TotalEnergies has agreed to sell its 36.36pc minority stake in South Africa's 108,500 b/d Natref refinery to UK-based energy firm Prax for an undisclosed sum.
TotalEnergies jointly owns and operates the refinery in Sasolburg with South African integrated energy firm Sasol, which holds the remaining 63.64pc stake. Natref supplies the Johannesburg area, the main South African inland market, and is one of only three South African refineries still operational.
"The transaction is in line with the company strategy to focus on its large integrated fuels and petrochemicals platforms and to divest its non-core assets," said TotalEnergies' chief financial officer Jean-Pierre Sbraire.
The future of the Natref refinery has been uncertain in recent years. The joint venture partners had considered closing it, selling it or turning into a storage and blending facility because of the costs involved in upgrading the plant to meet South Africa's pending Clean Fuels 2 regulations, which come into force on 1 July 2027.
But Sasol has changed its stance. It now plans to turn Natref into a green-hybrid plant that will use biofeedstocks to produce diesel that meets the clean fuel standards. Under the new plan, significantly less capital investment than previously expected will be needed to make the refinery compliant, the firm said.
The other two South African refineries that are still operational are Sasol's 150,000 b/d coal-to-liquids plant at Secunda and Astron Energy's 100,000 b/d refinery in Cape Town. The country's largest refinery, the Sapref joint venture's 180,000 b/d Durban refinery, shut indefinitely in 2022, while Engen's 105,000 b/d Durban refinery and state-owned PetroSA's 45,000 b/d gas-to-liquids refinery at Mossel Bay have been halted since December 2020, with the latter running out of domestic gas feedstock.
Natref will be Prax's second refining asset after it acquired the UK's 105,700 b/d Lindsey refinery in northeast England from TotalEnergies in 2020. It also has oil terminals in the UK and Belgium and it acquired North Sea oil producer Hurricane Energy earlier this year.