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Local firms hired as China bids for Qld gas reserves

Corrs and Freehills are being called upon as legal advisers as China steps up its bid for Australia's gas reserves.

user iconThe New Lawyer 13 December 2010 Big Law
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CORRS Chambers Westgarth and Freehills are being called upon as legal advisers as China steps up its bid for Australia’s gas reserves. 

The two firms have scored positions on the $78 million investment by one of China’s three energy behemoths, China National Offshore Oil Corporation, into Queensland exploration minnow Exoma. 

Corrs has advised Exoma Energy and Freehills has advised China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) in the deal. 

CNOOC is making a $50 million strategic investment in Exoma’s Queensland coal seam gas and shale gas projects. Under the terms of a Farmin Agreement signed in Beijing, CNOOC will acquire a 50 per cent interest in Exoma’s 26,840 km square of acreage located in the central Queensland Galilee Basin. 

The $50 million contribution will go towards exploration and appraisal expenditure during the Farmin Period, expiring in 2013. Exoma has also granted CNOOC an option to acquire 86.6 million shares of the company at 31.5 cents a share. 

CNOOC’s investment in the projects will allow Exoma to accelerate its exploration program for its Galilee Basin permits which are believed to host very large coal seam gas and shale gas resources. 

Exoma’s chairman, Brian Barker, said the gas resources “will underpin one or more large downstream gas development projects serving both export and domestic gas markets for many years”. 

The Corrs team was led by partners John Kelly and Jeremy Horwood and special counsel Paul Careless.The assets, in Central Queensland's Galilee basin, are believed to hold the largest untapped coal seam gas and shale deposit in Australia. The Australian newspaper reports that other companies, including AGL, Blue Energy and ConocoPhillips, are also exploring in the region.  

The Freehills team was led by partner Stuart Barrymore with partners Simon Reed and Nick Heggart, along with special counsel, Jau-Shi Liew, and solicitors James Sippe and Jane Ballard.  

“Itis a significant transaction for CNOOC representing the first exploratory higher risk investment in Australia in on-shore unconventional gas, with rights to assume operatorship and the potential acquisition of equity in Exoma," Barrymore said.   

“It represents another signal of CNOOC’s commitment to participate in the development of Australia’s hydrocarbon resources.

“The importance of this is evident from the Australian ambassador’s participation in the signing ceremony, and highlights the significant bilateral linkages between the two countries."   

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