1 / 8

China & Latin American Oil Panda or Dragon?

China & Latin American Oil Panda or Dragon?. China, Latin America & the United States: The New Triangle May 26, 2010 Woodrow Wilson Center Washington, DC Jeremy M. Martin Director, Energy Program Institute of the Americas. China’s Latin American Expansion. Why?

keegan
Download Presentation

China & Latin American Oil Panda or Dragon?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. China & Latin American OilPanda or Dragon? China, Latin America & the United States: The New Triangle May 26, 2010 Woodrow Wilson Center Washington, DC Jeremy M. Martin Director, Energy Program Institute of the Americas

  2. China’s Latin American Expansion Why? China’s growing appetite for oil: The International Energy Agency (IEA) estimates that their demand will more than double by 2030 China’s oil imports as a percentage of total consumption have gone from just under 10% in 1995 to over 50% today

  3. How and What? As set forth by Beijing, overseas expansion follows three main tenets: • Material reserves • Production positions • Diversification of sources of supply

  4. How and What? Cont’d Deep Pockets Perhaps most importantly in the recent uncertain economic period – they have cash. China’s unprecedented economic growth has provided important financial resources to support their Latin American interests Fiscal Footnote: It is also important to bear in mind that Chinese National Oil Companies aren’t just after short-term financial returns to shareholders Challenges Persist But we are now in an age of “Peak Access” – there are few easy targets and access to resources has become much more competitive Yet China’s global expansion has evolved and they’ve learned lessons such as the failed UNOCAL acquisition in the US and the tempestuous acquisition in Ecuador of EnCana’s oil assets

  5. Chinese Dollar Diplomacy & Latin America’s Oil Patch PetroChina-Athabasca Oil Sands Corporation – Two Projects approximately $2 Billion **PetroChina acquired Saudi Aramco 5 million barrel terminal on the island of St Eustatius **CNOOC acquired a 12.5% interest in 2C block & 12.75% interest in 3A block in Trinidad-& Tobago. **Framework agreement with Cuba targeting Gulf of Mexico fields CNPC-Recope 50-50 JV to upgrade only refinery – Cost of $1Billion **$20 Billion credit line from China Development Bank brings total Chinese commitment to Venezuela to about $28 Billion **CNPC-PDVSA JV’s for projects as part of the $8 Billion already disbursed **Total-CNPC plan to spend $7-10 Billion on 2 fields Sinopec acquired $800 million stake in Orimex in 2006 &Sinochem Corp. spent $876 million for Emerald Energy assets **CNPC acquired Block 11 for oil & gas E&P in 2003 **CNPC & Sinopec purchased Encana’s assets and created Andes Petroleum in 2005 **Sinopec JV with Petroecuador valued at $1.1 Billion **China Development Bank $10 Billion loan to Brazil – oil for credit deal to further Petrobras capex in Pre-Salt offshore fields **Sinopec-Petrobras cooperation agreement - possible stakes in 2 offshore Petrobras blocks **Sinopec completed the GASENE pipeline project at a cost of 1.3 billion - Sinopec's largest overseas service contract **CNPC and Argentina’s Pluspetrol formed a partnership to operate two blocks **Blocks 6/7 and 111/113 acquired for drilling and seismic studies CNOOC purchased a 50% stake in Bridas for roughly $3.1 Billion

  6. Final Points China is using all of the tools at its disposal – abundant cash, political influence and a global long-term outlook – to secure long-term oil supply around the world. And Latin America fits the strategic bill to diversify those efforts both geographically and resource wise But…China’s imports from Latin American nations like Venezuela, Ecuador and Brazil remain small compared to overall imports – and the distance often means that such deals are more costly. So we must be cautious not to over exaggerate the role of the Chinese in today’s oil sector in Latin America

  7. China’s interests in Latin American Oil: Panda or Dragon?

  8. Cheers y Abrazos?

More Related