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Oil & Gas Project Finance Training Course

Course Highlights and Agenda

 Topics addressed in depth during the course include:

  • Qualitative and quantitative risk analysis
  • The mechanics of upstream oil and gas financing
  • Understanding the complexities of refinery finance
  • Oil and gas transmission and distribution lending
  • LNG project finance strategies
  • Petchem and gas-to-liquids financing

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Agenda

Industry Overview/Qualitative & Quantitative Risk Analysis:

  • Structure of the international petroleum industry:
    – From upstream to downstream - the hydrocarbon value chain
    – Upstream – exploration, development and production
    – Refining – from raw material to end-product
    – Pipelines – transmission and distribution
    – Liquefied natural gas – a fuel of the future
    – Petchem – beyond the burner-tip
  • Different risk/reward objectives of sponsors and lenders
  • Structural & pricing drivers in oil & gas lending:
    – Country/political risk
    – Sponsors
    – Reservoir/reserves
    – Technology and construction/completion
    – Sales/offtake
    – Operation & maintenance
    – Abandonment/decommissioning
    – Environmental/regulatory
  • Quantitative risk analysis:
    – Key ratios – loan life and project life covers
    – Balancing equity and debt
    – Features and design of oil and gas models
    – Developing an appropriate base case – setting “price decks” and other economic/technical parameters
    – Sensitivity analysis:
           * Choosing/calibrating sensitivities
           * Getting to loan value


Understanding Upstream Oil & Gas Financing:

  • Reservoirs & reserves – a technical grounding:
    – From exploration through appraisal to development and production
    – Nature of hydrocarbon reservoirs
    – Estimating volumes
    – Reserve classification – proven/probable/possible: 1P/2P/3P
    – Reserves for banking purposes
    – Due diligence and consultants’ reports
  • Field development finance in the early days of the north sea
  • Growth of the independent sector
  • Emergence of the borrowing base as the tool of choice
  • European and North American borrowing bases
  • Structural features of the European borrowing base, especially:
    – Balancing development and producing assets
    – Redetermination practices – setting technical and economic parameters
    – Balancing OECD and emerging market assets
    – Adding/removing assets
    – Hedging as revenue protection and debt support
    – Treatment of abandonment/letters of credit for abandonment
    – Payment waterfalls/account structures
    – Typical and variant distribution controls, reps & warranties, undertakings, events of default
  • The “War Stories” in north sea single-field finance – examination of the deals that failed
  • Recent trends in north sea finance:
    – The “New Wave” of independents
    – The move by larger independents to corporate borrowing
    – The new independents’ needs and the banks’ response:
           * Single-field financing returns
           * “Stretched” borrowing bases
           * Subordinated/mezzanine products


Getting to Grips with Refinery Finance:

  • Refinery operations – from topping refineries to complex crackers
  • Greenfield or expansion financing?
  • Cash flow volatility – the key risk for lenders
  • Operational mitigation of volatility risk:
    – “Geographical” margin protection
    – Tolling-based structures
    – Hedging to reduce volatility
  • Debt structuring to mitigate lender risk, including:
    – Debt/equity balancing
    – Repayment profile optimisation
    – Cash sweeps
    – Distribution controls and information/other covenants
  • Refinery market analysis for lenders:
    – Choosing consultants
    – Scope of work for due diligence studies
  • Modelling/sizing debt for refineries
  • “Where has it gone wrong?” – a somewhat chequered history


Oil & Gas Transmission & Distribution Lending:

  • Trunk pipelines and distribution networks – very different animals
  • Oil and gas transmission pipelines – high fixed cost/multi-partner undertakings:
    – Key risk factors – especially upstream supply issues, construction contracts and sale/offtake contracts
    – Balancing the interests of private and public sector players
    – Environmental/social issues – a “make-or-break” factor
    – Analysis of recent oil/gas pipeline financings
  • Gas storage & distribution finance:
    – Liberalised/regulated gas distribution has increased financing needs
    – Gas storage in depleted fields and salt caverns - developing tailored financing packages
    – Funding the acquisition and build-out of gas distribution networks
    – Financing gas metering
    – The role of regulation and its impact on financing
  • 

Liquefied Natural Gas Finance:

  • The growth of the LNG debt market
  • LNG liquefaction finance:
    – Risk profile of liquefaction projects, especially:
           * Sponsor/equity issues
           * Construction contracts – structure and risk allocation
           * LNG sale contracts
    – Arabian Gulf LNG projects – a detailed comparison:
           * Typical debt structures
           * Development of structures over time
  • LNG regas finance:
    – Structural drivers – especially supply, market, regulatory and regulatory issues
    – Features of recent regas financings in:
           * UK & Europe
           * USA
           * India
  • LNG ship finance:
    – The LNG shipping industry
    – Corporate vs. project debt
    – Structural drivers in project-based LNG vessel financing
    – Comparison of project debt structures
  • Recent trends:
    – Financing of integrated LNG chains
    – Changing downstream markets and trading patterns
    – Increasing flexibility in LNG sales and financing contracts


Other Downstream Finance – Petchem and Gas-to-Liquids:

  • The Petchem “flowchart” – from gas/naphtha-based feedstocks to end-products
  • The Middle-Eastern petrochemical wave – adding value to domestic gas resources: 
    – Risk profile of petrochemical projects – especially:
           * Construction – issues and contractual structures
           * Technology – bankability and licensing
           * Feedstocks – volume, price and quality factors
           * Sales/Offtake – agency/licensing issues
    – Financing gas separation & treatment plants – the first step
    – Polyolefin projects – financing crackers and PE/PP plants
    – Increasing sophistication – aromatics and beyond
  • Gas-to-Liquids – financing clean diesel projects


Case Study:
Two major case studies will be used – one in the upstream sector and one in the downstream – to reinforce the principles taught on the course and to allow projects to be examined with greater granularity.

What You Will Learn

The training commences with an industry overview and teaching/group work on qualitative and quantitative risk analysis. This is designed to ensure that all participants have a good working understanding of the:

  • Basic structure of the international petroleum industry
  • Qualitative risk “template” applied by lenders – what risks are “bankable”
  • Different risk/reward objectives of sponsors and lenders
  • Ratios and other tools used to determine loan values and balance equity and debt

You will then progress to a study of the project financing challenges in the separate branches of the industry, in particular:

  • Upstream field development
  • Refineries
  • Oil and gas transportation pipelines and gas gathering systems
  • LNG, liquefaction and regasification
  • Petrochemical plants
  • Gas-to-liquids
  • Gas storage

In each sub-sector analysed, particular emphasis is given to:

  • Understanding the particular financing challenges of that industry branch
  • Using the risk template and economic modelling to address those challenges and structuring facilities accordingly
  • Developing a feel for what is and is not achievable from a financing perspective - and why
  • Recognising how structures have changed over time
  • Studying where and why structures have not worked

Reviews

"What I liked most about the course was the excellent course leader"
Simone Thrun
Assistant Vice PresidentKfW IPEX-Bank GmbH
"Very good course…very appropriate considering the varied background of audience.Teacher was excellent…best teacher I've seen in a long time."
Oliver Nielsen
EconomistEnerginet
"The trainer was really communicative & enthusiastic; I enjoyed the course very much because of him. The course was very well structured and presented, which gave me a deep understanding of Oil & Gas businesses and a good insight of different types of oil & gas projects."
Katerina Metallinau
Senior AssociateBlack Sea Trade
"I found the case studies material very useful…The level of expertise of the trainer made it one of the best courses I have attended. All the sessions were good & have added to my skills."
Ute Wisniewski
Oil & Gas PFUniCredit Group

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(updated 23 May 2013)