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BP rumoured to seek buyers for Chinese petrochemical joint venture for up to $3bn

A successful deal would mark BP’s first significant exit from a business in China

Arno Scuetze,Denny Thomas
Tuesday 09 August 2016 13:15 BST
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BP, led by chief executive Bob Dudley, is taking cash out of businesses where it lacks control
BP, led by chief executive Bob Dudley, is taking cash out of businesses where it lacks control (Reuters)

British oil company BP is seeking buyers for its 50 per cent stake in a Chinese petrochemicals joint venture, its single largest investment in China, in a deal that would fetch $2bn-$3bn, according to Reuters.

BP has hired an investment bank to sell its shareholding in Secco as part of a drive to take cash out of businesses where it lacks control, sources added. A successful deal would mark BP’s first significant exit from a business in China.

Situated in Caojing near Shanghai, Secco is China's largest petrochemicals refinery and was built at a cost of $2.7bn, according to BP's website.

State-owned China Petroleum & Chemical Corp (Sinopec) and one of its units hold the other half of Secco, according to the website.

A London-based BP spokesman declined to comment, and Sinopec did not offer immediate comment.

Secco, a venture formed in 2001, produces ethylene and propylene, which are used to make resins, plastics and synthetic rubbers.

While Sinopec has the right of first refusal on the potential sale, bankers said Chinese state enterprises are unlikely to step in to buy the stake as executives at many of them are distracted by anti-corruption probes.

Sinopec is currently discussing the conditions put forward by BP for the deal, a Sinopec spokesman said on Tuesday.

The spokesman said the company had not made a decision on whether to buy BP's stake.

BP's stake has been marketed to existing refinery operators in China, including companies from Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and Europe, the sources added.

BP, like other global oil and gas companies, has been sharpening its focus on costs and core businesses as it reels from lower oil prices.

It has sold more than $50bn of assets since the deadly 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill to pay for clean-up costs and legal bills.

This year, it plans to offload between $3bn and $5bn of assets, of which $1.9bn has been agreed, it said when releasing second-quarter earnings last month.

© Reuters

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