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by Daniel J. Graeber Washington (UPI) Jun 21, 2018
Royal Dutch Shell said Thursday it made further advancements on its divestment effort by selling off its stake in a natural gas field in Thailand. Shell's natural gas subsidiary said it sold its 22.2 percent stake in the Bongkot field to Thai company PTT Exploration & Production Public Co. Ltd., PTTEP, for $750 million. The Thai company increased its stake to 66.6 percent and became the operator, alongside minority partner Total. "Completion of this deal shows the clear momentum behind Shell's value-driven $30 billion divestment program and is in line with Shell's drive to simplify and refocus its portfolio, reshaping the company into a world class investment," the Dutch supermajor stated. The Thai divestment followed Wednesday's announcement that its subsidiary in Norway sold its entire 44.56 percent interest in the Draugen field and its 12 percent in the Gjøa to Norwegian energy company OKEA, which said it grabbed "high-quality" assets offshore Norway through the acquisition. Shell sold its minority stake in a liquefied natural gas business in Malaysia earlier this week for $750 million. Shell's remaining interests in offshore Norway represent about 14 percent of total production from the country. The sale from the Bongkot field doesn't impact Shell's other business interests in Thailand. Shell's divestment streak is part of its new strategy that was triggered in part by the 2015 mega-merger with British energy company BG Group. Shell's net income was $5.3 billion, up more than 40 percent from the same period last year. Production of 3.8 million barrels of oil equivalent marked a 2 percent increase. The Dutch supermajor's latest earnings report came two days after it sold off its refinery business, including its retail service stations, in Argentina for close to $1 billion in cash.
Moon suggests Russian gas be piped to Koreas, Japan Seoul (AFP) June 20, 2018 New pipelines could be laid to bring Russian gas through North Korea to the South and even on to Japan following the diplomatic thaw with Pyongyang, Seoul's leader suggested Wednesday. President Moon Jae-in was speaking to Russian news media before a three-day visit to Moscow starting Thursday, with the presidential Blue House releasing the transcript. Russia and South Korea agreed in 2008 to lay gas pipelines through the North to bring Russian natural gas to the South. But the project failed to ... read more
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