Neymar was
the poster boy for Brazil in the World Cup. He was all over billboards and
adverts during the World Cup. When he got injured, Brazil crumbled. They
conceded a record seven goals. Tullow similarly has been the poster company for
oil discoveries in Uganda. Tullow risked its dollars. The company, in a
statement says they have spent close to US$2.8bn in Uganda in the last 10years.
Over the last one year, we cumulatively could be looking at confirmed unrecoverable
liabilities of US$182m. The ruling by the Tax Appeals Tribunal ideally would place the liabilities of the company at between US$450m and US$500m.
Tullow
abandoned drilling for oil on Lake Albert – the Ngassa discoveries. This area
stretched almost close to the Democratic Republic of Congo on Lake Albert.
Flashback to 2009, Angus McCoss, the Exploration Director at Tullow said Ngassahad the “potential to be the largest in the basin.” He also described it as a “significant oilfield.”
Fast-forward to 2014, in February, Tullow told its investors that they
were abandoning the Ngassa discoveries. Investors were told that “Ngassa has
been written off due to offshore appraisal and development being currently uneconomic.”
Abandoning this discovery area cost Tullow about US$67m. This means that all
the money Tullow spent on appraisal and exploration for these discoveries is a
loss. It is not recoverable if oil production starts.
There was
more to come: More bad news for the Irish company. In the half year operational
update released in early July 2014, Tullow admitted it was forgoing US$115m duefrom CNOOC and Total. In 2012, Tullow sold 66.6% of its assets to the two
companies at US$2.9bn. About US$300m of this was placed in a reserve account
and would be paid to Tullow as soon as it had shown evidence of some promised "deliverables."
Tullow said
this $115m loss was due to delayed project approvals and failure to secure
license extensions. The delayed project approvals could not be revealed, as the
company tows the confidentiality line. From my understanding though, “delayed
project approvals” means the eight production licenses Tullow applied for as
far back as 2012.
Tullow applied for Production Licenses for Mputa, Nzizi, Kigogole,
Nsoga, Ngara, Ngege, Kasamene and Wahrindi. A production license is like owning
land with its title. Before you secure that land title, you cannot construct on
the land or even use it as security for a bank loan. Similarly, a production
license is what companies use to secure financing for eventual commercial
production of oil. There is potential investment of about US$10bn to US$22bn ifproduction licenses are approved. Now, the three companies are equal partners
in the licensed areas. Tullow was given the task to make some key deliverables,
but it hasn’t. It has paid the price.
The final
nail in the coffin or the cherry on the cake, depending on how you view this,
was the ruling by the Tax Appeals Tribunal that Tullow pays US$407m to Uganda Revenue Authority (URA). This is the income tax [Capital Gains Tax] accrued
from the 2012 sale of its assets to Total and CNOOC for US$2.9bn. Tullow
disputes this valuation, noting that it is entitled to an exemption as per the
highly guarded and confidential Production Sharing Agreements (PSAs) signed
with government. Tullow paid US$143m as income tax before it went to the Tax Appeals Tribunal.
It insists this is actual
tax to be incurred. The ruling and order by The Tribunal to pay the remaining
US$264m will not be reflected on their accounts because the company is not
going to pay that money. It will be challenging the ruling in both local and international courts. This could drag on for years.
Tullow with
all these "challenges" though, has made money. Tullow said it has spent
US$2.8bn in Uganda for the last 10years. But the company also sold a stake to
CNOOC and Total at US$2.9bn. This is even before the first drop of oil. However
such developments on delayed projects, tax obligations and write-offs bring
back the same old question, Is Tullow here to stay? The best answer is, “it
will be understandable if they exit.”
Tullow
officials have sent mixed signals on their plans for Uganda. In February, Paul
McDade the Chief Operating Officer Tullow, told the Wall Street Journal that
Kenya was “more supportive” and that first oil was more of “national priority.”
McDade’s comments were scathing. He
further said “Kenya will be easier to develop and the government is very
enthusiastic for us to get underway with that development and get first oil as
soon as possible.”
These statements do contradict what David Onyango, the
deputy spokesperson of Tullow Uganda told the Daily Monitor back in November
2013. He said, “No consideration has been given to any scenario or option other
than a long term partnership with Uganda that delivers shared prosperity and
benefits for the country and the company.”
The Ugandan
government though remains unscathed. They have turned out to be tough
negotiators. At the back of their minds the belief is that with the current oil
finds, Tullow can leave and there will be other companies clamoring to
takeover. They also consider Tullow's mixed signals on an exit is playing politics and trying to pile pressure on government to issue those licences.
Interestingly, after the ruling by The Tribunal on taxation issues, Aiden Heavy the CEO Tullow Oil Plc hints at resolving this dispute by negotiating with government.
"Tullow believes that the TAT has erred in law and Tullow will challenge the EA2 assessment through the Ugandan courts and international arbitration but hopes that further direct negotiation with the Government can resolve this matter."