Energy giant Ineos has struck a deal to acquire the Forties Pipeline System in the North Sea from BP for US$250m (£199m).
The pipeline transports about 450,000 barrels of oil per day on average - about 40% of UK production.
It is one of the oldest in the sector, having started operating in the Forties field in 1975.
The 235-mile line links 85 North Sea oil and gas fields to the UK mainland, and to the Ineos site in Grangemouth.
Sites
at Aberdeen, the Kinneil terminal and gas processing plant, the Dalmeny
terminal and the Forties Unity Platform will all transfer to Ineos when
the deal is completed.
BP originally operated the Forties oil and gas field, the pipeline and the refinery.
It sold its interests in the oil field to Apache in 2003 and sold the Grangemouth refinery and chemical plants to Ineos in 2005.
Forties Pipeline System employs about 300 staff at Kinneil, Falkirk, Dalmeny, Aberdeen and offshore.
Track record
Ineos chairman and founder Jim Ratcliffe said: "The North Sea continues to present new opportunities for Ineos.
"The
Forties Pipeline System is a UK strategic asset and was originally
designed to work together to feed the Grangemouth refinery and
petrochemical facilities.
"We have a strong track record of
acquiring non-core assets and improving their efficiency and
reliability, securing long-term employment and investment."
Under
the terms of the deal, Ineos will pay BP US$125m (£99.5m) on completion
and an earn-out arrangement over seven years that totals up to a further
US$125m.
BP chief executive Bob Dudley said: "While the Forties
pipeline had great significance in BP's history, our business here is
now centred around our major offshore interests west of Shetland and in
the Central North Sea."
The Forties Pipeline System primarily comprises a 105-mile (169km)
36in pipeline from the unmanned offshore Forties Unity platform to the
onshore terminal at Cruden Bay in Aberdeenshire.
From there, a
36in onshore pipeline transports the oil 130 miles (209km) south to the
Kinneil facilities, adjacent to the Ineos-owned Grangemouth refinery and
chemical plant on the Forth.
This is where it is processed before either being sent for export via the Dalmeny terminal or on to the refinery at Grangemouth.
20% of the oil that passes down the pipeline feeds the Ineos refinery to provide 80% of Scotland's fuel.
The
Unite union, which was involved in two major disputes with Ineos in
2008 and 2013, called for the Scottish and Westminster parliaments to
carry out urgent inquiries into the sale.
Scottish secretary Pat
Rafferty said: "It's not so long ago that both Grangemouth and the
Forties pipeline were owned by all of us, and operated by a nationalised
British Petroleum with a responsibility to look at what was good for
the country as a whole, not just what was good for a small group of
wealthy individuals.
"Both these parts of vital national
infrastructure - which are central to the success of the Scottish and
wider UK economy are now essentially in the hands of one man.
"Unite firmly believes that this sale is bad for Scotland and the UK."
No comments:
Post a Comment