Loss Making Atlas Development focuses more on Ethiopia and Tanzania as activity in Kenya reduces

Nairobi securities exchange listed company Atlas Development has said it is now eyeing the Ethiopian and Tanzanian markets as oil exploration in Kenya and the Turkana region witnesses a significant reduction.

According to the company business in Ethiopia has been improving with contracts in the potash project where developers have been negotiating and have renewed as they look to advance their exploration and mining operations.

“The Ethiopian business pipeline is also improving in the natural resource and infrastructure spaces.  With a positive market dynamic and a growth in requirements for international standard support services the Board is hopeful that the Ethiopian operations will generate positive returns,” the company says in a statement.

The company adds that despite agreements in place to provide support services across the delivery spectrum in Kenya revenue visibility is not easy to predict at this time.

Atlas development adds that although tenders are being offered by a number of parties throughout the East African region the Board believes that the terms being demanded from service providers are not sustainable.

“Indeed in a number of recent cases contracts were agreed but terms then adjusted by the clients, causing the work to be unprofitable and therefore unattractive to the Company,” the statement continues.

Atlas also says it has conducted a full review of operations in Kenya and dramatically reduced costs and overheads to preserve the balance sheet whilst maintaining a presence to ensure the capabilities are in place to deliver these potentially transformational projects when the time arises or market sentiment changes.

In Tanzania, although the Company has a number of small contracts, the operations are heavily centred on the oil and gas sector where, as in Kenya, the general environment remains challenging.

The company continues operations continue in Western Sahara.

Meanwhile the Company reported comprehensive losses during H1 2015 of US$2.6 million, which included exchange rate losses of US$0.7 million (resulting from the 9% fall in the USD:KES exchange rate which heavily impacted the USD equivalent cash balances which were held in KES) and non-recurring restructuring costs of US$1.1 million.

Looking forward Atlas Development adds the Board has focused on the preservation of capital through prudent cost cutting and streamlining initiatives. The board adds that it is in discussion with a number of asset financing banks with regards to potential acquisitions and expansion opportunities.

“The conclusion of any transaction due to market dynamics and the current valuations is more challenging but the Board, as I said, believes there remains opportunity.”

 

Serious Fraud Office Opens Corruption investigations on Soma Oil and Gas

United Kindgom’s Serious Fraud Office has confirmed that it has opened a criminal investigation into SOMA Oil & Gas Holdings Ltd, SOMA Oil & Gas Exploration Limited, SOMA Management Limited and others in relation to allegations of corruption in Somalia.

According to the SFO website the investigating institution is seeking information from whistleblowers with inside information.

“Whistleblowers are valuable sources of information to the SFO in its cases.  We welcome approaches from anyone with inside information on all our cases including this one – we can be contacted through our secure reporting channel, which can be accessed via the SFO website,” read a statement from the SFO.

The company says it is confident that it will be cleared off the allegations as it has carried its activities in a transparent and lawful manner

“Soma Oil & Gas can confirm that it has been informed by the Serious Fraud Office (“SFO”) that it is investigating an allegation that has been made against the Company.  Soma Oil & Gas is confident that there is no basis to the allegation and it is co-operating fully with the SFO to answer it’s queries. Soma Oil & Gas has always conducted its activities in a completely lawful and ethical manner and expects this matter to be resolved in the near future,” posted a statement by Soma Oil and Gas website.

Soma Oil & Gas which was founded in early 2013 expressly with a view to exploring in Somalia has on its board members including: former leader of the Conservative Party in Britain Lord Howard now the Chairman having held the post since May 2013, former Chairman of Eurasia Drilling Company Lord Clanwilliam, one of the founding investors in Ophir Energy plc Basil Shiblaq who is the Executive Deputy Chairman among others.

Soma Oil and Gas that in June concluded a 122,000 sq km 2D seismic acquisition is set to benefit from blocks with an area of up to 60,000 sq km under a seismic option agreement with Ministry of Petroleum & Mineral Resources, Federal Government of Somalia.

Oil, Gas and Chemical Industry advised to adopt cost culture to survive current environment

With the recent fall-off in oil prices, companies in virtually all sectors of the oil, gas and chemicals (OGC) industry worldwide are going to have to plan and manage their projects for greater capital productivity, something they weren’t doing particularly well before the price-drop, and along the way create a “cost culture” inside their companies. That’s according to a new study, which includes a survey of 250 high-level industry executives around the world, released today by AlixPartners, the global business-advisory firm.

The executive survey finds that just 30% respondents say their companies had explicit return-on-capital targets for projects prior to the crash in oil prices and, perhaps most surprising, that just 12% believe their companies are any better than their competitors at project execution. Meanwhile, the survey finds that only 19% of respondents from North American firms say their companies finish projects on budget, compared with 29% of all respondents globally.

The study also delves into the reasons behind suboptimal project management to date.  According to the executive poll, just 34% of respondents said they “agree” or “strongly agree” that project management is executed at the “company level” across all projects, suggesting that many projects are not benefitting from economies of scale, institutional knowledge, etc.  Only 39% of respondents—and just 30% of oil and gas drillers—said they have a strong series of checks and balances to ensure projects stay on track.  And only 11% of all respondents said they employ a stage-gated process to assess project viability at defined milestones when developing a new capital program.

Overall, when asked to name up to three ways in which they are most challenged in keeping projects on budget, the top reason chosen (by 39% of all respondents) was “company culture isn’t focused on project management.”

“Strong energy prices in recent years have allowed companies to delay putting an emphasis on project management, as they focused instead on the urgent need of achieving greater throughput.  But that was then and this is now,” said Dennis Cassidy, managing director at AlixPartners and co-head of the firm’s global Oil, Gas and Chemicals Practice.  “In the current environment of falling prices, plus increasing geologic and technical challenges, a new focus on building a ‘cost culture’ into each and every project is mandatory.”

The survey results also suggest that as projects grow more complex, many companies have attempted to boost returns, not by tightly controlling costs internally, but by looking outward, toward such things as developing partnerships.  For instance, when asked to list the most important criteria used in selecting new capital projects, 60% in the survey cited “partner/syndicate relationships,” a tie for first place with the project’s projected net present value.  And, among the firms in the survey with the highest (self-reported) corporate ROCE (return on capital employed), 64% cited partner/syndicate relationships as most important, compared with 51% of those representing the companies with the lowest self-reported ROCE who said that, suggesting that partnerships may indeed have been a successful strategy for boosting returns—in the past.

AlixPartners research accompanying the executive survey notes that, despite an average 10% per annum increase in industry capital spending globally since 2010, compounded ROCE averages for all major sectors of the industry (integrated oil and gas, chemicals, upstream, downstream, midstream, and equipment and services were in reality negative for the period 2008-2013— i.e., even before the recent drops in energy prices.

Sector Highlights

Below are some of other key survey results by sector:

  • Two-thirds (66%) of those representing exploration firms said it takes significantly longer to see returns on capital from projects, vs. only 38% for those from integrated oil and gas companies and 47% from drillers
  • Fully 70% of those from oil and gas drilling companies said partners/syndicate relationships are the most important determinant in deciding whether to conduct a project, vs. 60% of total respondents.
  • Just 55% of executives from integrated oil and gas companies said they “always” or “very often” deliver their projects on time, vs. 74% of total respondents.
  • Only 30% of leaders from oil and gas drilling companies said they have a strong set of checks and balances in place to ensure projects stay on track, vs. 39% of total respondents.
  • 55% of those from integrated oil and gas companies said their company culture is not focused on project management, although half said they do complete reviews at key project milestones.

Meanwhile, while 58% of total respondents said they are “focused” or “highly focused” on creating a “cost culture” within the companies – and an even higher number, 69%, from refining and marketing firms and from exploration/production companies said that — the study finds that many companies are not taking the right actions to match their words.

Regional Highlights

Here are survey highlights by region:

  • 49% of those from North American firms said their project planning process efficiently integrates input from key stakeholders, vs. 60% of total respondents.
  • Only 9% of North American respondents said they are likely to use tighter criteria for selecting projects, vs. 26% of Middle Eastern respondents.
  • African operators said they are more likely to close unprofitable operations—64%, vs. 45% of all respondents; 30% said they are plagued by insufficient data (vs. 20% of total respondents); and they said they are less likely to be investing in new infrastructure (13%, vs. 20% overall).
  • 56% of executives from South American firms say they are challenged by “limited synergy with planning and operations” (vs. 41% of total respondents) for getting projects completed on time; 58% cited too much intramural competition for project resources and skills (vs. 36% of all respondents globally) for completing projects on budget.

The executive survey also found that prior to the crash in prices “improving throughput” was indeed the single-most important focus for improving capital productivity, globally, with 63% of total respondents saying they were “quite” or “highly” focused on increasing throughput if existing operations.  It finds as well that only 30% of those surveyed formally identify and quantify project risks in advance of undertaking new projects, and that, in an era where new digital technologies help define the drilling environment, just 39% have a formal knowledge- management process in place.

The AlixPartners study does, though, offer hope to companies looking to crack the code on efficient project management in today’s brave new world of lower energy prices—and a lot of it starts with proactive leadership.  For instance, the executive survey finds that the companies which are best ROCE performers according to those surveyed are also more likely to be creating tighter criteria for project approval (36%, vs. 29% of all respondents), and that top leaders in those high-ROCE companies review all projects on a semi-annual or annual basis (53%, vs. 43% of total respondents).

Furthermore, the survey results suggest that OGC-industry leaders themselves view the creation of an overall cost culture inside their companies as a powerful generator of returns in the year ahead.  According to the survey, 46% of respondents believe doing so will yield at least 5% savings for their firm over the next 12 months, a greater improvement than they believe could come from improved purchasing/resource acquisition (41%), higher subcontractor productivity (39%),  SG &A improvement (27%) or technical-cost reduction (19%).

“The good news is that creating a true, soup-to-nuts cost culture can not only yield significant returns, if implemented properly it can be the approach that offers a lower degree of social impact, which of course can be of use once markets change yet again,” said Cassidy.  “If history is any guide, companies that simply go into shut-down mode given today’s tough market will rue the day when the market turns yet again.”

The AlixPartners Study included a global survey of 250 C-level executives and business-unit leaders globally in the oil, gas and chemicals (OGC) industry, 75% of whom work at companies with reported revenues last year of more than $1 billion.  The survey was conducted for AlixPartners by Oxford Research.

Tullow Oil To Start Offering Vocational Training Scholarships Beginning 2015

Tullow Kenya will starting next year expand its annual Tullow Group scholarship scheme (TGSS)to cover vocational training, in a move that will see over a 1000 Kenyans get opportunities to pursue short term courses including welding and carpentry.

Tullow Kenya Country Manager Martin Mbogo says the oil exploration company had renewed its contract with the British Council, the TGSS administrators, who will oversee the expanded scheme.

The new courses to be offered as part of the expanded Tullow Group scholarship scheme will be aimed at those who may have ambitions to apply for the Tullow Masters degree Scholarship but do not necessarily qualify for post graduate education.

“Over and above the job training, these young people will also get basic communications and entrepreneurships skills that will allow them to also participate in the oil and gas sectors either as entrepreneurs or employees. This objective sits within Tullow’s wider goal of increasing the participation of Kenyans in the country’s oil and gas sectors,” said Mr Mbogo.

This year, Tullow Kenya has invested Kshs. 200 million in providing scholarships and bursaries to university, college and secondary school students. In particular, the company has spent Ksh150 million in providing 30 scholarships to postgraduate students as part of the 2014 scholarship scheme.

“The main reason for starting the Tullow Group Scholarship Scheme was to bridge the skills gap within the oil and gas sectors in countries where we operate. I am proud to say that since we started the scholarship scheme in 2012, the Tullow Group Scholarship Scheme alumni network has become a rich source of specialised skills  for the Kenyan oil and gas sector, producing experts in fields such as oil and gas law, environmental sciences and logistics ,” added Mr Mbogo.

The 30 scholarship awarded this year brings the total numbers of Kenyans awarded the TGSS scholarships since it was started in 2012 to 55.

Opinion: Kenya Somalia maritime border dispute could throw whole region into dispute

A maritime border dispute case filed by Somalia before the International Court of Justice is likely to affect other countries in the region should the court rule in Somalia’s favor.

The case that has currently been shelved as the two countries try a new round of dialogue would also place three Tanzanian blocks in dispute should the court favor the median line petition and not the currently existing horizontal border line.

Among Tanzanian blocks that would be open to dispute include Blocks 12, 11 and 10 with a possibility of a portion of Block 9 also likely to be included. Three of this blocks are licensed to Shell and the last Dominion Energy.

Kenya would also have a right to claim a portion of Pemba Island that lies directly South East its border with its neighbor Tanzania.

Currently hope lies on dialogue between Somalia and Kenya with the two countries said to be considering it as a means to settle the dispute.

“Pending such an agreement or understanding, Somalia requests the Commission not to take any steps that would prejudice any future bilateral delimitation in the maritime area concerned,” the Business Daily quotes a request by Somalia to the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf.

In late August Somalia filed a maritime dispute case at the Hague based court laying claim to a triangle of water stretching more than 100,000 a sq kilometers (approx. 40,000 sq miles) of which Kenya has awarded exploration contracts to various international companies.

“Kenya’s current position on the maritime boundary is that it should be a straight line emanating from the Parties’ land boundary terminus, and extending due east along the parallel of latitude on which the land boundary terminus sits, through the full extent of the territorial sea, EEZ and continental shelf, including the continental shelf beyond 200 [nautical miles],” reads an application by Somalia.

Following the dispute Kenya risked losing seven blocks including include Blocks L5, L21, L22, L23, L24 and L26 some of which are licensed to companies including Eni, Andarko and Total.

Somalia has also filed similar cases against Tanzania and Yemen.

Part of the reason for the maritime dispute could be as a result of considered oil and gas potential in the East African coast that has seen large discoveries of natural gas especially in Tanzania and Mozambique and which is considered to extend northwards towards the Red Sea.

Oil & Gas UK statement on Scottish Referendum result

In light of the ‘No’ vote in the Scottish Referendum, Oil & Gas UK looks forward to continuing working closely with both the UK and Scottish Governments towards the shared ambition of maximising economic recovery of the UK’s offshore oil and gas resource.

This vote does not and will not diminish the pivotal role played by the Scottish Government in supporting the offshore oil and gas industry and Oil & Gas UK looks for this to continue.

Malcolm Webb, Oil & Gas UK Chief Executive, said:  “The Referendum campaign rightly revealed the important role the offshore oil and gas industry plays in our economy, both in Scotland and in the rest of the United Kingdom.  This is understandable given this industry remains the UK’s largest corporate taxpayer and largest industrial investor, and its crucial role in helping assure thousands of well-paid highly skilled jobs as well as our energy security.

“To safeguard the industry’s future, it is particularly important that that the government now presses swiftly ahead with fiscal reform as well as the implementation of Sir Ian Wood’s recommendations to maximise the economic recovery of our oil and gas resource.  The industry must not delay either in a cross-sector effort to bring its escalating costs under control.

“There has been a great deal of discussion about how much oil and gas resource remains to be produced from the UK continental shelf.  Oil & Gas UK’s position remains that there could be between 12 – 24 billion barrels of oil and gas still to recover but that the above three pivotal challenges need to be resolved if we are to stand any chance of reaching the top half of this range.

“We will continue to work with both UK and Scottish Governments on our mutual goals.  This is not just to maximise the economic recovery of the substantial remaining potential of the UKCS oil and gas resource but also to strengthen its supply chain across Scotland and in all other parts of the United Kingdom.”

Among top Scottish oil and gas exploration companies include: Abbot Group plc, Cairn Energy, Dana Petroleum, Britoil  and the Wood Group

Africa Oilfield Logistics Limited to Establish Logistics Hub in Northern Kenya

African focussed support services and logistics company Africa Oilfield Logistics Ltd has announced that Ardan Risk & Support Services the Company’s primary investment, has entered into a 15 year lease over a sizeable land plot in Northern Kenya, which will be used for warehousing, fuel distribution, cold storage and fleet maintenance.

This land Ardan says will be developed into the first of several planned logistics hubs and will support Ardan’s Technical Division as well as its expanding operations in Northern Kenya centered on the rapidly growing oil exploration and production industry in the region.

“Establishing a logistics hub in the burgeoning energy and natural resource destination of Northern Kenya will be a key differential for our business over the coming years,” said Chief Executive Officer of Africa Oilfield Carl Esprey.

In addition to the lease, negotiations are ongoing for an option over a further 25 acres of land in the vicinity to further support the Company’s long term regional expansion plans.

“The development of warehouses and infrastructure for fuel distribution, cold storage and fleet maintenance will enable us to meet the needs of companies in the region, and in time, we will also be able to offer warehouse space directly to our clients on a lease basis creating an additional revenue stream,” he concluded.

Experts warn on proposed windfall tax in attracting investors to Kenya

Experts are warning that a proposed windfall tax by the Kenyan government on oil once production starts could keep away potential investors much as it would amount to more income for the state.

According to Dr. Anthony Hyatt a lecturer at the Aberdeen based Robert Gordon University the concept that involves increased taxation should oil prices exceed a set value, have long term effects on the industry and is considered as a fiscal risk that could slow down activity.

“Windfall taxes brought in by the UK government have led to a slowdown in investment. The UK Is now considered among countries with a record of changing tax regimes especially given that the windfall tax was introduced after oilfields had started producing,” says Hyatt.

The lecturer proposes that the government in the various production sharing agreements needs to structure deals that would remain a win-win situation for both parties especially considering that exploration is only in the early stages with the majority of the country still untested.

Hyatts view is however set to be unpopular among community groups and political leaders who are determined to reap the most out of the reserves should they be termed of commercial quantities and thus a greenlight to production  be given.

“Many people view the oil industry as being money stuffed. No one remembers the risks involved with companies having to sink in millions if not billions of dollars in investments that are never guaranteed not to mention totally capital intensive to put up facilities should oil be discovered in large quantities.”

The don is also pessimistic that oil companies that invest millions in corporate social responsibility will put much in local content in regions where their profits are squeezed to the last drop.

“Studies have shown oil is less profitable than selling soda, retail, manufacturing among others but everyone targets this industry and ignore the rest,” he adds.

Elsewhere in the world plans by governments to levy more taxes on oil companies have always been met with opposition due to the risk of decrease in jobs and increase in products.

“With less money available, companies potentially could reduce investments in domestic energy production and slash research spending,” warned Jim Constantopoulos a professor of geology at Eastern New Mexico University  cnjonline.com following a plan by the U.S government to increase taxes on the oil and gas industry in 2013.

Kenya’s president Uhuru Kenyatta last week stated his government’s intention to impose capital-gains and windfall taxes on oil, gas and mining companies within months to ensure the East African nation maximises benefits from its mineral resources.

“We want something that’s fair, but equally recognising that Kenya as a country must benefit from this.” Said Kenyatta.

Hyatt who offers corporate lectures is currently offering training Kenya’s MPs and Senators sitting in various energy related committees in parliament on the industry as efforts to formulate legislation and other policy documents continue.

Tullow Oil and Africa Oil have discovered oil reserves in Block 13 T and Block 10 BB in northern Kenya’s South Lokichar Basin, estimated at a combined 600 million barrels.