French energy giant Total has entered a “strategic partnership” with Russia’s Novatek, paying US$4 billion for a 12 percent stake in the gas firm, the company said on Wednesday.
The stake is to rise to 19.4 percent in three years, it said in a statement, adding that Total would be represented on Novatek’s board of directors.
The accord, reached during a visit to Moscow by Total chief Christophe de Margerie, also gives Total a 20 percent share of the Yamal liquefied natural gas (LNG) project in the Arctic, Total said.
Total will acquire the 12 percent stake in Novatek, Russia’s largest independent gas producer, from its “two main shareholders based on stock market quotations,” the statement said.
The transaction is expected to be completed by next month, it added.
“Through this acquisition, the group will have access to an equity production of 120,000 boe [barrels of oil equivalent] per day and to proven and probable reserves of about 1 billion boe,” it said.
The Yamal project will develop the South Tambey condensate and gas field to allow production of more than 15 million tonnes of LNG per year, the statement said.
The Yamal Peninsula, a vast stretch above the Arctic Circle, is considered one of the planet’s richest sources of hydrocarbons.
Russia wants to make Yamal one of its main production centers for LNG and its development is a key project of the state-owned giant Gazprom.
Total and Novatek have been jointly developing the peninsula’s Termokarstovoye field since 2009.
Napoleon Osorio is proud of being the first taxi driver to have accepted payment in bitcoin in the first country in the world to make the cryptocurrency legal tender: El Salvador. He credits Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele’s decision to bank on bitcoin three years ago with changing his life. “Before I was unemployed... And now I have my own business,” said the 39-year-old businessman, who uses an app to charge for rides in bitcoin and now runs his own car rental company. Three years ago the leader of the Central American nation took a huge gamble when he put bitcoin
TECH RACE: The Chinese firm showed off its new Mate XT hours after the latest iPhone launch, but its price tag and limited supply could be drawbacks China’s Huawei Technologies Co (華為) yesterday unveiled the world’s first tri-foldable phone, as it seeks to expand its lead in the world’s biggest smartphone market and steal the spotlight from Apple Inc hours after it debuted a new iPhone. The Chinese tech giant showed off its new Mate XT, which users can fold three ways like an accordion screen door, during a launch ceremony in Shenzhen. The Mate XT comes in red and black and has a 10.2-inch display screen. At 3.6mm thick, it is the world’s slimmest foldable smartphone, Huawei said. The company’s Web site showed that it has garnered more than
Vanguard International Semiconductor Corp (世界先進) and Episil Technologies Inc (漢磊) yesterday announced plans to jointly build an 8-inch fab to produce silicon carbide (SiC) chips through an equity acquisition deal. SiC chips offer higher efficiency and lower energy loss than pure silicon chips, and they are able to operate at higher temperatures. They have become crucial to the development of electric vehicles, artificial intelligence data centers, green energy storage and industrial devices. Vanguard, a contract chipmaker focused on making power management chips and driver ICs for displays, is to acquire a 13 percent stake in Episil for NT$2.48 billion (US$77.1 million).
CROSS-STRAIT TENSIONS: The US company could switch orders from TSMC to alternative suppliers, but that would lower chip quality, CEO Jensen Huang said Nvidia Corp CEO Jensen Huang (黃仁勳), whose products have become the hottest commodity in the technology world, on Wednesday said that the scramble for a limited amount of supply has frustrated some customers and raised tensions. “The demand on it is so great, and everyone wants to be first and everyone wants to be most,” he told the audience at a Goldman Sachs Group Inc technology conference in San Francisco. “We probably have more emotional customers today. Deservedly so. It’s tense. We’re trying to do the best we can.” Huang’s company is experiencing strong demand for its latest generation of chips, called