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Unocal, the 8th largest U.S. oil company, is the subject of bidding from two major international oil companies. The most notable is Chevron, but politically more significant, China’s National Overseas Oil Corporation (CNOOC) trumped Chevron’s $16.6 billion bid for Unocal by $1.9 billion. This created an uproar in the U.S. that claimed a sale of Unocal to China would constitute a threat to national security as well as to American influence in Asia, where Unocal is well represented. While the direct consequences of this bid are exaggerated, it is indicative of the larger Chinese push for energy resources in Asia including Central Asia, which has set it on a collision course with U.S. interests there. |
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BACKGROUND: Chevron is seven times larger than CNOOC, but as CNOOC is a state-owned enterprise, it has the backing of China’s foreign currency reserve, dwarfing Chevron’s economic turnover and for that matter the economic value of all US oil companies together. It has been noted in the U.S. Congress that China could buy all the American oil companies with its foreign currency reserves, if allowed. It should also be noted that Royal Dutch/Shell owns a substantial part of CNOOC, which it acquired in 2002 when CNOOC conducted a public stock opening. However, fierce reactions from both Democrats and Republicans in the U.S. Congress were raised to refuse the Chinese bid to acquire a “strategically important” actor and a road to dominate Asia’s energy market. In Central Asia and Azerbaijan, it has been argued, this deal should have been especially notable given the oil exploration and pipeline projects that Unocal is engaged in. As a result, the U.S. House of Representatives voted overwhelmingly for a non-binding resolution advising the Bush administration to block CNOOC from merging with Unocal. IMPLICATIONS: The implications of a CNOOC-Unocal merger would be modest in Central Asia, as Unocal accounts only for 0.23 percent of world oil output and 0.3 percent of the U.S. consumption of oil, with reserves of 1.75 billion barrels of which 980 million are in Asia. Relatively small amounts of these reserves are in Central Asia. The deal’s impact would be much higher in Burma, Thailand and Indonesia even if it would not be significant enough to dominate the oil and gas markets in these states. However, the aggressive larger Chinese policy to buy oil and gas assets at almost any cost has targeted Unocal as a primary interest. This is largely due to the fact that Unocal controls some of the most interesting oil and gas fields in China’s immediate surrounding; and controlling energy resources in its immediate proximity is increasingly appearing to be a goal for Beijing, which has effectively targeted oil and gas resources in Central Asia and in particular Kazakhstan. If China would, as it seems, aim for regional influence and control over energy resources, Unocal is a very interesting actor as a step in a larger strategy in spite of its relatively small impact on the world market. China has for some time focused on strengthening its regional position politically as well as economically, and if this can increase its energy sustainability, all the better. CONCLUSIONS: The direct consequences of this single merger appear to be exaggerated by some political forces in the U.S., even if its long-term consequences would undoubtedly be to favor China’s aims at increasing its influence over regional actors and create a direct access to Middle Eastern oil through Central Asia. The Chinese claim that this is simply a business transaction and that there are no political elements tied to this bid is nevertheless equally problematic. Without a doubt, the acquisition of new oil fields are of economic importance, but the overpayment that Beijing is engaged in is not financially sound. Even if these deals are done with a view for the long-term, the payment has to include a political premium – i.e. the hope that they could influence regional actors in the future. However, from a Central Asian perspective, it could be positive if the deal went to Chevron as this would check the increasing Chinese influence in the region, something that strong forces in the regional countries would welcome. AUTHOR’S BIO: Niklas Swanström is Program Director of the Central Asia-Caucasus Institute and Silk Road Studies Program, a Joint Transatlantic Research and Policy Center affiliated with Johns Hopkins University-SAIS and Uppsala University. He is also a visiting professor and Faculty member at Renmin University in Beijing, China. |