Supermajor Looks To Dump $25 Billion In Oil And Gas Assets

Exxon
has an official target to sell US$15 billion worth of non-strategic assets by
2021. As at the end of Q3 2019, the supermajor had reached nearly one-third of
its US$15-billion asset sale target, chairman and chief executive officer
Darren Woods said in the Q3 results release earlier this month.
Now,
as Exxon is focusing on the Permian, Guyana, Mozambique, and Papua New Guinea,
the oil and gas major is looking to sell more assets and has included assets up
for sale in at least 11 countries worldwide, according to Reuters’
sources.
In
September this year, ExxonMobil signed a deal to sell its non-operated upstream
assets in Norway to Vår Energi AS for US$4.5 billion.
The
supermajor is also said to be looking to sell its assets in the UK, which will
make it the latest U.S. oil company to quit the UK North Sea.
Reuters
estimates show that Exxon is also looking to sell onshore gas assets in
Germany, a stake in an offshore project in Romania, stakes in fields in
Nigeria, the whole stake in a field in Chad, an exit from Equatorial Guinea,
assets in Malaysia, Indonesia, Australia, and Azerbaijan. Exxon is also in
talks to sell stakes in several fields in the Gulf of Mexico.
According
to Rystad Energy’s estimates, Exxon could raise up to US$2 billion from the UK
North Sea, up to US$2 billion from assets in the Gulf of Mexico, up to US$3
billion each from the Gippsland basin in Australia and from an exit from
Malaysia, below US$1 billion from Blue Whale in Vietnam, up to US$3 billion
from assets in Nigeria, and up to US$1.3 billion from Azeri-Chirag-Guneshli in
Azerbaijan.
Earlier
this week, Moody’s changed its outlook on Exxon to ‘negative’ from ‘stable’,
expecting negative free cash flow to continue in 2020 and 2021, even if the
supermajor hits its official US$15-billion asset sale target by 2021.
“The company’s high level of growth capital investments cannot be funded with operating cash flow and asset sales at projected levels given ExxonMobil’s substantial dividend payout, absent meaningfully higher commodity prices and earnings from downstream and chemicals,” Moody’s said.