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Platts Top 250 Global Energy
Company Rankings™ reviewed
2010 was a year of recovery, but for
some more than others. Oil may have
bounced back, but the energy complex
as a whole was marked by distinct
disparities between commodities and
regions. But if there is one consistent
factor, it is that Asia steals the show.
Whether coal, gas, oil or electricity, recession
or boom, Asia-Pacific’s rate of
consumption growth outstrips all other
regions by a substantial margin.
At the heart of this is one of the
world’s largest mass migrations in history,
from countryside to city. Even if
China’s population growth may have
slowed, it expects to add 16 million
urban dwellers a year out to 2020, creating
huge new demand for energy.
Urbanization across non-OECD Asia-
Pacific is one of the key driving forces
behind the region’s rapid growth in energy
consumption, so it is no surprise
that in the Platts 250 Asian companies
are once again to the fore.
However, companies’ ability to benefit
from Asia’s growth depends on
location, activity type and market.
While crude, coal and to some extent
LNG benefit from international pricing -
and thus from Asian growth — gas
and power markets are more regionally
based. Higher feedstock prices make
profits for some, but represent costs
to others. In Asia too, the impact of
growth in energy demand is differentiated.
Oil refiners and power producers
often find themselves caught between
the rock of international feedstock prices
and the hard place of regulated domestic
markets.
Recovery and Decline
World oil demand in 2010 grew by
3.1% on year to 87.382 million barrels
a day, surpassing its former peak
in 2007 and more than reversing the
previous two years of contraction.
Rising
demand was accompanied by rising
prices: Platts’ physical crude benchmark
Dated Brent averaged $79.50/barrel in
2010, its second-highest annual average
ever and a big step up from the $61.67/b
average seen in 2009. Asia saw the fastest
on-year growth in demand, at 5.3%,
as opposed to Europe’s anemic 0.1%.
World gas consumption jumped by
7.4% on year in 2010 to 3,169 billion
cubic meters, also reversing the contraction
of 2009 and reaching a new
peak. Although demand rose in all regions,
the pricing picture amply demonstrated
the benefits to consumers of
gas-to-gas competition, and by contrast
the benefits of its absence to producers.
It also illustrated the almost complete
disconnection of the US gas market
from trade in LNG and thus the severing
of international gas price transmission
mechanisms.
In the US, gas prices at Henry Hub averaged
$4.09/MMBtu over 2009, rising to
only $4.4/MMBtu in 2010 as supply from
shale plays kept overall gas supply well
above demand. This has caused a shift
in drillers’ attention from shale gas itself
to liquids production. By contrast, gas
prices at the UK National Balancing Point
jumped from an average of $4.775/MMBtu
in 2009 to $6.575/MMBtu in 2010.
But the runaway gas markets were,
first, spot LNG prices in the Asia-Pacific
market, which increased 46.2% on
year from an average of $5.28/MMBtu
in 2009 to $7.72/MMBtu in 2010, and
second, long-term oil-linked gas contracts.
Although these rose less than
spot prices, they achieved the highest
absolute val
, averaging, in Europe,
$9.0058/MMBtu in 2010, up from
$7.4038/MMBtu in 2009.
World coal consumption jumped
7.6% on year to 3,555.8 million tons of
oil equivalent (mtoe) in 2010, driven
by Asian demand. While this is also an
all-time global high, the regional variation
is stark. Coal consumption in Europe
is in long-term decline.
Although
consumption rose by 4.4% in 2010, and
steam coal prices delivered to Northwest
Europe jumped 39.6%, coal use remains
well below pre-financial crisis levels.
A similar trend is emerging in newly
gas-rich North America. US steam coal
prices on NYMEX averaged $61.60/
short ton over 2010, up 26.3% from
2009. But again, while North American coal use rose 5.3% over 2009, it remained
9.5% below 2007 levels.
In Asia, the story is very different.
Consumption rose by 9.1% on year to
2,384.7 mtoe, reaching its highest-ever
level. Average Chinese steam coal prices
at Qinhuangdao leapt 31.6% in 2010 to
$115.42/metric ton.
Top Ten
The entry of German multi-utility
E.ON AG to the top ten in 2009—
the only non-Integrated Oil and Gas
(IOG) company to do so in the last
five years—proved fleeting. The oil and
gas giants reasserted their dominance
of the top ten rankings, taking all ten
spots despite a stricken BP dropping far
from sight. On the back of higher oil
prices, the top ten companies brought
in a combined $178.874 billion in profits,
a 20.4% increase from 2009, but
still down from the bumper year of
2008, when profits hit an all-time high
of $214.042 billion.
US giant Exxon Mobil Corp retained
the top spot in 2010, while Chevron
Corp moved up from ninth in 2009
to second place as it boosted its return
on invested capital (ROIC) to
16% from 10.2% in the previous year.
Gazprom OAO, PetroChina Co Ltd,
Total SA and the China Petroleum &
Chemical Corp took third, fourth,
fifth and eighth places, respectively,
while Royal Dutch Shell climbed from
tenth to sixth.
Three re-entrants to the top ten in
2010 included ConocoPhillips—now
the subject of an innovative demerger
into upstream and downstream businesses—
which moved up from 24th
place to seventh. Meanwhile Russia’s
OJSC Rosneft Oil Company and Lukoil
Oil Company rose from 14th and 11th
places, respectively to take the ninth
and tenth spots.
E.ON dropped back to 13th from
sixth, and Brazil’s Petrobras-Petroleo
Brasilier fell from fourth in 2009 to
12th in 2010. But the biggest omission
from the top ten was UK major BP.
Ranked second in 2009, BP dropped to
118th on account of the cost of the Macondo
oil spill in the US Gulf of Mexico.
Although in dollar terms its asset
base expanded, as did its revenues, BP’s
profits were wiped out. The company
posted a loss for 2010 of $3.719 billion.
Here Come the Russians
Although the year-to-year changes
in the top ten companies can be small,
the big trends can be seen from longerterm
comparisons. In 2006, the top ten
consisted of five west European integrated
oil and gas companies, three US
majors, PetroChina and Petrobras. In
2010, there were still three US majors
but now two Chinese and three Russian
companies, with only two European
companies remaining.
But among the top 20, there were
still eight European companies, including three utilities, just one less than in
2006. US representation dropped from
six to three, while Russia had four companies
in the top 20 compared with
three in 2006. China is represented by
three companies compared with only
two five years earlier.
The entry of Russian companies into
the ranks of the world’s top energy enterprises
is a striking feature of the 2010
list, and features not only oil and gas,
but also electricity industry companies
as a result of privatization in the
sector. Of the top ten fastest-growing
companies, three are Russian: RusHydro
JSC, Bashneft OJSC and Moscow
United Electric Grid OJSC, with RusHydro
recording a giant three-year CGR of
106.1%. There are now 15 Russian companies
in the top 250, compared with
11 in 2009 and nine in 2006.
Mighty Gazprom’s position remains
pre-eminent in natural gas, based on its
huge production volumes and monopoly
grip on Russia’s gas pipelines and
exports. However, it may one day have
a challenger in the form of private gas
company Novatek OAO, which is operator
of the planned Yamal LNG project.
Novatek has moved up from 126th
position in 2009 to 104th in 2010. Profits
rose from $854 million to $1,358
million with an impressive ROIC of
19% in 2010—the twelfth-highest
ROIC out of the entire top 250. It is
also the 34th fastest-growing company
based on its three-year CGR. Including
AK Transneft OAO, the country’s
oil pipeline monopoly, Russia now has
eight companies primarily focused on
oil in the top 250 as well as two gas and
five power sector companies.
Returns and Growth
The ROIC rankings are revealing. The
oil majors and big European utilities
may dominate in terms of asset base,
revenues and profits, but when it comes
to return on invested capital only
one OECD-based company makes the
frame—the US E&P company Cimarex
Energy Co, which is a new entrant to the list with an overall ranking of 170.
Instead, this is where Latin America
really makes its mark. Top of the board
is Colombia’s rejuvenated Ecopetrol SA
with a staggering ROIC of 98%. Argentina’s
YPF SA is third with an ROIC of
28%, while Brazil’s Eletropaulo-Metropolitana
Eletricidade de Sao Paulo SA is
seventh ranked with an ROIC of 22%.
Russian and Chinese companies are
also well represented, while Kazakhstan’s
oil and gas company KazMunaigas
Exploration and Production JSC
takes the tenth spot with an ROIC of
19%. Coal India Ltd, newly listed in
2010, is second with an ROIC of 31%.
Distinct trends also emerge from the
top 50 fastest growing companies, the
leader of which is Essar Energy plc. Although
Essar Energy is incorporated in
the UK, the credit for its three-year CGR
of 199.5% has to go to India, as this is
an Indian-owned and led company.
Out of the top 50 fastest growers, 40 are
from outside the OECD compared with
36 in 2009. And while the oil industry
is out in front in terms of absolute size,
when it comes to growth it is Electric
Utilities, Independent Power Producers
and Coal & Consumable Fuels companies
that dominate the top 50 list of
fastest growers.
That said, oil companies still make
up six of the top ten spots. Perhaps surprisingly,
three of these are oil and gas
refining and marketing companies—all
non-OECD and all export-orientated.
They are India’s Essar Energy, Saudi
Arabia’s Rabigh Refining & Petrochemical
Co and Thailand’s PTT Aromatics &
Refining Plc. A fourth—El Paso Pipeline
Partners LP—is from the oil and gas
storage and transportation segment.
There are three such companies among
the top 50 fastest-growing companies,
as well as four refining and marketing
businesses, compared with five E&P
and three IOG companies.
The E&P companies lead the IOGs.
The E&P companies posting the fastest
growth are Cairn India Ltd, with a
three-year CGR of 116.5%, followed by
Russia’s Bashneft (57.9%) and then Texan
company Southwestern Energy Co.
(27.7%). Close on their heels are China’s
CNOOC Ltd (26.2%) and Russian gas
player Novatek (23.6%). By contrast, the
fastest-growing IOG is Canada’s Suncor
Energy Inc, with a three-year CGR
of 27.5%. The only other two IOGs to
make it into the top 50 fastest-growing
companies are Colombia’s Ecopetrol
(23.4%) and PetroChina (20.6%).
C&CF
Chinese companies increasingly dominate
the coal and consumable fuels
category, reflecting a number of factors.
First, China has the largest and most
rapidly-expanding coal industry in the
world. Second, the industry is undergoing
a state-led process of consolidation
that is pushing smaller operations into
major conglomerations. And third, as
the country’s coal imports continue
to increase, Chinese companies are
looking to expand beyond their own
borders for supplies. While there were
three Chinese companies in the C&CF
top ten in 2009, there are now five, the
two new entrants being Shanxi Lu’an
two new entrants being Shanxi Lu’an
Environmental Energy Development
Co Ltd. and Shanxi Xishan Coal and
Electricity Power Co Ltd.
Another new entrant is Coal India,
which in 2010 undertook a massive
initial public offering which was
more than 15 times oversubscribed.
As India’s primary coal producer in
the world’s third largest coal market,
this puts the company second behind
only China Shenhua Energy Co Ltd. It
also puts it 51st in the overall rankings.
In addition, Thailand’s Banpu Pcl has emerged in the C&CF group at number
six, reflecting the company’s expansion
into China, Laos and Indonesia.
The emergence of these companies has
pushed Indonesia’s Adaro Energy Tbk
and Bumi Resources Tbk Pt out of the
top 10 C&CF companies, while the US’s
Patriot Coal Corp has also dropped out
to be replaced by Consol Energy Inc.
In terms of growth, there are eight
C&CF companies in the top 50 fastest
growing list. They are all Asian; five from
China, two from Indonesia and Thailand’s
Banpu. Adaro Energy and Bumi
Resources may have dropped out of the
top ten C&CF companies, but they can
still claim to be amongst the fastestgrowing
energy companies in the world.
Utilities
The Electric Utilities category remains
dominated by the European giants. Of
the top ten, eight are European and
two American. While there have been
slight changes in relative positions, the
group remains largely as in 2009. However,
two companies have disappeared
from the top ten—France’s EDF and US
company NextEra Energy Inc—with
the latter performing well but just being
edged out into 11th place. Replacing
them are Germany’s EnBW Energie
Baden-Württemberg AG and the US’s
Southern Co.
Nuclear giant EDF has dropped from
22nd in the overall Platts’ rankings in
2009 to 64th in 2010, the third year in
a row it has slipped. While still ranking
top in terms of assets, the decline in
the company’s financial performance
reflects €2.9 billion ($3.9 billion) in
non-recurring risks and impairments
in 2010, owing to deterioration in international
power and gas market conditions.
Most of the impairments relate to
the US and Italian markets, but EDF is
also struggling with cost and construction
overruns with its new model nuclear
reactor at Flamanville in France.
In the IPP sector, the results are much
more internationally diversified. India’s
NTPC Ltd has moved to the top of the
leader board, while the US’s Constellation
Energy Group Inc has dropped
from first in 2009 to disappear from
the list altogether, following a net income
loss of $931.8 million in 2010.
The company is likely to re-emerge in
2011, but in a new guise, if a proposed
merger with Exelon is completed.
There are now four Chinese companies
in the IPP top ten compared with
two in 2009. This group shows the largest
change in composition with the new
entrants including China Yangtze Power
Co. Ltd in third, Datang International
Power Generation Co. Ltd in eighth
and Enel Green Power SpA in tenth
place. In addition to Constellation Energy,
the UK’s International Power Plc
has dropped out of the top ten.
The picture is different when it comes
to growth rather than absolute size. If
western Europe dominates the top
rankings for EUs, Russia has the fastest
growth in the form of RusHydro
JSC, Moscow United Electric Power
Grid, Mosenergo Ao and the Federal
Grid Company of Unified Energy System
JSC. India’s Reliance Infrastructure
Ltd and Power Grid Corp of India are
also amongst the fastest growing EUs.
There are no US companies in the fastest-
growing top ten, but Europe continues
to provide opportunities. The UK’s
Scottish and Southern Energy plc and
Spain’s Iberdrola SA and Endesa SA are
present, while South Africa’s Eskom
completes the leader board.
There are seven IPPs in the fastestgrowing
top 50 companies, with six
coming from China. The non-Chinesecompany is Spain’s Iberdrola Renovables
SA with a three-year CGR of 33.0%. A
notable absence from the growth list
are Chilean IPPs, with companies such
as AES Gener SA and Colbun SA, which
were represented in 2009, failing to
maintain their places in 2010.
Asian Leaders
The number of Asian companies in
the top 250 continues to rise, reaching
70 in 2010, up from 67 in 2009 and 56
in 2006. In addition, despite having
more companies represented, the average
ranking of Asian companies has also
improved from 135.2 in 2006 to 134.9 in
2009 and 131.3 in 2010 (a lower number
denotes a higher ranking). Asian companies
are not just increasing in number,
but are increasing their rankings relative
to their international peers.
Within Asia, the average ranking of
Japanese companies overall has improved
from 145.9 to 132.1. This partly
reflects the Japan Petroleum Exploration
company dropping out of the top
250, but the improvement is notable
given the sharp fall in the ranking of
the Tokyo Electric Power Co (Tepco)
which was ranked 54th in 2009, but
131st in 2010.
This is the result of the financial impact
of the Fukushima nuclear disaster
in March 2011 and Japanese reporting
of financial data based on fiscal years
running from April-March. Tepco recorded
a loss of $14,881 billion in fiscal
2010. Other Japanese companies
dropping down the rankings include
Tohoku Electric Power Co, which fell
from 119th to 156th and Chugoku
Electric Power Co, which dropped from
134th to 178th.
By contrast, Japan’s oil and gas companies
performed well. JX Holdings was
the shining star, rising from 129th in
2009 to 18th in 2010. Idemitsu Kosan
Co Ltd increased its ranking from 144th
to 70th. Tokyo Gas Company Ltd upped
its place in the list from 108th to 74th.
For China, most change was seen
within the power sector. The number of
Chinese companies in the top 250 was
the same in 2010 as in 2009, but the
Shenzhen Energy Group, Huadian Power
Intl Corp and Shenergy Co. Ltd were
displaced by Shanxi Lu’an Environmental
Energy Development Co., Shanxi
Xishan Coal and Electricity Power Co.
and China Longyuan Power Group. In
the oil sector, PetroChina moved up
from seventh in the rankings to fourth,
and CNOOC from 29th to 15th. The
biggest mover, however, was China
Yangtze Power Co., which jumped from
163rd in 2009 to 112th in 2010.
By contrast, India saw three new companies
join the top 250 list—the newlylisted
Coal India, oil and gas producer
Cairn India Ltd and the IPP company
NHPC Ltd. As in Japan, the oil sector
also gave India its strongest movers.
The Indian Oil Corp Ltd jumped from
78th in 2009 to 42nd in 2010, while the Hindustan Petroleum Corp Ltd rose
from 174th to 142nd.
The improvement in oil companies
vis-à-vis EUs and IPPs largely reflects the
difference between being on the cost or
profit side of rising feedstock prices. But
in terms of revenue growth, Asia comes
out on top. Taking all Asian companies
in the top 250 into account, revenues
jumped 32.1% from 2009 to 2010. This
compares with an increase of 21.4% in
South America, 19% in EMEA and just
10.7% in North America.
However, the picture for company
profits was rather different. These rose
by 9.1% in EMEA and by 15.5% in Asia-
Pacific. By contrast, they jumped 32.6%
in South America and a huge 56.6% in
North America. Asia-Pacific’s relatively
poor performance reflects write-downs
amongst Japanese electric utilities and
regulated prices in key domestic markets
such as China and India. By contrast,
the 2010 figures for North America are
flattered by hefty write-downs in 2009
by companies such as Chesapeake, Devon
Energy and Talisman, all of which
bounced back to profitability in 2010.