For PetroChina, move to Houston pays off

Updated: 2015-07-03 10:55

By May Zhou in Houston(China Daily USA)

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For PetroChina, move to Houston pays off

Li Shaolin, president of PetroChina International America, Inc, talks about the growing business of his company. May Zhou/CHINA DAILY 


It has been about two years since PetroChina International (America) moved its headquarters to Houston from New Jersey in 2013 - a strategic move that obviously has paid off, according to President Li Shaolin.

"We have nearly doubled our personnel to about 130, opened a new branch office in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and developed new products for our trade business," he said.

To Li, Houston has lived up to its reputation as the Oil Capital of the World. "In Houston we can readily find whatever talents we need; our potential partners are mostly in Houston; and the social environment here is very conducive to business - we get help all around in the community, and I find southern people warm, practical and efficient when it comes to business partnership," said Li.

In the past year, Li said PetroChina America has been focusing on three areas - market expansion, vertical integration and information system updating.

"With the opening of Rio branch office, we have developed six new markets. Now PetroChina has coverage of the entire market of North, Central and South America with offices in Houston, Rio and Calgary. Our next goal is to better sustain our business on a long term basis and negotiate business deals in packages," said Li.

PetroChina America has six employees in Brazil with a focus on downstream crude oil and natural gas products. The goal is to expand the number of personnel to about 15 like its Calgary, Canada, counterpart.

"The Rio office was opened in July, 2014, and we already made profit by the end of last year. Brazil is an emerging country with lots of opportunities, like a smaller version of China. Of course, our Rio office functions as an anchor and it fans out to cover other surrounding South American markets as well," Li said.

PetroChina America also managed to export 400,000 tons of solid ammonia from China to United States and other countries in the Americas last year, a new product for the company that also brought in new trade partners.

Internally, PetroChina America shifted its focus from specific trading projects to vertical integration with an emphasis on research, technical analysis, strategic analysis, and business development.

"In the past, when we hire people, we wanted someone who can immediately do trading on the floor. Now, we hire more traders to conduct research for decision-making, marketing expansion in terms of new products and new customers, and developing new business models. About 30 percent of our trade team is assigned to research," said Li.

That move brought a small profit windfall to PetroChina America.

"Last year, three research teams of ours all correctly predicted that the crude oil price would soon experience downturn. Based on this projection, we made necessary moves and preparations. As a result, we made a nice bundle of extra profit in millions," said Li.

Another move by PetroChina America was updating its infrastructures with the most advanced information system. The system updating encompassed almost all of PetroChina America's business, including trading, shipping, chartering, operating and internal accounting.

"We invested $1.5 million to implement E-TRADE for natural gas alone - a move to improve our commodity trade efficiency. This industry is fast paced - five deals could happen in a mere minute. Now we can transact a trade and print out invoice in a matter of minutes," said Li, adding that a similar upgrading is underway for crude oil and refined oil trade.

Besides the cost-effective benefits, the system updating also enables PetroChina America to customize products and service to clients' specific needs. This helps the company to get new customers and produce new products, according to Li.

When it comes to successful management of the company, Li said localization and cross-culture awareness are the keys.

Currently, 85 percent of PetroChina America's employees are hired locally with the remained being expats sent from its Beijing headquarters. Li said his goal is to increase the ratio of local hire to 90 percent. At the management level, the heads of its four business departments are local hires. "We assigned only one Chinese to each department. They function as the liaison between the departments and the upper level management in Beijing," he said.

With such a high percentage of local hires operating under a primarily Chinese management team, it is tricky to make the majority of employees feel comfortable and to retain talent. To Li, this is the biggest challenge in running the company.

"Company culture is something you can't see and touch, yet it's everywhere. I want people to want to work for us - this requires us to provide a welcoming cultural environment. My motto is, the soft culture needs to be softer, and the performance evaluation based on data needs to be more concrete."

To that end, Li said he pays special attention to the language difference. For example, English is designated as the official office language and no Chinese is allowed in office communications. Company policy also stipulates that as long as there is one local employee present, all employees are required to speak only English.

Language aside, PetroChina America also brings employees of different cultural backgrounds together through monthly events, such as remote-controlled boat races in the lake in front of the office building, making dumplings, a Fourth of July celebration, Thanksgiving gathering and birthday parties.

Zheng Yi contributed to this story.

mayzhou@chinadailyusa.com

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