US oil giant Exxon Mobil, which according to Biden "made more money than god" last year until Joe decided to drain the US Strategic Political Reserve, agreed to buy Denbury for $4.9 billion, its biggest acquisition in six years, in a deal that will provide Exxon the largest network of carbon dioxide pipelines in the US.
The all-stock transaction which was first leaked last October, values the Plano, Texas-based Denbury - which emerged from bankruptcy in Sept 2020 after shedding $2.1 billion in debt - at $89.45 a share, the companies said Thursday in a statement.
Denbury’s key asset is 1,300 miles of pipelines dedicated to transporting CO2, critical infrastructure if the US is going to be successful in capturing carbon emissions from heavily-polluting facilities like refineries and chemical plants.
The deal is Exxon's biggest since buying its core Permian Basin acreage position from the Bass family for about $6.6 billion in 2017 and is the largest single carbon-management investment since the Inflation Reduction Act passed in August. The law included landmark climate provisions, providing substantial tax incentives for companies to capture CO2 emissions and store them underground rather than pollute the atmosphere.
As Bloomberg adds, more than 70% of Denbury’s pipeline network is on the Gulf Coast, home to the largest concentration of industrial emissions in the US. Historically, Denbury has used CO2 for enhanced oil recovery, a process which squeezes more crude out of old wells, but the company has recently been repurposing its assets to become a leader in the low-carbon space.
“The goal here is to help accelerate the world’s path to net zero,” said Dan Ammann, president of Exxon’s Low Carbon Solutions business. “This is additive and accelerative to those efforts.”
Carbon capture is the bedrock of Exxon’s climate strategy, which targets net-zero emissions by 2050 from its operations, and buying Denbury would give the oil giant critical and hard-to-replicate infrastructure as it pursues that goal. Exxon has pledged to spend $17 billion on lower-carbon investments through 2027. Capturing carbon from its own operations and third parties in hard-to-decarbonize sectors is a priority.
Denbury’s Rocky Mountain assets are connected to Exxon’s Shute Creek gas facility near LaBarge, Wyoming, which has captured more carbon than any other asset in the US.
The Inflation Reduction Act is a key catalyst for carbon capture, increasing tax credits 70% to $85 for every ton of CO2. Executives, including Exxon Chief Executive Officer Darren Woods, have praised the legislation for its financial support for carbon capture, which Morgan Stanley says could be highly profitable thanks to the tax incentives.
The deal will also provide Exxon with about 47,000 barrels a day of oil, about 1% of its overall production. Exxon shares are down 3.5% this year, while Denbury stock is up almost 1%.