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PETROPLUS

Lenders extend lifeline to cash-strapped Petroplus

Embattled Swiss-based Petroplus said Wednesday that lenders had agreed to temporarily provide vital cash flows to keep two of its oil refineries running in Britain and Germany.

A statement said the “agreement is designed to provide the financial resources necessary to meet critical expenses,” and “to maintain safe ongoing operations at the Coryton and Ingolstadt refineries.”

The deal will also “allow the company and its lenders to negotiate an amendment to the revolving credit facility which is expected to be completed in the second half of January 2012.”

Petroplus, Europe’s largest independent oil refiner, recently announced it was to enforce a temporary halt at three of its refineries after financiers froze an initial $1 billion credit facility.

The affected refineries are Petit Couronne in northern France, the Antwerp refinery in Belgium and Cressier in the Swiss canton of Neuchatel.

The firm’s Coryton refinery in England and the Ingolstadt refinery in Germany are still operational.

PETROPLUS

Libyan lifeline for bankrupt French oil plant

Bankruptcy administrators for the Petroplus oil refinery in Normandy have accepted bids from two firms to rescue the plant and have passed them on to a court, union sources said this week.

Libyan lifeline for bankrupt French oil plant
Workers outside the Petroplus oil plant during a day of action last month. Photo: Charly Triballeau/AFP

The bids from Panama-registered NetOil and Libya's Murzuq Oil are expected to be considered in the coming days, ahead of an April 16th deadline.

Unions representing the plant's 470 workers hailed the decision.

"This is very good news," said Jean-Luc Broute of the CGT union following a meeting of the plant's works council.

Two other bids, from Hong Kong-based Oceanmed Seasky System Limited and GTSA of Luxembourg, were rejected.

Opened in 1929, the refinery has struggled in recent years, with parent company Petroplus filing for bankruptcy in January 2012 and the plant placed under insolvency administration in October.

The fate of the plant has become a symbol of France's struggle to keep industrial sites running in the face of a stagnant economy and stiff global competition.

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