guardian.co.uk,
Terry Macalister and Uki Goñi in Buenos Aires, Monday 16 April 2012
![]() |
| The Argentinian president, Cristina Kirchner, said YPF had not produced enough oil. Photograph: Pablo Porciuncula/AFP/Getty |
Argentina
sent shock waves through the oil industry by announcing plans to nationalise
local oil assets controlled by a Spanish company, in a controversial move that
threatens to sour the already troubled relationship between the two countries.
The move to
seize 51% of Repsol's YPF business in Argentina sent the company's shares
spinning down 18% on Wall Street and will worry other big foreign investors
such as BP.
Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, Argentina's president, introduced the new measure to
Congress in a bid to recover sovereignty over its national hydrocarbon
resources.
Kirchner
accused Repsol of failing to produce enough oil through YPF to meet Argentina's
energy requirements. Repsol's alleged failure threatened to "practically
turn us into an unviable country," Kirchner said. Economic and political
interest in the country's hydrocarbons has rocketed since the end of last year
when YPF announced it had discovered a shale oil site that could potentially
yield 1bn barrels.
Politicians
have accused Repsol of failing to invest enough in future production at a time
when the high cost of oil is undermining the country's economy.
The
nationalisation comes amid escalating threats against operators drilling for
oil off the disputed Falkland Islands.
Argentina
is expected to expropriate about 24% of YPF from Repsol and another 26% from
Argentina's Peterson Group at a price yet to be determined by the government.
Kirchner
said the price would be set by the national appraisal tribunal and insisted the
business could continue to be managed "professionally". She said
Argentina was one of the few countries that did not control its own oil.
YPF is
Argentina's biggest oil company and was in the hands of the state until the
early 1990s. It was acquired by the Spanish group in 1999 and the boss of
Repsol, Antonio Brufau, has been in Argentina since last week trying to head
off a takeover. He told Mitre, a local radio station: "You've got to talk,
not impose."
Speaking in
Madrid a few hours before the announcement, the Spanish prime minister, Mariano
Rajoy, warned: "Wherever there is a Spanish company, the Spanish
government will be there defending its interests as its own."
Last week,
Spain's foreign minister, José Manuel García-Margallo, threatened to break off
economic and fraternal relations with Argentina if Kirchner moved against YPF.
Independent
petroleum experts were stunned by the development. "They are going to be
closing the country as an investment destination," Anish Kapadia, an
analyst at the London-based energy investment house Tudor Pickering Holt, told
Bloomberg. BP, whose Pan American business in Argentina was a fully-integrated
oil business covering exploration, production and petrol marketing, said it was
unable to talk about what the nationalisation might mean for its business.
"We
have not heard anything from the government. It is business as usual for us. I
do not want to make a comment on someone else's business," said a company
spokesman. BP tried to sell the business in 2010 for $7bn to Bridas
Corporation, a deal which fell apart.
Kirchner's
bill is expected to fly through Congress within the next couple of weeks thanks
to the President's legislative majority.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.