Title: Minerals and Energy
1Minerals and Energy Portfolio Committee Mpumelel
o Tshume MD / CEO
2The Petroleum Oil and Gas Corporation of South
Africa (Pty) Ltd
3Delivery
- Inform the Portfolio Committee on PetroSAs
- Vision and strategic objectives
- Business and challenges
- Performance
- Budget 2003/2004
4Structure of presentation
- Section 1 Vision and overview of current
business - Section 2 Strategic objectives
- Section 3 Business performance 2002/2003
- Section 4 Budget 2003/2004
- Section 5 Corporate Governance
- Section 6 Challenges and conclusion
-
5Vision and Overview of current business Section 1
6Vision
- To be a leading African energy company, competing
globally in an environmentally reponsible manner,
to the benefit of stakeholders.
7Overview
- Merger of Soekor, Mossgas and certain activities
of SFF - Business strategy informed by
- Energy White Paper (1998)
- Business Plan and Corporate Governance review
report sanctioned by Cabinet in May 2001 - Wholly state-owned
- Separate legal entity under Companies Act
- Mandated to manage all commercial assets of state
in the petroleum industry
8Overview(continued)
- Managed on sound commercial business principles
- Forecasted turnover for 2002/2003 financial year
- R5.6 billion. - Forecasted profit after tax and before dividends
for 2002/2003 financial year - R1.6 billion. - Sound balance sheet to raise financing for major
capital projects - Book value of assets at end March 2003 - R12.2
billion - Employs approximately 1 200 people
9Overview(continued)
- Supply approximately 7 of total South African
refined product - Mossel bay GTL plant - Oil production from Southern Cape offshore
approximately 15 000 barrels per day - Chemical exports - R600 million per annum
- Worlds largest commercial natural gas to
transportation fuels plant - Sasol licence agreement limitations
- Participation in international upstream petroleum
ventures
10FA Platform
- 100 km south of Mossel Bay
- 220 m high
- 105 m water depth
- 9 direct wells, 3 satellite wells
- 7 wells by remote control through EM buoy
11Strategic Objectives Section 2
12 Corporate Strategic Thrust Exploration and
Production Division
- Exploring, developing and producing gas reserves
on a commercial basis to supplement feedstock to
Manufacturing refinery - Intensify investment in the upstream sector of
value chain by focusing on Africa - Optimising production and current operations to
generate cash flow for current and future
developments -
-
13 Corporate Strategic Thrust
Manufacturing Division
- Optimising production and current operations to
generate cash flow for current and future
developments - Evaluating alternative sources of feedstock to
Manufacturing refinery - Reduce Manufacturing cost base over next 18
months to achieve a R720 million saving per year -
-
14 Corporate Strategic Thrust
Trading, Supply and Logistics
- Expanding product range into higher-value
chemicals and new environmentally compliant fuels
- Develop and grow international sales by growing
market share in existing customer base and
extending sales regions already served - Optimisation of logistics in consideration of
broad strategy to supply 30 of fuel products to
BEE companies - Product trading and hedging to penetrate markets
for oil offtakes as well as to minimise exposure -
-
15 Corporate Strategic Thrust Corporate
Planning and New Ventures
- Extending position in value chain to wholesale
and retail marketing - Commercialise and exploit gas to liquids (GTL)
know-how -
- Develop Pipeline infrastructure along West Coast
- Investigate national refinery capacity expansion
- Enter LNG, Methanol, down stream petrochemicals
businesses via partnerships and synergistic
acquisitions
16 Corporate Strategic Thrust Support
Functions
- Ensure access to world-class support services,
systems and practices in pursuit of operational
excellence - Ensure functional systems support empowerment of
teams and individuals - Implement competency development programs to
retain, develop and attract human capital -
-
17Corporate Strategic Thrust Transformation
- Black Economic Empowerment
- Achieve Employment Equity in line with Policy 60
40 - Develop
- Skills and Capacity in line with commercial focus
- Corporate Social Investment Strategy and Funding
Plan - Policy, targets and procedures to promote
affirmable procurement - Facilitate the development of suppliers
- Promote Equity participation by black owned
companies in our businesses - Achieve a commercially orientated culture change
18Business Performance 2002/2003 Section 3
19Summary of salient points
20Business Performance 20002/2003
- Implementation of merger completed
- Entered into three upstream participation
agreements in Gabon, Algeria and Nigeria - Oil production better than expected from Oribi
and Oryx oil fields (Oribi produced 25 million
barrels vs expected 11 billion barrels Oryx
produced 9 million barrels vs expected 4.5
million barrels) - GTL manufacturing plant achieve 1 million hours
without disabling injuries - Good progress in securing gas feedstock for GTL
manufacturing plant - Ibhubesi gas fields
- Block 9 gas fields
- Kudu gas fields
21Business Performance 20002/2003(continued)
- Entered into numerous Memorandums of Co-Operation
and Memorandums of Understanding with NOCs,
IOC,s and Governments - Refocused marketing efforts for petrochemical
products internationally reaped significant
monetary benefits - Commissioning of LAD/LAK 1 project, increase
petrochemicals production by 70 000 tons per
year. Gross revenue added of 30 million per
year. -
22Business Performance 2002/2003(continued)
- Initiate social development programs in Mossel
Bay and Limpopo Province - Implement progressive HR policies and set R115
million aside for training and skills development
over next three years - Significant progress to achieving representative
demographic profile - Contract of R750 million for procurement of
condensate awarded to BEE company - Financial performance from Finance outstanding.
23Business Performance 2002/2003(continued) Staff
by Race
24Business Performance 2002/2003(continued) Top
Management
25Business Performance 2002/2003 (continued)Staff
by race, gender and designated groups
26Business Performance 2002/2003 (continued)BEE
discretionary expenditure
R100 Million Target (16 of Opex) for 2002-2003
27BEE- Current and future initiatives
- Projected BEE Procurement expenditure for
2003-2004 is R200m (Estimated 30) - 25 of all staff will be female
- 1 of all staff will be disabled individuals
- 60 of staff will be from the designated group
and 40 non-designated by 2004 (By level and
division) - R6m will be spent on supplier development
programme - Establishing a forum to discuss opportunities
between black business, established suppliers and
PetroSA
28BEE- Current and future initiatives (continued)
- R50m will be spent on CSI-targetting education,
poverty alleviation, community development and
enterprise development, including the
registration of PetroSA Trust - 9 interest in Sable Oil field to be sold to HDSA
groupings by mid year 2003 - PetroSA is funding the Vukani initiative to train
450 women intrepeneurs from 9 provinces, and 30
Process Controllers - Partnerships being established with SABS and
CHIETA and other state owned organisations to
promote enterprise development
29BEE- Current and future initiatives (continued)
Women And Disabled Groups
- PetroSA is introducing new BEE reporting
parameters effective April 2003 - Black women owned enterprises,
- Black disabled owned enterprises,
- Black empowered enterprises,
- Black enterprise 50,1 with preference for 100
black owned enterprises - To date PetroSA has spent R12m on six Black women
owned enterprises, - Zero expenditure on Disabled owned enterprises.
30Budget 2003/2004 Section 4
31Summary 2003/4 Budget
- Employment equity
6040 - Gender equity
25 - Black economic empowerment (R mil) 200
- Sales growth
11 - Productivity improvement 13
- Return on shareholders funds 13
- Net profit before tax(R mil)
878 - Net profit after tax (R mil)
878
32Income statement
33Salient ratios of financial plan
34Investments required in the future ( 2003/4)
- R millions
- Manufacturing
367 - E P
1 383 - Other
13 -
- Gross total Capex
1 762
35Corporate Governance Section 5
36Corporate Governance
- Compliance a high priority
- Compliance required to following main acts /
regulations - Public Finance Management Act
- Treasury regulations
- South Aftican Reserve Bank regulations
- Close working relationship with regulatury bodies
essential to ensure quick decision making and
approval process - Opportunity to add 3.3 million barrels of oil to
reserve base lost
37Challenges and Conclusion Section 6
38Challenges
- Expand business along the industry value chain,
with retail as main priority - Secure long term gas feedstock for GTL
manufacturing plant - Progress GTL commercialisation projects to ensure
commisioning of first full scale plant not later
than 2009 - Commissioning of SABLE oil field in 2nd quarter
of 2003. Will add 12 million barrels to oil
reserves. Expected capital cost of 86 million - Successful shutdown during 2nd quarter of
2003.Expected cost of R171 million, margin impact
of R220 million
39Challenges (continued)
- Migration to unleaded fuels
- Create a culture and value system aligned to our
commercial objectives - Skills enhancement to create required capacity
- Consolidation of business architecture- systems
and policies - Achievement of transformation objectives,
especially BEE - Corporate Governance compliance
- Meaningful contribution to NEPAD objectives
40Conclusion
- The business strategy of PetroSA is based on
achieving and contributing to following
shareholder objectives - Achieve a competitive commercially viable company
on a sustained basis - Active along the full value chain of the
petroleum, oil, gas and petrochemical sectors - Achieve transformation on a continuous basis,
with focus on BEE delivery - Up skill of staff and industry capacity building
-
-
41