Analysis: Future choices for BP Amoco chems
26 February 1999 21:36 [Source: ICIS news]
LONDON (CNI)--While BP Amoco Chemicals has confirmed where it
will be headquartered and also its plan
for 3000 job cuts, the portfolio of
projects that will characterise the merged giant has yet to be
determined. As chief executive Bryan Sanderson told CNI,
it will not be a matter of weaving together the chemicals
strategies of BP and Amoco, but whatever way the plan is made it
will have to be done fast - a statement on the whole group's
strategic review is expected about July, he said.
Given BP and Amoco's speed at pulling off the merger, which was
only announced last August although the serious talks began late
May, it is reasonable to understand that everything is not up in
the air. But the expectation that BP Amoco will have a strong focus
on the potential of its merged chemicals activities comes for
another reason: Sanderson said that a few years before BP and Amoco
considered wedding at group level, he and his Amoco counterparts
looked at the potential of some kind of pairing and realised the
divisions would dovetail quite well. That divisional exploration
did not lead to marriage but it is clear that the chemicals suitors
are not strangers.
Being somewhat knowledgable of each others strengths and
weaknesses, the BP and Amoco teams have not held back on all
projects nearing decision time that could benefit the merged
operation. On Thursday BP Amoco Chemicals gave the go-ahead to the 450 000 tonne/year Prairie
Rose alpha olefins plant in Canada that had been in the Amoco
pipeline. Recently, BP Amoco and Sterling it announced plans to
invest $10m (Euro8.8m) in a 25% expansion
of the latter's world-scale acetic acid plant at Texas City,
Texas. The work, which is to be complete by March, is effectively
debottlenecking, said Sanderson.
As well as acetic acid, the future market position in aromatic
acid is also on corporate minds. Mark Noetzel, vice president for
feedstocks, said BP Amoco wants to "underpin growth" in
terephthalic acid (PTA) and isophthalic acid (PIA) by integrating
its feedstock positions in paraxylene (PX) and metaxylene (MX),
respectively. Key aspects of that strategy build on Amoco's
pre-merger "pairing" of its expanded PIA
plant at Joliet, Illinois with its new MX plant in Taxas City,
Texas, both of which went onstream in December. Amoco also had
strategic moves underway to improve its PTA economics at its 850 00
tonne/year plant at Geel, Belgium, which consumed 550 000
tonne/year of PX, all of which is being bought at present. In 2000,
BP Amoco is to have a 420 000 tonne/year PX plant onstream at Geel,
which Amoco approved in 1997 and should cut costs for the merged
enterprise.
Noetzel said "we will continue to invest in those areas to
support downstream products".
However, despite the steady progress of construction work at
Geel, BP Amoco has also inherited some dramatic repair work at the
complex. Last August, barely three months after it came onstream,
Amoco Chemical Belgium's 500 000 tonne/year No 3 PTA plant was put
out of action by advanced corrosion in a stainless steel pipe,
which has called for extensive replacement of pipework. The plant
should be back in action in the second quarter of this year.
BP Amoco's interest in northern Europe is also reflected in its
plan to stop buying vinyl acetate monomer (VAM) from Italy's
EniChem plant at Porto Marghera and start producing its own VAM at a new 250 000 tonne/year plant at Hull,
England. The new plant will also replace the group's own VAM
production at Baglan Bay, Wales - a complex that the sword of
Damocles hangs over and threatens the future of the styrene unit,
although the group has confirmed it will keep its "quite economic"
isopropynol unit.
In the UK, BP Amoco is consolidating its assets. The VAM
investment is part of a bigger package that involves construction
of an ethylene pipeline that links Hull into another line running
between the chemicals nodes of Teesside and Grangemouth, Scotland.
A key feature of that enlarged network is the Wilton, Teesside
cracker that BP and its majority owner have been wrangling over for
ages. Sanderson confirmed that BP Amoco is looking for a "package"
that ups its current 20% equity stake to about 50% and makes it the
operator. Despite the ongoing restructuring in both corporate
camps, disagreement on price has continued to be the main stumbling
block, he indicated. If the cracker was strategically important
before to BP, it is even more so to the merged enterprise, the
chemicals team said.
While its relationship with ICI on the cracker may be whittled
down to a price issue, according to Sanderson, other strategic
pairings have possibly tougher aspects to grasp, such as BP's
polypropylene (PP) venture with Elf - Appryl. The venture is
currently investing in new kit in Grangemouth and has options at Lavera, France but the future
of the proven team is "a real issue", said Sanderson. He added: "I
don’t think either of us want to get out," as he says both
parties have strategic interests in PP.
Choices further away, though, are more limited. In China, BP
Amoco is resigned to a delay of a couple of years or so to its Jinshan project with Shanghai
Petrochemical, and its interest in being a partner in a proposed
cracker in Indonesia is also on the backburner because of the
region's economic troubles.
However, another country that has been on the backburner for
years is sparking renewed interest - Iran. Even though BP Amoco, as
Sanderson says, may not do anything in the country without the
green light from the US - except to continue to service its
historical polyethylene licences - the merged operation, and other
Western companies, is in talks with Iran's
National Petrochemical Co of possible projects. Elsewhere, in
the Middle East the group also has interests, such as Oman where
feasibility studies have been underway for possible investments.
However, like many other parts of the puzzle, their fate remains to
be determined by the chemicals teams' portfolio review t a time
when capital expenditure is expected to be down this year by more
than 12% to $1.4bn.
BP Amoco may have "a bigger chemistry set to play with" but it
must do so judiciously in the face of struggling markets. The
chemicals industry is not quite at bottom of the cycle but is near
it, said Sanderson. "It's very difficult indeed when starting a new
company," he said, but adds that the "high tech parts of our
business do deliver in difficult times". However, while the markets
may be tough, he notes that BP Amoco's inherited tax position is
favourable due to the UK, and its debt/debt plus equity ratio is
about 23%, which is below the 30% that he said would be
"comfortable".
While proceeding with a sound financial footing in the face of
tough markets (Q4 '98 profits fell 65% to $125m) to review its
future strategy and tactics, Sanderson's team already knows the key
performance indicators they must meet in the coming years. While
his immediate ambition is for a 7% return on average capital
employed (ROACE), after tax, in the longer term the business if to
deliver an average of 15% across the cycle, he said. As cycles drop
off, he is aiming for the business to be fit enough to achieve at
least 10% ROACE after tax at the bottom of the swing.
To help meet those numbers, the new group should be in a
stronger position to grab opportunities as they come along, said
Sanderson. "The 'old' BP was 'underweight' sometimes to be able to
take advantage of opportunities as they came along," he said, and
believes that would also have been the case for Amoco in comparison
to the muscle backing the combined operation. "Now the new company
should be able to take advantage of first class opportunities."
But the powerful new enterprise will not be able to sprint off
unhindered from the starting blocks. While it is not bounded on any
acquisition plans, BP Amoco is limited in the scale of any
divestments it might consider by the US Securities Exchange
Commission (SEC), the stock exchange regulator. The whole group is
limited to divestment cap of about $1bn (Euro886m) in 1999, the
first year of a two-year restriction. In an era of low oil prices,
the chemicals division - should it seek to - would be competing
against the group's upstream players for priority.
However, there is a twist; it seems that any divestment plans
the original companies may have had on the cards might be the
camels that sneak through the SEC needle. Given that the BP Amoco
Chemicals strategy is not meant to be a simple weaving of the
original companies plans, just how this possibility fits into
strategic review now underway is yet another problem for the
chemicals managers to grapple.
ICIS Copyright © Reed Business Information 2009
Author: Patrick Reynolds+44 208 652 3214
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