Financing alternatives in a changing gas landscape
James MacGinley A and Brad Calleja ANational Australia Bank.
The APPEA Journal 54(2) 516-516 https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ13089
Published: 2014
Abstract
In recent years, Australia has gone through an unprecedented expansion in its oil and gas industry. The demand for capital has been enormous and has resulted in some of the largest project debt financings globally. In the coming years, the funding requirement will change dramatically as projects reach completion; become cash-flow positive; and owners changing their funding structure from project finance debt to lower cost, lower covenant corporate debt. The development of a number of Australia’s largest oil and gas projects during the past five years coincided with a tightening of capital from the traditional project finance market. This lead to the emergence of export credit agency financing as an integral component of project development. During the past year, however, re-capitalisation of global banks are now re-entering the Australian market and are driving competition and increasing liquidity. This extended abstract covers a review of the funding approaches taken on major Australian LNG projects, including lessons from the funding of CSG projects that may be relevant to other new development markets such as shale gas. It also draws on historical lessons of funding new technologies and provide insight about funding of the next wave of LNG development: floating LNG. The National Australia Bank is one of the largest resources project finance banks globally and is well positioned to provide APPEA’s delegates with relevant insight about the future of debt funding in the oil and gas industry.
James leads NAB’s Natural Resources business in Queensland. James joined NAB in 2012. Before that James was Head of Business Development at Macarthur Coal, and before that worked for BHP Met Coal in Brisbane, and Macquarie in Sydney and London. James has broad experience in the coal and gas sectors including acquisitions and divestments, project evaluation, Joint Venture negotiation, and infrastructure financing. |
Brad has extensive experience in equity valuation, M&A, structured debt origination, and advisory. He is presently NAB’s Global Head of Resources. He previously lead the banks’ Institutional Banking business in WA and its Natural Resources project finance division. He previously also worked in the bank’s proprietary investments team. He has successfully executed proprietary equity acquisitions, advised key natural resources clients on optimal capital structures, and provided acquisition, corporate, and project finance debt facilities to numerous companies. He has extensive experience funding offshore projects. Before joining the National, Brad worked for US Chartered Accounting firm, Arthur Andersen. Brad is a qualified Chartered Accountant and holds both a Bachelor of Economics and a Master’s Degree in Finance from the University of Melbourne. |