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ENERGY TECH
Sinopec buys $1bn US shale stake from Chesapeake
by Staff Writers
New York (AFP) Feb 25, 2013


China raises fuel prices for first time this year
Shanghai (AFP) Feb 25, 2013 - China raised government-set fuel prices on Monday for the first time this year to reflect changes in global crude prices, the top economic planning body said.

The benchmark price for petrol will rise 3.5 percent to 8,830 yuan ($1,416) per tonne while diesel will increase 3.8 percent to 8,010 yuan per tonne, the National Development and Reform Commission said in a statement late Sunday.

Pump prices for petrol and diesel will rise by 0.22 yuan per litre and 0.25 yuan per litre respectively.

The commission said global crude prices had risen since November due to political turmoil in the Middle East and expectations of improving outlooks in the US and European economies.

The body can adjust fuel prices when international oil prices move by more than four percent over a 22-working day period.

Its last move was a fuel price cut in November to ease inflationary pressure.

Inflation slowed to 2.0 percent in January, official data showed earlier this month, easing from a seven-month peak of 2.5 percent in December.

Refinery shares rose in afternoon trading in Shanghai on Monday as the increase is expected to help them offset rising costs.

Sinopec gained 2.29 percent to 7.14 yuan while PetroChina climbed 0.45 percent to 9.02 yuan.

They were mixed in Hong Kong, where both companies are also listed, with Sinopec up 0.23 percent to HK$8.78 ($1.13) while PetroChina was down 0.37 percent to HK$10.66.

Chinese oil giant Sinopec is investing $1.02 billion in a US shale field as it teams up with Chesapeake Energy Corp. in a 50-50 joint venture, the companies said Monday.

China Petroleum & Chemical Corp. (Sinopec) will buy a 50 percent interest in Chesapeake's 850,000 acres in Mississippi Lime shale in northern Oklahoma, they said in a joint statement.

The two companies will share the costs of all future exploration and development, while Chesapeake will be in charge of leasing, drilling and operations and marketing activities.

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma-based Chesapeake, the second-largest producer of natural gas in the United States, has been shedding assets to pare down massive debt.

The Mississippi Lime joint venture with Sinopec "moves us further along in achieving our asset sales goals and secures an excellent partner to share the capital costs required to actively develop this very large, liquids-rich resource play," said Steven Dixon, Chesapeake's chief operating officer.

Chesapeake produced on average 34,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day from the Mississippi Lime assets in the 2012 fourth quarter, and at the end of last year proven reserves were estimated at 140 million barrels of oil equivalent.

The transaction was expected to be completed in the 2013 second quarter.

Analyst Paul Ausick of 24/7WallStreet.com noted that Chesapeake already had sold more than $3 billion in assets to China's energy giant CNOOC.

"The interesting thing that could develop from this is a sale of a US producer -- not necessarily Chesapeake, of course -- as a result of the recently approved $15 billion acquisition of Nexen Inc. by CNOOC," he said.

"The US approved the sale of the Canadian-based firm and may have opened the door for more aggressive bidding by China's big state-backed oil firms."

The United States approved the takeover in early December, its green light needed because of Nexen's oil assets in the Gulf of Mexico.

Chesapeake shares tumbled 4.5 percent to $19.58 and Sinopec's US-traded shares were up 0.4 percent at $113.16 in morning New York trade.

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