Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Apache Sells Stake In 2 Lng Projects For $2.75B As New Player Backs Project

The Canadian Press, 15 Dec, 2014 04:34 PM
    VICTORIA — A multibillion-dollar deal signed Monday between Australian and American oil and gas companies has brought a new backer to a proposed liquefied natural gas project on British Columbia's northwest coast at Kitimat.
     
    Houston-based Apache Corp., announced it is selling its ownership in two liquefied natural gas projects, including Kitimat LNG, to Australia's Woodside Petroleum Ltd. for $2.75 billion.
     
    The agreement includes Apache's 50 per cent stake in the Chevron-backed Kitimat project and related upstream lands in the Horn River and Liard natural gas basins in B.C.'s northeast.
     
    The transaction also involves Australian subsidiary Apache Julimar Pty. Ltd., which owns a 13 per cent stake in the Wheatstone LNG project and a 65 per cent interest in the area that includes the Julimar/Brunello offshore gas fields and the Balnaves oil development.
     
    In B.C., Natural Gas Minister Rich Coleman said the deal will strengthen the Kitimat LNG project, which has been in development, but the partners have yet to announce a final investment decision.
     
    "In moving forward, I think it probably stabilizes some of their marketability, probably their customers and certainly with those two companies working together that's a pretty formidable team of people that can bring that project to fruition," Coleman said.
     
    "It's a good relationship that will develop out of these two groups and they are both globally large enough companies, both Chevron and Woodside, to do a deal."
     
    Last summer, Apache announced that it planned to drop out of the Kitimat LNG project and the Wheatstone LNG project in Australia.
     
    The company said it wanted to make its North American onshore operations the focus of its business and was weighing its options when it comes to its international holdings.
     
    Farris has said that Apache's exit from Kitimat LNG will not detract from its value, describing the project as world class. 
     
    On Monday, Apache said in a statement it anticipates net proceeds of about $3.7 billion. That includes its expenses between June 30 and the transaction's closing date in the first quarter of 2015. The company may use proceeds to lower debt, buy back stock or for other purposes.
     
    The Kitimat sale is subject to certain operator consents.
     
    Apache said that once the transaction closes, it will still have upstream acreage off the shore of Western Australia in the Carnarvon, Exmouth and Canning basins along with related hydrocarbon reserves and production.
     
    The company will also keep its 49 per cent ownership interest in Yara Holdings Nitrates Pty. Ltd. and 10 per cent interest in the related ammonium nitrate plant.
     
    The company's stock added $1.16, or 2.1 per cent, to $57.60 in pre-market trading.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Provinces Need Screening Programs To Find Lung Cancer When Most Treatable

    Provinces Need Screening Programs To Find Lung Cancer When Most Treatable
    TORONTO — Comprehensive screening programs that detect lung cancer early and improve patients' chances of survival are lacking across the country, says a report by Lung Cancer Canada, an advocacy and research fundraising organization.

    Provinces Need Screening Programs To Find Lung Cancer When Most Treatable

    E-cigarette Smoking Has Tripled In High School Kids In Recent Years

    E-cigarette Smoking Has Tripled In High School Kids In Recent Years
    NEW YORK — Use of electronic cigarettes by high school students tripled over three years, according to a new government report released Thursday.

    E-cigarette Smoking Has Tripled In High School Kids In Recent Years

    Top Court Hears Damages Sought By B.C. Man Wrongly Imprisoned For 27 Years

    Top Court Hears Damages Sought By B.C. Man Wrongly Imprisoned For 27 Years
    VANCOUVER — The Supreme Court of Canada is hearing an appeal from a B.C. man whose lawyers say he deserves financial compensation for spending 27 years in prison for several sexual assaults he did not commit.

    Top Court Hears Damages Sought By B.C. Man Wrongly Imprisoned For 27 Years

    Human Remains Found Two Years Ago In B.C. Identified As Those Of Woman From Iran

    Human Remains Found Two Years Ago In B.C. Identified As Those Of Woman From Iran
    VANCOUVER — Human remains found in North Vancouver, B.C., more than two years ago have been identified as those of a 31-year-old woman from Iran.

    Human Remains Found Two Years Ago In B.C. Identified As Those Of Woman From Iran

    Supreme Court refuses to hear case of Hassan Diab, Ottawa man wanted by France

    Supreme Court refuses to hear case of Hassan Diab, Ottawa man wanted by France
    OTTAWA — An Ottawa sociology professor is a big step closer to being extradited to France for questioning about the 1980 bombing of a Paris synagogue.

    Supreme Court refuses to hear case of Hassan Diab, Ottawa man wanted by France

    Eaton Centre trial hears from young victim's mom

    Eaton Centre trial hears from young victim's mom
    TORONTO — The mother of a 13-year-old boy who survived a gunshot wound to the head at Toronto's Eaton Centre has told the trial of the man accused in the shooting that her son went stiff and lost consciousness minutes after he was hit.

    Eaton Centre trial hears from young victim's mom