BP is said to hire HSBC to sell Vietnam Natural-Gas Field for $1.3 Billion
30/07/2010 09:22 am
News - BP Plc, seeking cash to help pay for the worst U.S. oil spill, is
moving ahead with asset sales by hiring HSBC Holdings Plc to sell its stake in
a natural-gas field in Vietnam valued at about $1.3 billion, according to two
people with knowledge of the matter.
BP will begin the sale process next month and give out information on
the assets, which include the gas field, a pipeline and a power station, to
potential buyers, said the people, who declined to be identified because the
details are private. BP spokesman Toby Odone and HSBC spokesman Brendan
McNamara declined to comment.
BP, Europe’s largest oil producer by volume, last week agreed to sell
oil and gas fields in the
U.S.,
Canada and
Egypt to Houston-based Apache Corp. for $7
billion as part of a plan to sell up to $30 billion of assets to raise cash to
meet the costs of the
Gulf of Mexico oil
spill. Oil & Natural Gas Corp., India’s biggest energy exploration company,
has a 45 percent stake in the venture and may consider bidding with Vietnam Oil
& Gas Group for BP’s stake in the field, ONGC said last week.
The Nam Con Son gas project in
Vietnam is valued at $1.3 billion,
London-based BP said on its website. BP’s assets in
Vietnam
and
Pakistan
may be worth $1.7 billion, ING Wholesale Banking analyst Jason Kenney, said
last week. BP discovered four offshore gas fields south of
Ho Chi Minh City in the early 1990s and the
area started producing gas in 2003.
BP may seek offers for several other holdings, including its 60 percent
stake in
Argentina’s Pan
American Energy LLC,
Argentina’s
second-largest oil producer, and fields in
Venezuela
and
Colombia,
a person familiar with the matter said this month.