Green Dragon Gas:
Transcription
Green Dragon Gas:
JRS CORPORATE Leading the Chinese green VOLUMEFIVEISSUETHREE September 2009 WWW. CORP-INTL .COM ca C n o no rp Pl w or e at m ase be or v r e isi e e I in t a N fo ww d rm w in TL at .e io m its Ma n ag on .c en g ou orp ti az r in r F -i RE ntl ety e E .co e- m on m fo ag r lin e CORPORATE INTL Green Dragon Gas: energy revolution Green Energy Green Dragon Gas: China’s green energy leader The recent joint venture between US integrated energy company ConocoPhillips and Chinese vertically integrated gas business Green Dragon Gas is the culmination of more than10 years of work to bring sustainable flows of natural gas to the Chinese market in line with the Chinese Government’s clean energy objectives and needs. “Greka China secured the first of its six Production Sharing Contracts (PSCs) with the Chinese Government in 1998 and signed four more in 2003. It then acquired one more through the acquisition of Pacific Asia China Energy (PACE) in July 2008. Green Dragon Gas is an AIM listed Chinese coal bed methane (CBM) business that is aiming to become the largest vertically integrated supplier in China, providing compressed natural gas (CNG) to wholesalers, power companies and CNG retail stations. Importantly, unlike natural gas, CBM is priced at market prices in China, reflecting Chinese policy on developing this green energy resource. Green Dragon Gas is the parent company of Greka China, which is exclusively focused on the gas industry in China. Greka’s business plan is to generate its CBM supply from six production sharing contracts located in Shanxi, Jiangxi, Anhui and Guizhou province covering acreage holdings of a total of 7,566 sq km. Greka China secured the first of its six Production Sharing Contracts (PSCs) with the Chinese Government in 1998 and signed four more in 2003. It then acquired one more through the acquisition of Pacific Asia China Energy (PACE) in July 2008. This array of PSCs has given the company drilling rights across six CBM blocks and access to gross gas-in-place (GIP) of 25.5 trillion cubic feet (TCF). A series of acquisitions since the company listed on AIM in August 2006 have provided tangible accretive value for shareholders and given Green Dragon Gas control of additional upstream assets in addition to midstream, downstream assets and technologies that add dramatically to the upstream resource. Accretive acquisition trail In November 2006 Green Dragon Gas acquired a 49% stake in Kesi Hengrun (Beijing) Technology Co Ltd, which gave it a 29% stake in Beijing Huayou, a downstream gas distributor in southeastern Beijing serving almost 20,000 households and some large industrial customers. In June 2008 the company acquired Giant Power International, providing two strategically located gas distribution centers off the West-East CNPC pipeline in Henan and Anhui province. Perhaps the most significant acquisition to date is that of PACE in July 2008, which gave the company a sixth CBM block and a 50% joint venture 10 Corporate INTL September 2009 with Mitchell Drilling and access to its revolutionary Dymaxion surface-to-inseam horizontal drilling technology. Stephen Hill, Vice President of Corporate Communications at Green Dragon Gas, is upbeat about the progress of Green Dragon Gas and says every acquisition made by the company has been very shareholder accretive. He said: “The last three years, prior to the most recently announced ConocoPhillips Joint Venture, there have seen a series of acquisitions both on the technology side of our business with the aim of controlling costs of production as well as acquisitions aimed at securing strategic customers. The technology we have acquired ranges from seven Schramm drilling rigs, in house drilling teams, to the joint venture with Mitchell Drilling of Australia. The other acquisitions are based on getting customers, whether that’s the Beijing pipeline (Beijing Huayou) or mother stations off the west east pipeline where we take gas and sell that to a myriad of customers.” He added: “That’s the backdrop of the last three years and it has allowed us to fold in the ConocoPhillips Joint Venture on the upstream end of the business, such that we have our costs under control on the one end and our customers and pricing on the other.” The most recent independent resource report from Netherland Sewell & Associates shows that the proven and probable (2P) reserves of Green Dragon Gas amount to 258 billion cubic feet (BCF) with present value of future net revenues (PV10) amounting to $US1.1 billion. The proven, probable and possible (3P) reserves are estimated at 2,161 BCF, net to Green Dragon Gas, with a PV10 value of $US7.2 billion. These figures make very positive reading when set against the current market capitalization of Green Dragon Gas at $US716 million. Mr Hill says that the 3P PV10 figures have increased significantly on previous reports largely because of the successful drilling results and technology application enhancements provided by the acquisitions. He said: “We had a very large bump on our upstream resource from the 2007 yearend Netherland Sewell report, which came out at $US5.5 billion, to the 2008 yearend saying $US7.2 billion, based on the future revenue from gas net to Green Dragon Gas. That valuation bump largely came from our advanced horizontal drilling technology application versus the traditional vertical drilled wells, which added more than $1billion from an acquisition (PACE) that cost us less than $US37 million.” He added: “Once the stock market appreciates the value of the acquisitions we have made and understands the value of the ConocoPhillips JV to the overall business it would be reasonable to expect a significant re rat- ing of the Company.What we have been doing is building a business around the resource. We are already in commercial production of gas in one of our blocks with an additional five large projects to come on stream in the years to come. This is a very good strategy and I do believe that the market is not fully aware of the value of the purchases that we have made, both in terms of cost savings and revenue collection.” An historic joint venture The joint venture with ConocoPhillips was announced following seven months of due diligence by the major energy company, which is also one the world’s largest CBM producers. Acknowledging Greka’s operating expertise, ConocoPhillips accepted Greka as the operator of the project. Additionally, ConocoPhillips will pump an initial irredeemable $50 million into the project (in two stages) before getting any access to revenues. Following this ConocoPhillips then has an option to pay a further $120 million towards a joint venture giving it access to 50% of the revenues from three of the six CBM blocks being drilled by Green Dragon Gas. Mr Hill says this makes a big statement about the confidence ConocoPhillips has in Green Dragon Gas and its potential scale of the revenue streams as a super major energy company must have scale of operations for it to participate. He said: “As a big international ConocoPhillips has been in China for more than 20 years and this is their first onshore business venture. That is a very big statement from them. The first part of the deal ($50 million cash injection) is 100% carry to Green Dragon Gas, there is no share holder dilution, debt or lien on the company with no recourse or, to put it simply, an option price to pay for a participation.” He added: “The general perception from investors is that this is a 50/50 joint venture where ConocoPhillips spends US$170 million on three PSCs. That is the perception, but not the reality. The reality is that we get additionally that US$170 million back in cash flows to Green Dragon Gas before ConocoPhillips receives a penny.” Mr Hill says that ConocoPhillips expects the project with Green Dragon Gas to be a multi TCF (trillion cubic feet) joint venture net to them. He said: “It’s a big commitment for them and a vast deal for us. If you compare the multi TCF statement to our reserve reports, it becomes clear that they see a significant upside that hasn’t yet been talked about in our current reserve reports from Netherland Sewell. Our current 3P reserves are currently estimated at 2.2 TCF. At the moment (after paying $170 million) they would enjoy revenues from 50% of that 2.2 TCF only after the cost recovery to us. That’s not a multi-TCF figure net to them, so they must be looking at a much bigger story than the current reserve reports show. That’s a big underline for Green Dragon Gas shareholders.” The horizontal drilling technology from Mitchell Drilling is another big factor in the joint venture with ConocoPhillips and has been a catalyst in increasing PV10 figures for several Australian gas companies. The technology was partly responsible for boosting 3P PV10 numbers for numerous Australian Energy Companies prior to the arrival of the majors in Australia on their recent spate of acquisitions there. The focus was 3P valuations and that was the eventual prices paid averaging US$21 per BOE compared to Green Dragons current value at US1.98 per BOE. The joint venture also gives ConocoPhillips an option to buy into the mid and downstream businesses of Green Dragon Gas, including its CNG distribution September 2009 Corporate INTL 11 Green Energy “Green Dragon Gas has made a commitment to moving to the main board of the Hong Kong Stock Exchange by the second quarter of next year, but that may change depending on ongoing discussions with shareholders and brokers.” stations and the gas distributor Beijing Huayou. Mr Hill said: “They have a right to talk to us about our mid and downstream businesses though the price of any desired participation is yet to be discussed. They have Australian gas coming on stream in 2014 a lot of which is bound for China. This gives Green Dragon Gas shareholders a big option on what could happen in the future.” Prospects for natural gas in China The future for Green Dragon Gas looks bright as the Chinese Government continues to support the increased use of natural gas in the economy. A study by the China United Coalbed Methane Co (CUCBM) has predicted that annual gas demand is expected to reach 210-250 billion cubic metres (BCM) by 2020, versus production of 76 BCM in 2008. Natural gas currently comprises 22% of the world’s energy consumption, but only 3% of China’s, and it wants to increase that figure to 5.3% by 2010, amounting to natural gas consumption of 20 BCM. Coal bed methane (CBM) production is set to increase to 10 BCM by 2010, from a figure of 1.3BCM in 2006. Figures from Westhall Research show that CBM production could rise as high as 78 BCM or 49% of domestic gas production by 2020. Mr Hill says that Green Dragon’s vertically integrated structure is ideally suited to deliver on the expanding demand for natural gas and is putting in place the infrastructure to sell directly into downstream markets. He said: “The original PSCs were given to five companies at a time when China needed foreign money and expertise. The conditions in China today are very different to that period, and that’s a unique plus for Green Dragon Gas. China has designated CBM as one of their key policies for clean energy, and there are huge incentives for the company involved, whether they are tax or capex related. In Beijing many of the buses run on compressed natural gas (CNG), in Zhengzhou 70% of all buses and 60% of all taxis run on CNG. There are also incentives for vehicles to be converted to CNG. It is 40% cheaper with 90% less in emissions to run a car on CNG vs petrol or diesel in China. dditionally Chinese power companies are being given incentives for CBM power plants, the first CBM driven power plant was given Government approval recently.” Green Dragon Gas is actively developing its 12 Corporate INTL September 2009 customer chain and has two part-owned CNG distribution stations in Wuhu and Zhengzhou connected to the West-East pipeline and capable of supplying downstream markets. Its investment in Beijing Huayou has given the company access to households and businesses in the Beijing Development Area, with key customers including Mercedes Benz, plus a gas fired power plant and a water heating company. Green Dragon Gas also owns four CNG stations with approved licences in Henan province. The future for Green Dragon Gas Green Dragon Gas is working towards further organic growth, sustained well drilling and the delivery of more gas to the Chinese market. Despite a focus on organic growth, the company will still consider acquisitions that can demonstrate shareholder accretion within its strategic inner China niche. Mr Hill said: “We will definitely focus on drilling wells, but I don’t think people should just assume it’s 100% about drilling wells, if we see something that makes sense we won’t steer away from an acquisition opportunity as we have demonstrated over the last three years. We are always on the look out for things that add value to Green Dragon Gas – it’s a very good playing field that we sit on in China.” Green Dragon Gas has made a commitment to moving to the main board of the Hong Kong Stock Exchange by the second quarter of next year, but that may change depending on ongoing discussions with shareholders and brokers. Mr Hill said: “We have been listed now on AIM for three years and we have recently been thinking about moving to the main board in London. That continues as a possible avenue that we believe we qualify for.” He added: “AIM has been good for the company, I can testify to the fact that in Asia the majority of people didn’t understand CBM three years ago, but in London there was a much wider and experienced client base. Today we are the largest Chinese company on AIM and, although we have an 18% free float, investors buy the stock and sit on it due to the obvious value, limiting the trading daily trading volume in the stock – that’s something that we need to address. The majority of our shareholders are very large institutions that we have placed stock with around the time of our acquisitions, but they are putting those shares away, rather than trading them.”