BP, CNOOC Seek $1.3 Billion Loan for Tangguh LNG in Indonesia
BP, CNOOC Seek $1.3 Billion Loan for Tangguh LNG in Indonesia
Denise Kee
Bloomberg/Singapore
BP Corp. North America Inc., a subsidiary of Europe's biggest oil
company BP Plc, and CNOOC Ltd, China's largest offshore oil
company, are seeking a US$1.3 billion loan to develop the Tangguh
liquefied natural gas greenfield project in eastern Indonesia, a
banker close to the deal said.
BP and CNOOC will be guarantors for the loan and have
appointed Societe Generale SA as their financial adviser. SG has
sent out a Request for Proposal to banks asking for bids by
Tuesday, said a banker who received the request.
The loan is part of $3.5 billion in financing for the project,
which will cost about $6.5 billion. The loan will feature a six
to 6.5-year tenor and will be taken up by commercial lenders, the
banker said. The rest of the $3.5- billion will come from the
Asian Development Bank, the Japan Bank for International
Cooperation and a group of Chinese lenders.
The project will build two LNG trains with capacity to produce
7.6 million tons per year (mtpa) of LNG. The development will
include gas production facilities and other infrastructural
facilities such as a seaport and airfield.
BP owns 37.16 percent of the project, making it the biggest
investor. CNOOC is the second-largest, with 16.96 percent.
Other investors include Mitsubishi Ltd., Japan's largest
trading company, and Inpex Corp., Japan's biggest oil explorer.
They hold a combined 16.3 percent in Tangguh. A Nippon Oil Corp.-
led company has a 12.23 percent stake and LNG Japan, owned by
Sumitomo Corp. and Sojitz Holdings Corp., holds 7.2 percent.
Japan National Oil, Kanematsu Corp. and Mitsui & Co.'s Overseas
Petroleum Corp. unit hold a combined 10 percent stake.
The project has to be approved by the Upstream Oil and Gas
Regulatory Body (BP Migas).
Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp. is the general adviser to BP
Migas on the contractual and financing structure of the project.
Its role is to safeguard the country's interests in the region's
biggest LNG project in terms of capacity.