give British firm LNG toehold

ReutersFebruary 25, 2010 1:03 PM

Centrica will buy the Trinidadian gas properties of Suncor Energy Inc for $380 million, giving the owner of British Gas its first toehold in a liquefied natural gas project, the company said on Thursday.

Photograph by: Herald Archive, Reuters

Centrica will buy the Trinidadian gas properties of Suncor Energy Inc for $380 million, giving the owner of British Gas its first toehold in a liquefied natural gas project, the company said on Thursday.

The deal to acquire Suncor's portfolio of assets in Trinidad and Tobago gives the owner of Britain's biggest household energy supplier a secure source of gas from the Caribbean country over the long term.

"This is a significant move into one of the world's most established LNG areas providing us with access to both gas-producing and development blocks," Centrica Chief Executive Sam Laidlaw said, announcing the deal with the company's 2009 results.

"This agreement builds further on our upstream capability and marks a step change in our global gas position."

Suncor, Canada's largest energy company, is selling the properties as its looks to winnow its holdings following its C$22.7 billion ($21.1 billion) purchase of Petro-Canada last year and raise cash to expand its Canadian oil sands production.

With the sale of its Trinidad assets, following on the disposal of gas properties in Colorado and Western Canada, Suncor has now raised C$1.3 billion and still plans to sell some assets in the North Sea and the Netherlands.

Centrica said production from its new properties should average between 60 million to 70 million cubic feet per day in 2010.

The properties include a 17.3 percent stake in the North Coast Marine Area (NCMA-1) production area and equity interests in three blocks; Blocks 22, 1(a) and 1(b), for future development.

The NCMA-1 block, which supplies gas to Trinidad's Atlantic LNG facility, holds remaining working gas interests of 266 billion cubic feet (bcf) of proven and probable reserves attributable to Centrica's 17.3 percent stake.

Gas produced from the block has been contracted to a third party until 2023.

Block 22 and Blocks 1(a) and 1(b) comprise 90 and 80 percent operated interests, respectively, with recoverable resources attributable to Centrica estimated at 1.34 trillion cubic feet.

Centrica said on Thursday it took delivery of 15 LNG cargoes in Britain last year and has contracted another seven for 2010.

Trinidad and Tobago is one of the biggest exporters of the super-cooled gas in the Atlantic, supplying over half of the LNG going into the United States and also supplying Europe and Asia.

Centrica has an existing gas asset in Trinidad and Tobago through an equity interest in Block 2(ab).

© Copyright (c) The Calgary Herald
.
.
Best Wishes; Scott
Share
New Message
Please login to post a reply