Energy Daily: CITIC’s Chinese Australia mine sets sail, Energy gro...

 
 
To view this email as a webpage, click here
 
 
Thursday December 05 2013
 
 
Energy
 
CITIC's Chinese Australia mine sets sail
 
Citic Pacific has finally loaded up its maiden shipment of iron ore from its Australian venture following years of infighting among Chinese and local partners
 
 
 
Energy group set to cancel wind farms
 
 
US should heed warnings on BP
 
 
Drax shares rise on UK biomass support
 
 
Gazprom pushes for peace with Europe
 
 
Advertisement1
 
 
Oil & Gas
 
Iran threatens to trigger oil price war
 
Opec maintains its production target as Tehran warns it will increase output even if crude prices tumble to $20 a barrel
 
 
 
Time to create a new oil major
 
Mining
 
Thornton to take helm at Barrick Gold
 
Former banker to complete journey from Goldman to gold mining, and is expected to use his knowledge of China to forge joint ventures
 
 
Nick Butler
 
Time to create a new oil major
 

Let us start with two questions. Which of the following energy companies is planning to sell assets next year – Shell, ExxonMobil, BP, Total, Statoil, ENI? Answer – all of them. Which of those companies is planning to cut capital expenditure in 2014? Answer – all of them, with the sole exception of Exxon which is planning a modest increase. If you extend the list of companies the answers are the same.

Taken together these answers reveal some interesting points about the oil and gas industry. Most companies now feel they have been over investing – either by doing too much or by allowing costs to rise out of control. Returns have not matched the growth in spending. Shareholders are restive. Asset sales are normal business – every big company builds up a tail of marginal, non-strategic assets. But the scale of current plans goes beyond that. The tail has gone and the assets for sale now are in most cases attractive commercial propositions.

Read more
 
 
 
Offshore wind gains in subsidies shake-up
 
 
 
 
Manage email
  
Forward this email
 
Feedback
  
Manage portfolio
 
Subscribe to the FT
 
Follow the FT
twitter facebook google plus linkedin
 
Unsubscribe | My Account | RSS | Privacy Policy | About Us | Help
 
You have received this email because you have signed up from the NBE preference page.
This email was sent by a company owned by Pearson plc, registered office at 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL.
Registered in England and Wales with company number 53723.