Posts Tagged ‘Atlas’

Reliance, Atlas to buy Marcellus acreage

April 28th, 2010 - by admin

Independent oil and gas company Atlas Energy Inc said it would buy 42,344 acres in the gas-rich Marcellus shale along with Indian energy giant Reliance Industries, weeks after the two announced a joint venture.

The companies will buy the acreage in Fayette, Washington, Indiana, Westmoreland, Armstrong and Clarion Counties of Pennsylvania at an average price of $4,532 per acre.

Earlier this month, Reliance said it would pay Atlas $1.7 billion, or $14,000 an acre, to buy a 40 percent stake in Atlas’s operations in the Marcellus shale.

The booming Marcellus shale — a gas project which according to some geologists could hold enough natural gas to satisfy U.S. demand for a decade — has been attracting companies’ attention for the last few years.

Following Wednesday’s deal, the Atlas-Reliance joint venture will control about 343,000 Marcellus Shale acres, of which about 206,000 acres are net to Atlas.

Atlas said it would be able to drill over 450 horizontal wells on the latest acquired acreage, adding that it intends to develop a large percentage of the acreage in the next five years.

Source:http://in.reuters.com/article/businessNews/idINIndia-47890920100422

Indian energy giant Reliance Industries will pay $1.7 billion to form a joint venture at one of the most promising natural gas deposit regions in the U.S. with Atlas Energy, becoming the latest foreign company to invest in shale plays that are expected to be very lucrative.

Reliance, controlled by billionaire Mukesh Ambani, has been working hard to expand its presence outside India, break into new markets and broaden its various businesses including refining, oil and gas exploration and petrochemicals.

India’s largest listed firm will pick up a 40 percent stake in Atlas’s operations in the booming Marcellus Shale — a gas project that spans parts of Pennsylvania, West Virginia and New York in the United States and which, according to some geologists, could hold enough natural gas to satisfy U.S. demand for a decade.
With this move it joins a number of international oil companies including BP Plc, Total, Statoil and Mitsui & Co who have bought into shales, rock formations that could hold vast amounts of natural gas.

While the shale formations have proven to be lucrative, they are also very expensive to develop and environmentally sensitive. The joint ventures have given the independent oil companies who own much of the acreage in these areas access to capital and should allow foreign oil companies to pick up expertise in new drilling techniques developed for the shales.
“This marks Reliance’s foray into a totally new venture altogether. Reliance is going to generate a lot of cash flows going ahead and investments in shale gas could be a good growth opportunity,” said Deepak Pareek, oil and gas analyst with Angel Broking.

Reliance Chairman Ambani, who according to Forbes is the world’s fourth-richest man with a net worth of $29 billion, has made no secret of the firm’s overseas ambitions as the company has raised a war chest of $2 billion by selling stock in recent months.

But Reliance, founded by Ambani’s father Dhirubhai, a school teacher’s son, had not met with much success until now in its foreign takeover attempts.
Bankrupt petrochemicals firm LyondellBasell recently rejected a bid from Reliance that valued the target at about $14.5 billion, and the Indian firm also lost a race for Canadian oil sands firm Value Creation, in which it wanted to take a majority stake for $2 billion.
Shares in Reliance closed up 1.8 percent on Friday, while the Mumbai market rose 1.2 percent.

Atlas Energy shares jumped $6.44, or 20.3 percent, to $38.25 on the Nasdaq on Friday.

Shares of other companies with acreage in the Marcellus Shale, including Exco Resources and Range Resources, were also boosted by the news.
More joint ventures in the region can be expected to follow, bankers said. Exco, in particular, should be closely watched. Chief Executive Doug Miller said in February that the company was in discussions for a potential joint venture with its acreage there.
JOINT VENTURE

Atlas’s core Marcellus position consists of about 300,000 acres, largely in southwestern Pennsylvania, out of which about 120,000 acres will go to Reliance, the companies said.
Upon closing Reliance will pay about $340 million in cash and must also contribute $1.36 billion to the joint venture to develop the shale project, Atlas said in a statement.

Reliance is paying around $14,000 an acre for its share of the Marcellus acreage, which is in line with what Japan’s Mitsui paid for its joint venture with Anadarko Petroleum Corp announced in February [ID:nN16229402]. Still, the price is more expensive than most of the previously announced deals.
The members of Atlas’s management team have a background in finance and are known for their deal making skills, said Marshall Carver, energy analyst at Capital One Southcoast in New Orleans.

Atlas Energy Chairman Edward Cohen is also chairman of Resource America Inc, a publicly traded asset management company, and Chief Operating Officer Richard Weber was head of energy investment banking at KeyBanc Capital Markets from June 1997 to March 2006.
“This deal was certainly done at a good price” for Atlas, Carver said.

Atlas will serve as the development operator for the joint venture, and will retain a 60 percent undivided interest in the acreage.
Reliance will have the option to buy 40 percent in all new acreages, and also has the right to first offer for potential future sales by Atlas of about 280,000 additional Appalachian acres controlled by the U.S. firm.

Debate over drilling in the region has sharpened in recent months. Environmentalists claim the drilling fluids needed to crack the rock and free the gas can contaminate drinking water, an assertion the industry hotly disputes.
Jefferies & Co was the lead financial advisor, while J.P. Morgan Securities was another advisor to Atlas.

Barclays advised Reliance on the deal, which is expected to close by the end of April.

Source:http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2010/04/09/business/business-us-reliance-atlas-marcellus.html?_r=1

Reliance eyes gas venture in US

March 19th, 2010 - by admin

Mukesh Ambani led Reliance Industries Ltd., the owner of the world’s largest fuel-making complex, is in talks with Atlas Energy Inc. to invest in the U.S. natural-gas producer’s shale assets. Reliance is seeking a joint venture with Atlas Energy to develop the U.S. firm’s Marcellus Shale gas operations.

Independent oil and gas company Atlas is looking for a partner for its operations in the booming Marcellus Shale in the eastern United States, which could bring in $1 billion or more for the firm.

Reliance, India’s largest listed firm, is eyeing a deal in trying to gain a foothold outside India, as it attempts to break into new markets and expand its various businesses including refining, oil and gas exploration and petrochemicals.

The Marcellus Shale, which spans parts of Pennsylvania, West Virginia and New York, could hold enough natural gas to satisfy U.S. demand for a decade, according to some geologists. “The sentiment is that the U.S. has a wall of gas that can be drilled at very low prices,” said Brian Lively, vice president of exploration and production research at Tudor Pickering Holt & Co. in Houston.

Atlas’ core Marcellus position consists of 266,000 acres largely in southwestern Pennsylvania. Bidders for the Atlas position should include large international integrated oil and gas companies as well as domestic independent oil and gas companies. Reliance Industries would be joining British, French, Japanese and Canadian rivals in investing in U.S. reserves trapped in rocks that until five years ago were considered too hard to be worth drilling.

Reliance Industries has raised about $2 billion selling shares since September and the funds may be used for capital expenditure, Chief Financial Officer Alok Agarwal said in Jan. Reliance had outstanding debt of 700 billion rupees ($15 billion) in cash and cash equivalent of 159.6 billion rupees as of Dec. 31, Mukesh Ambani, CMD, Reliance Industries said in the AGM in January. At the other end Marcellus Shale, Chief Executive Officer Edward Cohen said on a conference call on Feb. 26, “We’ve made clear that we are very alive and receptive to the joint venture situation. We’re well into the process.”

Source:http://news-views.in/reliance-eyes-stake-in-natural-gas-field-in-us/