China oil giant ex-chief warns drillers becoming ‘dinosaurs’

epa04367459 The logo of China Petroleum & Chemical Corporation (Sinopec) is seen at a Sinopec gas station on MacDonnell Road, mid-Levels, Hong Kong, China, 25 August 2014. According to media reports, Sinopec first half turnover, other operating revenues and other income fell by 4.2%, recording RMB1,356 billion (Euro 166 billion). However, the company still maintained double digit growth in operating profit of RMB52 billion (Euro 6.36 billion), up 11.8% year-on-year.  EPA/ALEX HOFFORD

 

Bloomberg

China’s biggest state-owned companies will see “dramatic changes” in the next few years as they may downsize and become more efficient, according to the former chairman of two of the country’s biggest producers. Chinese oil companies have “tremendous room” to improve efficiency and will be “suffering for the next few years” amid the oil crash that’s pushed prices down by roughly half their value from mid-2014, said Fu Chengyu, former chairman of both Cnooc Ltd. and China Petroleum & Chemical Corp., known as Sinopec. Domestic producers need at least $60 a barrel to stabilize China’s slumping oil production, he said.
“We are a big elephant already,” Fu said in New York City on Tuesday at Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy. “If we don’t move faster, reform ourselves faster, we will become a dinosaur.” China’s explorers have been hit hard by the slump in international crude oil prices because of production costs inflated by large work forces and mature domestic resources. Output from the world’s second-biggest consumer has slid this year as the country’s producers shut fields that are too expensive to operate at current prices, forcing the country to seek more oil from overseas.
PetroChina Co., the country’s biggest oil and gas producer, barely broke even in the first-half even after booking a 24.5 billion yuan one-time gain from pipeline sales. Cnooc Ltd., the biggest offshore explorer, posted a first half loss as low crude prices forced it to write down assets. Sinopec, the world’s biggest refiner, posted a profit in the first three quarters this year, thanks to its oil-refining business, which benefits from low crude prices.

MIXED OWNERSHIP
Fu retired as Sinopec’s chairman in May 2015 after working in China’s oil industry for almost four decades, including serving as Cnooc’s chairman. Fu was one of the first state-owned enterprise chairmen to start mixed-ownership reform by selling 30 percent of Sinopec’s retail division to outside investors for $17.5 billion in 2014. China’s crude production from January to October fell 6.7 percent from a year ago to 166.8 million tons, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics last month. October crude output dropped 11.3 percent to 16.05 million tons, or about 3.795 million barrels a day, down 2.7 percent from September.
Firing employees is not an option “either legally or culturally,” Fu said. Sinopec has an alternative — paying people not to work in money-losing parts of the company. That helps cut losses, he said. Over time, traditional energy companies in China will become “smaller” and green energy and energy efficiency will surge, Fu said.
China National Petroleum Corp., the country’s biggest producer and parent of PetroChina, will separate its pipeline and natural gas sales units as part of an acceleration of gas market reforms, the state-owned China Daily reported Thursday. The move dovetails with efforts by President Xi Jinping’s government to boost the use of natural gas in China’s energy mix and revamp the country’s massive state-owned enterprises.
Sinopec shares in Hong Kong rose 3.5 percent to HK$5.61 at 11:26 a.m. in Hong Kong, while PetroChina added 5.7 percent. Crude producers across Asia gained after the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries approved its first supply cuts in eight years. The MSCI AC Asia Pacific Energy Index rose 4.3 percent.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend