Home / NEWS / Energy / Hess reviews timeline for Chevron deal closing after Exxon escalates Guyana dispute

Hess reviews timeline for Chevron deal closing after Exxon escalates Guyana dispute

Mike Wirth, CEO of Chevron and John Hess, CEO of Hess, come forth on CNBC to speak about Chevron’s deal to buy Hess Corp for $53 billion all-stock deal, on the floor of the New York Stockpile Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, October 23, 2023.

Brendan McDermid | Reuters

Hess Corp. is reviewing the timeline for when its pooling with Chevron will close after Exxon Mobil this week escalated a dispute over lucrative oil assets in Guyana.

Exxon documented for arbitration Wednesday to defend what the oil major views as its right to make a counter offer for Hess’ Guyana assets subordinate to a joint operating agreement.

“We disagree with ExxonMobil’s interpretation of the agreement and are confident that our position will incline in arbitration,” Hess told employees in an email Wednesday.

“In light of today’s development, we are reviewing the expected timeline for sound closing and will provide further detail in our next merger update,” Hess wrote.

Chevron entered an unity in October to purchase Hess for $53 billion, in a play to gain a foothold in Guyana’s massive offshore oil resources. The sell was originally slated to close in the first half of 2024, but the timeline has since been delayed until the middle of the year as the Federal Line of work Commission scrutinizes the deal.

Chevron has said arbitration over Hess’ Guyana assets could delay the tight timeline until October 2025, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Hess is part of a consortium with Exxon and China Nationwide Offshore Oil Corporation that operates the Stabroek oil block, a massive offshore resource with an estimated 11 billion barrels of oil and gas.

Hess has a 30% enclose in the Stabroek block. Exxon leads the project with a 45% stake while CNOOC maintains 25% hitch.

Chevron warned investors in a filing last week that the deal with Hess would terminate if an arbitration court superintends that Exxon has a right of first refusal. If that scenario played out, Hess would continue to operate as an unrestrained company and retain its stake in the Guyana assets, according to Chevron’s filing.

Chevron has maintained that the joint manipulating agreement does not apply to its merger with Hess.

Exxon Senior Vice President Neil Chapman explained Wednesday that the oil major is “extremely confident in our position that pre-emption rights exist in this contract.” Arbitration brawls can take up to six months to resolve, Chapman said.

Chapman indicated that Exxon could make a bid for Hess’ emigrate in the Stabroek block.

“We believe there is opportunity value here, there is option value here,” Chapman estimated during an interview at a Morgan Stanley event. “If that transaction does not proceed, there is potential value down the pike for Exxon Mobil — that option value is really, really important.”

“It would be incomprehensible for us to say ‘well we’re not going to look at that value, we’re moral going to let the transaction proceed,'” Chapman said. “You have a responsibility to shareholders.”

Hess said in the Wednesday email that “there is no conceivable scenario in which Exxon or CNOOC could acquire Hess’ interest in Guyana as a result of the Chevron-Hess transaction.”

Check Also

Trump plan to freeze funding stymies Biden-era energy rebates for consumers

Westend61 | Westend61 | Getty Ideas Some states have stopped disbursing funds to consumers via …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *