Daily Newsletter

05 December 2023

Daily Newsletter

05 December 2023

Petrofac considers sale of non-core assets 

The transaction is expected to improve the balance sheet of the company, which is facing reduced cash flow.

Shivam Mishra December 05 2023

Petrofac has announced that its board is weighing options for the business, including the sale of non-core assets.

The company, which provides services to the oil and gas industry, said the review forms part of efforts to bolster its balance sheet, secure bank guarantees and enhance short-term liquidity.

London-listed Petrofac has also warned that it will not be able to meet the cash flow forecast it had previously given for the whole year.

The oilfield services provider attributed the delay in payments for the contracts awarded in 2023 for the reduced cash flow.

In a statement, Petrofac said: “Management has been making progress in organic actions to unwind working capital, collect receipts on ongoing and new contracts and to unlock long-outstanding commercial settlements.”

The management is also weighing its option of selling non-core assets and is actively negotiating with investors to acquire a non-controlling stake in other parts of its portfolio.

These transactions are expected to improve the balance sheet of the company, which is exploring possible new financing solutions for all its capital classes.

Petrofac group chief executive Tareq Kawash said: “Petrofac’s underlying business is robust with material growth in our backlog from approximately $5.5bn in new awards in new and traditional energy this year.

“This demonstrates our competitive strength and long-term potential. To deliver on this, we are working hard to address short-term liquidity challenges and strengthen the financial position of the group.”

Petrofac noted that it has kept its liquidity over its financial covenant, which states that at the end of each month, the group's liquidity (excluding funds retained in joint operations) must surpass $75m (£59.42m).

In October this year, ADNOC Gas awarded a $615m (Dh2.3bn) contract to Petrofac for engineering, procurement and construction work on the Habshan carbon capture, utilisation and storage project.

ESG 2.0 will be less forgiving of poor ESG performers

While ESG 1.0 was driven by voluntary corporate action, ESG 2.0 is being driven by a new wave of government policies. A host of new environmental laws are in the pipeline, relating to mandatory reporting, carbon pricing, and carbon import tariffs, as well as more state support and investment in clean energy technologies. Companies unprepared for ESG 2.0 face higher costs and lost sales.

Ammonia and Methanol in Energy Transition

Ammonia and methanol are key industrial chemicals with strong demand in the agriculture, manufacturing, and construction sectors. The demand for these chemicals is expected to rise in the coming years due to their potential applications in energy transition. Low-carbon ammonia is garnering the most attention from oil and gas industry players with nearly 300 plants in development globally.

Newsletters by sectors

close

Sign up to the newsletter: In Brief

Your corporate email address *
First name *
Last name *
Company name *
Job title *
Visit our Privacy Policy for more information about our services, how we may use, process and share your personal data, including information of your rights in respect of your personal data and how you can unsubscribe from future marketing communications. Our services are intended for corporate subscribers and you warrant that the email address submitted is your corporate email address.

Thank you for subscribing

View all newsletters from across the GlobalData Media network.

close