By Paul Burkhardt.
Sasol is looking to revive its international chemical business, including a sprawling US complex, to boost earnings and open up an option to potentially list it, according to the company’s chief executive officer.
The South African maker of fuel and chemicals from coal reported its first loss since 2020 last year and took billions of dollars in writedowns. The company has about R75 billion of debt and suspended dividend payouts. Its shares tumbled 55% in 2024.
Sasol CEO Simon Baloyi, a two-decade veteran who took over the role in April, sees the company’s $12.8 billion Lake Charles chemicals facility in Louisiana as a significant factor in generating cash and raising investor confidence.
“It’s a fantastic asset that Sasol has, and we have to make sure it starts making money, “he said in an interview with Bloomberg in Johannesburg.
The company separated the international chemical business from operations in South Africa and has set targets to increase its contribution to earnings and strengthen it as a standalone entity.
While chemicals make up about a third of earnings, the regional contribution of the US is just 6%.
“In the future, at the peak of the chemical market, it’s going to give us lots and lots of strategic options to create shareholder value, where you can have the option to either list it by itself or you can merge it with someone else,” Baloyi, 48, said.
Success could mean revising a dark chapter in the company’s history. The Lake Charles Chemicals Project was originally designed to expand Sasol’s operational footprint abroad, but it suffered from mismanagement issues, hurricanes, and billions of dollars in cost overruns that ballooned the company’s debt.
In 2020, the year it reached completion, Sasol sold a $2 billion stake in the US base-chemicals business to form a joint venture with LyondellBasell Industries to cut debt. It also accelerated an asset-sale program that wrapped up the following year.
The company’s shares have plunged for two straight years, and its weighting on the FTSE/JSE Africa All Shares Index has dropped to 0.86% from 3.2% a decade ago.
Baloyi pledged to avoid “a fire sale of assets” that he considers “value destruction.”
A review he announced in August, when the company took a R56.7 billion write down largely on low chemical prices, is intended in the next three to four year to make the units capable of sustaining their own operating costs and help pay debt interest.
It’s also looking at all assets to determine which “are bleeding cash, which assets need fixing,” and which need to be shut down if they can’t be improved, he said.
Another unanticipated obstacle that has emerged for Sasol in recent years has been the quality of coal it produces and uses to feed its Secunda manufacturing hub.
That’s become another priority, and the company has made a final investment decision on a de-stoning project to improve the quality of the coal, according to Baloyi.
The company has been purchasing about 4 million tons of the fuel a year to make up for the issue, that he considers a waste of money.
“We shouldn’t be buying coal because we have the infrastructure, we have the people, we have everything to mine the coal.”