HCB Magazine December 2020

Page 42

40

UNDER CONTROL RESULTS • VOPAK’S REVENUES AND PROFITS ARE HOLDING UP WELL, WITH LITTLE NEGATIVE IMPACT FROM THE COVID-19 CRISIS OR OIL MARKET VOLATILITY

VOPAK HAS REPORTED third quarter revenues of €297.0m, down 5 per cent compared to the same period 2019, reflecting the sale of some terminals over the course of the past 12 months. Excluding exceptional items, group EBITDA came in at €200.1m, only slightly below last year’s €202.4m. Moreover, overall tank occupancy continued to improve, reaching 91 per cent over the quarter as a whole, compared to 82 per cent in third quarter 2019, reflecting strong demand from oil markets and “robust” demand in other market segments. Vopak says that, while the Covid-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on its people and it has put global and local measures in place to protects its employees, their families and the company’s operations, it has experienced a limited impact on business. “All our 66

HCB MONTHLY | DECEMBER 2020

terminals are operational and there have been no significant disruptions to business continuity,” it states. “Vopak’s strategy is robust and unchanged. An effective control and governance structure to respond to the impact of the global pandemic, with continued decision-making to support business execution and well-being of people, has been put in place. Operational and financial performance, cash flows and our financial position have not been significantly affected. Our financial results reflect our resilient business performance. Timing of growth projects execution is affected by generic local lockdown measures in various countries. Our focus in these circumstances is on the short-term delivery and protection of long-term value.” GOING FOR GROWTH That long-term focus has continued during the third quarter with further expansions and acquisitions. This past September, in a joint venture with BlackRock, Vopak Industrial Infrastructure Americas, it announced the acquisition of three industrial terminals on the US Gulf Coast from Dow for a price of $620m. That deal is expected to close before the end of 2020. In addition, late in the quarter, it completed a total of 169,000 m³ of new tank

capacity at three of its terminals around the world: Durban (South Africa), Merak (Indonesia) and Vlissingen (the Netherlands). Vopak has also announced that it is to expand its Alemoa terminal in Brazil with 20,000 m³ of new chemical tankage to further strengthen its position in Santos, Latin America’s largest port. The new capacity is due to be commissioned in third quarter 2023, subject to permit approvals. In total, Vopak expects to spend between €500m and €600m this year in growth projects, including the acquisition of the Dow terminals. For 2021, it is aiming to allocate between €300m and €350m to growth investments, including projects already sanctioned, new business development and feasibility studies in new energies, including hydrogen. “We aim to grow EBITDA over time with new contributions from growth projects and replace the EBITDA from recent 2019 and 2020 divested terminals, subject to market conditions and currency exchange movements,” the company states. “Although the pandemic brings a lot of uncertainty and the estimates remain subject to future events, we expect to continue to manage our performance in line with our original business plans and unchanged strategy.” That strategy includes a strict focus on cost control and Vopak says that its cost base is currently tracking lower than the target of €600m set for this year. www.vopak.com


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Articles inside

Joint Meeting gets to work on tanks

17min
pages 60-65

The legal view of containership fires

6min
pages 58-59

Incident Log Stem the tide

6min
pages 56-57

Conference Diary

2min
page 55

Project Brenntag shaping up

6min
pages 50-51

News bulletin – chemical distribution

5min
pages 52-54

RIPA counts US reconditioning

2min
page 49

Greif introduces new concepts

2min
page 48

Recognition for Schütz IBC

3min
page 47

Time Technoplast arrives in the US

2min
page 46

News bulletin – storage terminals

5min
pages 44-45

Vopak holds up well

2min
page 42

Power-to-methanol for North Sea Port

2min
page 43

UM Terminals centralises services

2min
page 41

Tarragona hosts Med Hub Day online

13min
pages 34-37

GPS adds to ethanol in Amsterdam

2min
page 40

Stainless tanks for Maastank

2min
page 39

Bidvest, Petredec open LPG terminal

2min
page 38

BW LPG starts LPG fuelling

2min
page 29

Tough times for Kirby Corp

2min
pages 30-31

News bulletin – tanker shipping

5min
pages 32-33

Stena, Proman add to methanol plans

3min
page 28

Making headway in hydrogen shipping

4min
pages 26-27

Odfjell eyes normalisation

2min
page 24

HGK converts for Covestro

2min
page 25

News bulletin – tanks and logistics

5min
pages 20-21

Consolidation in chemical tankers

3min
pages 22-23

Fort Vale reflects on a strange year

6min
pages 18-19

A lighter tank from Van den Bosch

3min
pages 16-17

Dachser’s links in warehousing

3min
pages 14-15

Obituary – William O’Neil

5min
pages 4-5

STC disapproves of flexis

2min
page 10

VTG adds temperature sensors

3min
page 12

ITCO reports on rule changes

6min
pages 8-9

Cotac expands depot network

2min
page 11

Letter from the editor

2min
page 3

Learning by Training

2min
page 7

30 Years Ago

2min
page 6
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