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Gold/Mining/Energy : KERM'S KORNER -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (12815)10/14/1998 4:25:00 PM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15196
 
CANADA IN THE NEWS

Alberta Gas Producers Face Shortfall, Analysts Warn

Alberta natural gas shippers could find themselves running out of product if a long, cold winter sets in, says a Calgary gas analyst.

Martin Molyneaux, an analyst with FirstEnergy Capital Corp., said yesterday, based on his revised estimates, TransCanada PipeLines Ltd. could face a shortfall of up to 1.4 billion cubic feet a day from field production. Gas in storage will only be able to meet up to 1.1 bcf/d of demand.

TCPL released figures last week showing it will meet expected demand of 13.8 billion cubic feet a day during the winter months through 12.9 bcf/d from field production and 900 million cubic feet a day from storage.

But Molyneaux said he believes field production will be lower, only reaching 12.5 to 12.7 bcf/d.

"[Producers] are not drilling at that level yet," he said.

Pulling 900 million cubic feet a day from storage is "stretching the envelope, but do-able. It becomes an issue of supply at what price."

Alberta has storage capacity for 185 billion cubic feet of gas.

Last year, TCPL met 13.1 bcf/d of demand with 12.4 bcf/d from field production and 700 million cubic feet a day from storage.

Analysts believe depleted storage and lower than expected production will push natural gas prices up next summer.

Molyneaux has revised his price to $2.75 a thousand cubic feet for 1999, up 20¢ and substantially higher than the $2.20 to $2.40 a thousand cubic feet Canadian producers are using for their 1999 budgets.

In order to fill TCPL's expansion Nov. 1 of 400 million cubic feet a day and another smaller expansion by November 1999, 18,000 gas wells will have to be drilled and tied in.

That will likely take until the end of 2002 to achieve, he said.

The number of gas wells coming on stream this year will be 10% fewer than expected at about 4,600 wells, Molyneaux estimated.

Pipeline capacity will increase to 14.2 bcf/d this winter with TCPL's expansion and Northern Border's addition of 700 million cubic feet a day.

Bob Reid, president of TCPL's Canadian mainline, said all firm contracts will be met. He expects supply to remain tight through next summer but move into balance by the fall.

TCPL shares (TRP/TSE) closed yesterday down 35¢ at $22.30.

Alberta Energy Corp Aims At Being No. 1 Oil And Gas Firm

A day after locking up the takeover of Amber Energy Inc. for about $775 million, Alberta Energy Co. president Gwyn Morgan suggested yesterday he's in the market for more acquisitions.

"We view this period as being AEC's period. There may be other opportunities and we will be watching," he said.

With its balance sheet in relatively good shape because of the large proportion of equity in the takeover, AEC is interested in more natural gas and natural gas liquids assets.

It's unlikely the senior producer will go after any more heavy oil. Amber's prize assets are heavy oil properties at Pelican Lake in northeastern Alberta, where it's producing heavy oil at costs comparable to light oil.

AEC and Amber agreed over the weekend to turn a hostile takeover battle into a friendly deal, after AEC increased its bid price 50¢ to $7.50 for each Amber share, or 0.225 AEC shares, up from 0.215 shares.

Up to 4.5 million AEC shares would be made available, an increase from three million in the original bid.

"The company's ability to take advantage of what is a countercyclical period in the industry continues to be very strong," said Morgan.

Already one of Canada's top 10 producers, the company is said to be aiming to become Canada's largest upstream oil and gas company.

The offer is open for acceptance until midnight local time on Oct. 23 and is conditional on 662 1/83% of Amber's shares being tendered.

The deal will make AEC Canada's largest publicly traded natural gas producer with 900 million cubic feet produced daily in 1999. Oil production will rise to 85,000 barrels a day.

The combination boosts AEC's proven and probable natural gas reserves to four trillion cubic feet, from 3.7 trillion cubic feet, and doubles conventional oil and natural gas liquids reserves.

Circumstances will dictate whether AEC will again take the hostile route, Morgan said. The deal marks the third successful hostile takeover in the oil and gas industry this year.

The company has earmarked $850 million in capital spending for 1999, up from $800 million this year, not including money that might be allocated for acquisitions and including capital spending related to Amber's assets. It is allocating a lower level of spending for Amber's Pelican Lake property than was planned by Amber. AEC will take a lower-volume, longer-life approach for the assets with less capital, Morgan said.

"Our feeling is that we don't have to put much more near-term capital into Pelican because there's been a lot of money put in there by Amber. And we are not going to push production up to where they were trying to push it."

AEC shares (AEC/TSE) closed at $33.80 yesterday, down 5¢. Amber shares (AMB/TSE) closed at $7.50, up 35¢.

The 50¢ Difference

This week's revised takeover of Amber Energy Inc. by Alberta Energy Co. shows yet again what a difference 50¢ a share can make.

On Monday, AEC upped its offer for Amber to $7.50 a share and/or 0.225 of a AEC share for each Amber share, from $7 a share and/or 0.215 of a AEC share. Amber's board then voted to endorse the transaction -- a major change, given that it originally regarded the offer as inadequate and had threatened to trigger a poison pill.

In at least two other M&A transactions, 50¢ a share clinched the deal. In 1994, Rogers Communications Inc. upped its bid to $17.50 a share from $17 a share for Maclean Hunter Ltd. Before that, Ted Rogers, RCI's chairman, said there was no way, including pressure from his wife, his company's offer would be hiked. In what was a public demonstration of who wears the pants, RCI raised its offer by 50¢ a share, an amount that was paid by MH.

Earlier this year, 50¢ appeared once again when Great-West Lifeco Inc. paid $34 a share for London Insurance Group. Originally, it offered $33.50 a share, but London Life's major shareholder, Trilon Financial, indicated it would not lock up its control block at that price. An extra 50¢ a share did the trick, and Trilon agreed to exclusivity with Great West.

While there seems to be a certain magic about 50¢ a share, 30¢ a share was enough to allow Union Pacific Resources Group Inc. to win Norcen Energy earlier this year. Noranda Inc., which owned 49.5% of Norcen, indicated if its block was to be locked up irrevocably, Union Pacific would have to offer 30¢ a share more than the planned $19.50.

Investors Flock To Amber Shares Following Alberta Energy Deal

Amber Energy Ltd. was the most active stock on the Toronto Stock Exchange on Tuesday following its acceptance of a sweetened takeover bid by Alberta Energy Co. on Monday.

About 7.3 million shares of Calgary-based Amber's stock changed hands on the TSE as it rose C$0.30 to C$7.45.

The agreement, reached by the two companies over the Canadian Thanksgiving long weekend, calls for AEC to pay C$7.50 per Amber share or 0.225 AEC shares per Amber share.

AEC also made more of its stock available to Amber shareholders who opt for shares instead of cash, increasing the maximum to 4.5 million shares from three million.

Amber rejected AEC's original offer of C$7.00 or 0.215 AEC shares per Amber share as inadequate and opportunistic.

The offer is conditional, among other things, on at least 66-2/3 percent of Amber's outstanding shares being tendered.

The Amber board will waive the application of its Shareholder Rights Plan to the AEC offer prior to the expiry of the offer.

In their statement, AEC and Amber said they have executed a pre-acquisition agreement under which Amber will discontinue seeking other bids, and to continue standstill agreements relating to previously executed confidentiality agreements with third parties. Amber will also cease pursuing the disposition of certain of its midstream assets. In addition, in certain specified events, Amber will pay AEC a fee of $12 million.

AEC's shares were off C$0.10 to C$33.75 in moderate trade on the TSE on Tuesday.

Consumers Gas Changes Name To Enbridge

Consumers Gas of Toronto, Canada's largest distributor of natural gas, says it's changing its name, to keep pace with the changing times.

Consumers Gas, part of an energy services group headed by IPL Energy of Calgary, will soon be known as Enbridge Consumers Gas to reflect changes in the industry, president Rudy Riedl announced Tuesday.

The company distributes natural gas to almost 1.5 million customers in Ontario, Quebec, and upper New York State. It's parent IPL Energy, to be called Enbridge, operates the world's longest and most complex oil pipeline system, which transports oil from Western Canada to eastern markets.

"Change is sweeping our industry, bringing with it competition and consumer choice," Riedl said in a statement.

And he predicted a wide-open field for utilities in the future.

"These changes will soon enable us to deliver services beyond natural gas, such as electricity and water," said Riedl.

"One day, Enbridge may even offer ‘one-stop shopping' for phone, cable, computer and Internet services. The possibilities are endless."

The name Enbridge combines the words energy and bridge, which Riedl says describes the link between the present and future of the energy services industry where deregulation means greater competition and reduced consumer prices.

The name change will take about a year to complete, he said, allowing customers time to adjust as well as giving the company time to change its truck signs, bills and even uniforms.

Company of the Year Awarded to BW Technologies

BW Technologies, a Calgary based manufacturer of high technology gas detection equipment, has been awarded the 1998 Electronics Industry Association of Alberta (EIAA) award for Company of the Year. According to the Alberta Economic Development, electrical and electronic products manufacturing contributes in excess of $1.3 billion to the Alberta economy. BW Technologies was chosen by the EIAA for its contribution to the electronics industry in Alberta, its ability to grow and consistently bring out new products. Currently the company employs more than 80 people in three countries and has topped the $12 million mark in sales for fiscal 98 with a net income of more than $623,000. In little more than 24 months BW has brought to market seven main-line products in addition to three brand name products for Fluke Corporation of the United States.

Joy Uniat, General Manager for Future Electronics Inc and an EIAA member of the board of directors selecting the award recipients says, "BW is profitable, recently became a public company and has maintained very high stock values, even while the markets have dropped significantly."

The company began operations in Alberta meeting gas detection needs for the oil and gas industry and has since diversified to serve the pulp and paper, municipalities, telecommunications, fire, water treatment and even disaster response sectors. BW Technologies is committed to becoming the industry leader in the design, development, manufacturing and marketing of gas detection equipment for the protection of working personnel and industrial facilities.

IPSCO earnings drop on slumping steel demand

IPSCO Inc. shares slipped to a 52-week low Wednesday after the Western Canadian steelmaker reported lower-than-expected third-quarter earnings and issued a warning for its next quarter.

IPSCO shares were down C$1.20 to C$25.00 in mid-afternoon after falling earlier by as much as C$1.60 on volume of 16,200 shares. The stock had traded in a 52-week range of C$47.00 to C$25.25.

The drop came after the Regina, Saskatchewan-based steelmaker said net income for its third quarter ended September 30 was C$26.1 million, or C$0.62 a share, on sales of C$284.1 million. That compares with a profit of C$33.3 million, or C$0.79, on sales of C$276.4 million in the year-before period.

The company blamed the earnings drop on lower shipments to Western Canada caused by a fall in oil and gas drilling activity.

The prospect of lower steel prices resulting from low-cost imports forced the company to issue a warning for its fourth quarter earnings as well.

"The unprecedented surge in imports of steel mill products should see both lower price realization in the United States and lower demand in the fourth quarter as distributors de-stock after having over-ordered in an apparent attempt to profit from dumped prices," IPSCO said in a release.

It noted the fourth quarter will be the low point for earnings with prices recovering gradually over the next year.

The warning did not take analysts by surprise.

"It would be unrealistic right now to really expect a lot from the steel companies considering what is happening to steel prices," said Greg Misztela, an industrial products analyst at Griffiths McBurney Partners in Toronto.

Misztela has a 12-month target of C$33 a share on the stock with an "accumulate" recommendation.

Misztela expected the share prices of the major steel producers to slip even lower before a turnaround takes place next year.

"Probably in the short term we'll see more pressure on these stocks. I wouldn't be surprised to see these stocks drifting even lower until the market has a good grip on how deep this downturn is going to be. This creates uncertainty and puts more pressure on the stocks."

Toronto stocks drop on weak golds

Toronto stocks fell at the opening of trading on Wednesday, mirroring the Dow Jones Industrial Average as uncertainty over earnings crept back into the markets. The gold index led the market lower.

The Toronto Stock Exchange's key 300 Composite Index fell 22.63 percent, or 0.4 percent, to 5522.30. Volume was 9.4 million shares worth C$165.5 million. Advancers lagged decliners 122 to 203 with another 184 issues unchanged.

This followed a gain on Tuesday of 62.90 points, or 1.15 percent, to 5544.74.

In New York, the Dow was down 28.84 points, or 0.36 percent, to 7909.30 at the opening. On Tuesday it fell 63.33 points, or 0.8 percent, to 7938.14 points.

Uncertainty over the earnings potential of North American companies once again weighed heavily on the markets, said Jeff Milligan, a U.S. Investment specialist at Priority Brokerage in Toronto.

"I think a lot of people are selling off. Although there's been positive earnings announcements, a lot are insecure with the future. They don't know what the next quarter will be like," he said.

"It's the insecurity of the market. I think the mood's really changed."

Overall in Toronto, 11 of the TSE 300's 14 subindexes opened lower, led by a 2.1 percent dip in the gold sector and a 0.6 percent decline in the metals index.

The dip came as gold in New York fell $1.20 to $297.30 an ounce.

Gold miner Placer Dome Inc. fell C$1.20 to $21.00 and metals producer Alcan Aluminium Ltd. slipped C$0.40 to C$38.50.

Conglomerates, consumer products and merchandising shares also fell.

Bucking the negative trend was the paper and forest products group, which rose 0.3 percent. Abitibi-Consolidated Inc. rose C$0.15 to C$14.90.

Telecommunication companies TELUS Corp. and BC Telecom Inc. are stocks to watch today as rumors swirl that they will merge. Both issues were halted in Toronto pending news.







To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (12815)10/15/1998 12:44:00 PM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 15196
 
INTERNATIONAL BITS AND PIECES - PART 1

Iran hints at oil shift, Rushdie flap no threat

By William Maclean
LONDON, Oct 14 (Reuters) - Iran may show flexibility in negotiating key aspects of foreign investment in oil and gas development ventures that have proved unpopular with foreign energy companies, an Iranian oil official said on Wednesday.

In remarks indicating a possible easing of Iran's approach to outside energy involvement, he said Iran would be prepared to discuss widening the range of possible repayment models for investors planning to upgrade existing oil and gas fields.

"There is room for flexibility in this regard. It's a question of collecting information and addressing a range of related issues over the next few months," the official, who asked not to be named, told Reuters.

He said investors should not fret over political turbulence such as Iran's rocky ties with neighbouring Afghanistan and fresh statements attacking British author Salman Rushdie, or over oil sector changes such as a planned onshore reshuffle.

"The Salman Rushdie case is over. There are some conservatives who raise this issue but for domestic consumption only. But 70 to 80 percent of those who voted for President Khatami do not subscribe to their views," he said.

On Iran's confrontation with Afghanistan's ruling Taleban Islamic movement, he said: "This should not be a cause for concern. It is being allowed to calm down."

Foreign energy companies are elbowing for position in Iran in an $8 billion oil and gas investment race that has attracted European and Asian firms long starved of Gulf upstream ventures.

The country, which holds the world's second largest gas and fifth largest oil reserves, has offered 43 so-called buy-back ventures where investors are repaid in production under its largest energy opening since the 1979 Islamic revolution.

Iran has already signalled the possibility of easing terms on exploration deals which make up 16 of the offered ventures.

But on development deals on established fields, Iran has so far been determined to restrict the use of so-called alternative oil for repayment in cases where a field's output is insufficient to repay capital recovery and remuneration.

Asked to comment on a demand by some foreign companies to have a right either to raise production or take production from other fields if their own output was inadequate, the official said without elaborating that flexibility was a possibility.

Iranian analysts based in London have said they expect any such flexibility to emerge only in final phases of negotiation -- which for most projects lies months, if not years away.

Asked whether Iran preferred approaches by consortiums, the official said there was no rigid rule but ventures involving several foreign companies were usually able to draw on more resources than those involving only one.

The official added the oil ministry was pressing ahead with plans to reorganise the onshore sector of the National Iranian Oil Company to allow a role for private Iranian companies.

These small, semi-private business units would act as state owned NIOC's prime onshore contractors and would link up with foreign "buy back" partners to develop one or two fields each.

A separate Iranian source said 30 of such firms had been or were being created for both onshore and offshore sectors.

Some foreign firms dislike the development, arguing it could lead to delays and complications if it is carried out in tandem with buy-back negotiations on onshore fields.

But the official said foreign investors should not be deterred, and those foreign companies that had worked with such semi-private companies in the offshore sector would be at an advantage in seeking opportunities onshore. "They can use their experience and contacts built up in their dealings with Iranian private companies," he said.

He said Iranian officials would attend a conference in January in London to review bids. Iran has said it hopes to finalise an "appreciable" amount of the ventures by late March.

Bangladesh sets date for gas talks with foreign firms

Bangladesh will begin negotiations with foreign oil firms on the awarding of gas blocks later this month, energy ministry officials said on Thursday.

"We will start negotiating with the foreign companies for awarding the rest of the blocks," said a senior official with Petrobangla, the state-owned oil and gas company.

The talks will start on October 25.

Petrobangla awarded only five blocks (3,5,7,6 and 8) on July 26, more than a year after the bidding took place on 15 blocks.

Petrobangla officials said the delay was due the need to set up certain conditions for exploration work and to remove any ambiguities that might have existed.

"The award of the blocks will be made as per the analysis and that will be based on the best offer," the Petrobangla official who declined to be identified told Reuters.

He said the negotiations for the blocks would take about a month.

The officials said blocks 9 and 11 may go to Irish oil company Tullow Oil Plc <TLW.L> in a joint venture with American companies Chevron/Texaco <CHV.N> <TX.N>.

Block 10 might be awarded to joint venture British Cairn Energy Plc <CNE.L> and Royal/Dutch Shell Group <SHEL.L> <RD.AS>.

They said American firm Unocal Corp <UCL.N>, which also bid for block 10, might get a share of the block along with Cairn and Shell.

Energy ministry officials said the three companies vying for the block were negotiating between themselves for jointly exploring blocks 5, 7 and 10.

Petrobangla has already awarded block 5 to Cairn/Shell and block 7 to Unocal.

Petrobangla officials said the state-owned company had already found gas at Shahbajpur in block 10. It tested gas after drilling one exploratory well in 1992.

Cairn/Shell had already won exploration rights to blocks 15 and 16. The company has struck gas in the offshore block 16 and started to supply gas to the national grid from the Bay of Bengal.

Bangladesh has proven gas reserves of 10.5 trillion cubic feet, but experts say that could rise to 50 trillion cubic feet.

Mobil Australia<MOB.N>hopes for Asia upturn in '99

An economic recovery in Asia from 1999 would help reduce the oil products surplus that has eroded refinery margins, Mobil Oil Australia Ltd chairman and managing director P.C. Tan said on Thursday.

"What we are hoping is that there will be some recovery in the economies in 1999 and that will help tighten up supplies," Tan told reporters after a speech to the Committtee for Economic Development of Australia business group.

He said an additional two to three percentage points of growth would equate to increased uptake of half a million barrels a year. "If we can pick up a couple of percentage growth a year, that takes up the surplus quite easily."

He noted that that refineries had cut capacity and mothballed some production due to the depressed market.

The Asian economic crisis and the excess refining capacity in the region has sharply eroded refiner margins and led to increased pressure on Australian refineries from imports.

But Tan said he disagreed with forecasts that some Australian refineries would be forced to close in the next decade.

Tan told the luncheon the refineries would survive by becoming more flexibile and increase their focus on export markets including niche markets in South America.

He said South American was already importing lubricant base stock from Mobil's South Australian refinery.

"What we would like to do is extend that to fuels," he said.

Tan also flagged the possibility of supplying the U.S. defence forces, which already buy from refineries around the region, but set stringent specifications.

"Once we can get the flexibility we can go after that market," he said.

Mobil and the Australian unit of Shell <RD.AS><SHEL.L> have announced they will merge their four Australian refineries next year in a move to increase efficiency.

The refineries have an average capacity each of around 100,000 barrels per day.

Russia president orders PM to act on Rosneft/Purneft

Russian President Boris Yeltsin on Wednesday instructed Prime Minister Yevgeny Primakov to ensure that state oil holding company Rosneft got back its stake in one of its key assets, oil and gas producer Purneftegaz <PFGS.RTS>, the Kremlin said.

The Kremlin press office also said in a statement that Yeltsin formally instructed Primakov to make sure state assets were protected in the case of any legal action and when issues of shares were made in companies in which the state had a stake.

Yeltsin instructed Primakov to "take measures to guarantee the return to the ownership of OAO Rosneft the stake in OAO Rosneft-Purneftegaz and to punish officials guilty of causing a loss of state property," he said.

Rosneft owned 38 percent of Purneftegaz, its most profitable and valuable asset, but lost it in a court action when it was seized by creditors. The stake, valued by Rosneft at $400 million to $500 million, was later sold for $10 million to an unknown buyer.

The Russian prosecutor's office has opened a criminal investigation into the deal on the grounds of negligence.

Briefing - Asia Energy
Thu, 15 Oct 1998 03:56 EST

JAPAN'S TEC GAINS DESULFURIZATION TECHNOLOGY FROM EBARA

TOKYO - Toyo Engineering Corp. (TSE:6330) has obtained a 10-year
non-exclusive license to use electronic beam-based desulfurization and denitration technology from Ebara Corp. (TSE:6361), with the aim of marketing gas-emission disposal equipment primarily in China, company officials said Wednesday.

The new technology employs electronic beams to eliminate harmful
substances from gas emissions at power stations and industrial plants, with ammonium sulfate and ammonium nitrate recovered as by-products that can be used as fertilizer.

INDONESIA STATE GAS COMPANY TO BUILD FIVE NEW PIPELINES

JAKARTA - State-run gas company, PT Perusahaan Gas Negara (PGN) plans
to build five new gas pipelines worth US$936 million until 2002, and in 2003 the company could fulfil the target to produce around 1.4 billion metric standard cubic feet per day (mmscfd), officials said.

The five pipelines were the first stage towards creating an integrated gas transmission system in Indonesia, PGN Managing Director Abdul Qoyum told a hearing with Commission V at the House of Representatives here Tuesday.

PHILIPPINE CITY MAY SET UP GREEN CHARCOAL PLANT

DUMAGUETE CITY - Plans are now being eyed for the establishment of a
plant to produce the environment-friendly charcoal-based fuel known as Green Charcoal.

Gonzalo D. Catan, a Dumaguete-born scientist and technical director of the National Committee on Urban Pest Control, met with the city's
Environment and Natural Resources Council Tuesday to discuss the zero-waste management program.

INDIA SET TO DRAW UP COMPREHENSIVE ENERGY POLICY

NEW DELHI - The Indian government would soon announce a comprehensive
energy policy to stimulate private and foreign investments in the power sector to mitigate shortages, the country's power secretary said today.

A comprehensive energy policy was on the anvil and all the states would have regulatory commissions in another two years, he told a seminar.

PETRONAS, AGL SIGN DEAL FOR AUSTRALIA/PNG GAS PROJECT

MELBOURNE, Australia - Malaysia's national oil corporation Petronas and the Australian Gas Light Company (AGL) (ASX:AGL) Wednesday signed a natural gas pipeline development agreement with the Papua-New Guinea Gas Supply Consortium, headed by Chevron Services Australia.

The agreement finalises all the relevant commercial terms associated
with the development of the A$3.5 billion Gladstoe pipeline and sets
out the roles and obligations of the parties up to financial close
which is planned for next June.

IOC PLANS SEPARATE JOINT VENTURE MARKETING COMPANY

NEW DELHI - Indian Oil Corporation Ltd (IOC), country's state-owned oil major, is considering a proposal to set up a separate marketing company to sell products of private refiners like Reliance and Essar, IOC chairman M A Pathan has said.

"The proposal is under our serious consideration and the finer details of such a venture are being worked out," he told newsmen on Tuesday.