Word: chevronings
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...contract to supply smaller windmills to mainland China--where energy demand is soaring and the government aims to spend $85 billion on pollution controls, especially in smog-choked cities like Beijing, site of the 2008 Olympics. Immelt also intends to capitalize on coal-gasification technology purchased last year from Chevron, allowing GE to sell coal-fired power plants that spew fewer greenhouse gases. (GE is in discussions with coal-rich China on various "clean coal" initiatives too). Other eco-ventures include a hybrid locomotive, due in 2007, fuel cells, solar panels, energy-efficient water desalination systems--and, of course...
...struggling appliance maker based in Iowa. And 19 years after getting his M.A. in petroleum engineering from U.S.C., Fu wants to own Unocal, once the parent of those Union 76 gas stations. The company he heads, China National Offshore Oil Corp. (CNOOC), topped a $16.5 billion bid from Chevron for the ninth largest U.S. oil company...
...Unocal is by far the most audacious move any Chinese company has made. CNOOC, whose market value is only about $22 billion (compared with $119 billion for Chevron), offered about $18.5 billion, or $67 a share, for Unocal. Since it's an all-cash offer, the Chinese company would have to take on a huge chunk of debt to finance the deal. Fu insists that no one in the government pushed the company to buy Unocal, and sources close to CNOOC's board tell TIME that Fu, not some shadowy string-pulling figure in Beijing, has been the driving force...
...When Chevron, one of the world's oil giants, announced in early April that it was buying Unocal, a smaller rival, for about $17 billion, it seemed like business as usual in the oil patch: the big getting bigger by swallowing the not quite so big. Across the Pacific, though, management at Chinese National Offshore Oil Corp. (CNOOC), one of China's largest oil firms, was still pursuing what it calls "Operation Treasure Ship." Unocal, some at CNOOC think, fits perfectly into China's fervent effort to secure new oil and gas supplies to fuel its surging economy. Within...
...Associates, because the Chinese companies, most still state owned, are "willing to accept a lower rate of return." Those concerns may be overwrought. To acquire Unocal, CNOOC (whose market capitalization is about $22 billion) would have to offer more than $17 billion, plus pay the $500 million breakup fee Chevron booby-trapped to its Unocal bid. "It's all about money," says a banker close to CNOOC. "Nothing else...