| Why is America Worried?Fu Chengyu  Updated: 2005-07-06 11:24
 Two weeks ago, our company, Cnooc Ltd., extended a 
friendly, all-cash offer to Unocal's board of directors. After being invited to 
engage in dialogue with Unocal earlier this year, we entered detailed 
negotiations regarding a possible merger. We have made our offer because 
Unocal's asset base -- 70% of its oil and gas reserves are close to Asian 
markets where we operate -- fits our business extremely well. We are listed on 
the New York and Hong Kong Stock Exchanges and have fiduciary obligations to all 
of our shareholders. We believe this merger will offer our shareholders, which 
include many leading U.S. institutional investors, tremendous growth 
opportunities. 
 The majority of Unocal's Asian reserves are gas. Its proven reserves are 
mostly committed to long-term contracts in the region, notably for domestic gas 
markets in Thailand and Bangladesh. Unocal also has very substantial gas 
resources -- or unbooked reserves -- particularly offshore East Kalimantan, 
Indonesia, which will be developed for the production of Liquefied Natural Gas 
(LNG). Although Cnooc will have no direct influence over the marketing of the 
LNG, since this is conducted by Indonesian state-owned entities, it is expected 
that the clean-burning LNG will be sold primarily into Asian markets. 
 We also believe that our two companies can bring even more oil and gas to the 
U.S. market by building on Unocal's strength in the Gulf of Mexico and other 
producing areas in the U.S. Last year, Cnooc grew production of oil and gas by 
over 7%. Over the past three years, we achieved an average reserve replacement 
ratio of about 213%, one of the best records in the industry. 
 We have partnered with many leading oil and gas companies in a significant 
number of projects in China and elsewhere in the world. An example is the 
memorandum of understanding we have signed with Chevron to participate in the 
Gorgon LNG project in Australia which is expected to supply LNG both to China 
and the U.S. Of course, sometimes we compete with these companies as well -- in 
this case with Chevron for Unocal. That is because we are both trying to pay the 
best price, for a good business. I adhere to the belief that the highest price 
wins. Given that our bid is about 11% -- or $2 billion -- higher than Chevron's 
stock-and-cash deal as of today, this competition also benefits Unocal's 
shareholders, in addition to our own. The bottom line is that our all-cash offer 
puts more dollars in the pockets of shareholders and is not subject to the daily 
fluctuations and uncertainty of the stock market.  There has been huge change in China in recent years, as more and more 
businesses have learned to focus on proper financial management and corporate 
governance disciplines. Cnooc is recognized for being well ahead of most of 
them, however. We are a listed company, with half of our eight-member board 
composed of non-executive independent directors. Our parent company has been a 
leader in the development of the oil and gas industry in China since its 
formation in 1982. It is investment-grade credit-rated, has net cash on its 
balance sheet and is highly profitable.  Furthermore, ours is a business run by professional business people. Most of 
the team here, including me, have been in the oil and gas industry throughout 
our careers. We are also very international in our approach. We have been 
working in joint ventures with other leading oil companies for 20 years. After 
my masters degree at the University of Southern California, I spent 13 years 
working with international oil companies, many of them U.S. oil companies. When 
I led Phillips' joint venture with Cnooc in China, we had 200 expatriate 
employees working alongside 200 Chinese. That was a very positive experience, 
and I want to share with you my great personal pride at the thought of leading a 
similar effort to combine the talents of an American and Chinese company. I am 
therefore very pleased that Cnooc and Unocal have begun discussing the merits of 
our offer and I hope we can reach an agreement on a consensual transaction in 
the near future. 
 We have recently filed with the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United 
States (CFIUS) and look forward to entering discussions with them and answering 
all their questions as soon as possible. We are prepared to agree necessary 
modifications to our proposal in order to alleviate any concerns they may have. 
 When my company's board authorized the offer for Unocal, I knew that the 
transaction would create great interest -- and even concern. That is why we set 
out straight away, to address those concerns with up-front commitments 
surrounding our deal.  The most fundamental point of concern that we face is that American oil and 
gas should stay in America -- and I promise that we will continue Unocal's sales 
practice of selling all, or substantially all, U.S. oil and gas in U.S. markets. 
The American public's anxiety -- that we plan to take fuel back to China -- is 
based on a misunderstanding. It would not be economically rational to take U.S. 
oil and gas to China -- not least, as the U.S. is one of the strongest markets 
in the world. In fact we will increase production in the U.S., particularly from 
the Gulf of Mexico. That will mean more oil for U.S. consumers, not less. It is 
worth noting that international oil and gas =perators active in China are free 
to export their share of production anywhere in the world, or sell into the 
domestic market. 
 We also wanted to send a very clear message about jobs, so our second 
commitment is that Cnooc will seek to retain substantially all Unocal employees, 
especially those in the U.S. We think Unocal has attractive and efficient 
operations and a high quality team. Our merger, unlike Chevron's, is not based 
on rationalization and cost cutting. As a result it will save a great many 
American jobs. 
 Finally, we will sell or place into special management arrangements any 
pipeline, gas storage, terminals and other midstream assets that might raise 
concerns in the CFIUS process. Unocal has a relatively small portfolio of 
midstream assets, which include its 22% interest in the Colonial Pipeline and 
its less than 2% interest in the Trans Alaska Pipeline. While other foreign 
entities own significantly larger stakes in even more critical U.S. energy 
infrastructure such as refineries, we believe, as long as a divestiture or 
CFIUS-approved management structure for the assets at issue doesn't damage 
Unocal's business, that these assets are not core to the shareholder value we 
can create with this merger. 
 At the heart of our commitment is the CFIUS process. We recently filed a 
notice so that CFIUS could begin to review our proposal. In preparing our bid, 
Cnooc always planned to voluntarily seek CFIUS review. I respect the concerns 
the process seeks to address and believe that a successful review can help build 
even stronger trading ties that are so vital to our two countries. 
 I know that operating a business in the U.S. is a complex undertaking. Only 
the companies with the best management teams are able to survive and prosper. 
Thus, Cnooc will make every effort to persuade the members of Unocal's executive 
and operations management team to join the combined company. Unocal has more 
than 100 years of experience in the U.S., and the combined company will benefit 
from that knowledge. We know their people well and respect them as some of the 
best in the industry. We, too, have a 20-year track record of working with other 
international businesses, integrating teams from different countries into 
effective cross-border joint ventures. With the Unocal team alongside, us I am 
confident we will build a compelling business. 
 I know that debate about our offer will continue. I am conscious that in some 
ways that Cnooc is helping show the American people the face not just of our 
business, but of the changing nature of corporate China. The best way we can do 
that is by being open and responsive to people's concerns, and by ensuring that 
they see the careful, transparent standards of shareholder discipline that we 
apply to a situation like this. 
 Our company has grown shareholder value from a market cap of $6 billion when 
it listed four years ago, to $25 billion today. I will continue to focus on 
bringing value to Cnooc shareholders and am convinced that the acquisition of 
Unocal can help us. I will also be focused on providing our better offer for 
Unocal shareholders, bringing oil and jobs to the United States, and on our 
assurances that we will be an open and responsible participant in the 
process.  
 From the Asian Wall Street 
Journal,Mr. Fu is chairman and CEO of Cnooc Ltd. 
  
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