Shell to sell stake in Thai Bongkot fields to PTTEP for US$750 million

Royal Dutch Shell has announced that it will sell its stake in the Bongkot gas field and adjoining acreage offshore Thailand to PTT Exploration & Production PCL for US$750 million before tax.

The deal with PTTEP comes after Shell in October canceled a US$900 million agreement to sell the same gas field stakes to Kuwait Foreign Petroleum Exploration Company (KUFPEC).

“The two deal values are not comparable and we will not comment further on any commercial terms,” a Shell spokeswoman said when asked about the discrepancy between the price tags in the two sale accords.

In a statement, Shell said, “This sale takes Shell a step closer to its divestment target of US$30 billion” of non-core assets. The transaction is expected to be completed in the second quarter, both companies said.

PTTEP is the upstream arm of oil giant PTT Pcl and currently operates the Bongkot field, which produces about 860 million cubic feet per day of natural gas and 26,000 barrels per day of condensate.

The acquisition is in line with PTTEP’s strategy of adding producing assets or those which are in the final stage of development, located in Southeast Asia where PTTEP has experience, Chief Executive Officer Somporn Vongvuthipornchai said in a statement.

PTTEP is keen to continue as the field’s operator and plans to participate in a bidding round for the Bongkot concession which expires in 2022-2023 to maintain Thailand’s energy security, Somporn said.

Andrew Harwood, research director of Asia Pacific upstream oil and gas at ‎Wood Mackenzie, said the lower sale price for the asset probably reflects PTTEP taking on a larger share of future decommissioning liabilities.

“The deal also puts PTTEP in a stronger position ahead the bidding round, expected to launch by mid-2018,” he said.

The sales agreement covers Shell’s 22.2 % stake in Blocks 15, 16 and 17 and Block G12/48, the companies said. PTTEP’s stake will increase to 66.7 % after the purchase, with the remaining 33.3 % held by France’s Total, they said.

The deal will increase PTTEP’s sales volume by about 35,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day.

In the bidding round set for mid-2018, over 650 million barrels of oil equivalent of resource will be up for grabs in Thailand, including both the expiring Bongkot concession and areas licensed to Chevron Corp.

Chevron operates the nearby Erawan field under a concession set to expire in 2022.

The fields have a combined output of 2.2 billion cubic feet a day, making up about 76 % of the Gulf of Thailand’s output.