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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Glencore Energy UK Ltd v Transworld Oil Ltd [2010] EWHC 141 (Comm) (03 February 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2010/141.html Cite as: [2010] 1 CLC 284, [2010] EWHC 141 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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GLENCORE ENERGY UK LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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TRANSWORLD OIL LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Mr Andrew W. Baker QC (instructed by Jones Day) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 14th, 15th, 16th, 17th December 2009, 12th, 13th January 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Blair :
The facts
The making of the contract
The declaration by Glencore as to the pricing period
Hedging by Glencore
The attempted loading
Events following the departure of the Narmada Spirit
"Due to circumstances beyond the control of the terminal and cargo shippers it will not be possible to receive the vessel Narmada Spirit back at the terminal to offload the agreed/nominated parcel(s) of cargo within a reasonable time.
This development is regretted and has arisen despite every effort under most difficult circumstances on the part of the terminal operators and ourselves to receive the vessel.
We are left with no possible alternative other than to advise all involved parties to take whatever steps they deem appropriate in the circumstances".
Transworld's case is that if the contract had not already expired unperformed, it was terminated by this email. As it is put in Transworld's closing submissions, so far as Transworld was concerned, the commercial adventure was at an end. I prefer Glencore's interpretation, which is that although the vessel was cancelled, the contract was not. This is consistent with what happened next, which was as follows.
The conversation between Mr Wakefield and Mr Bechter of 8 April 2008
"Spoke to allan of Tetra; need to send email summarising we keep deal afloat i.e re pricing/period".
The reference to "Allan" is a reference to Mr Bechter (he did not in his own mind draw a distinction between Transworld and Tetra), and the reference to an email was a note to himself, he says, and not something he had discussed with Mr Bechter.
The email of 9 April 2008 and events immediately following
"Subject: 26-28 March Ukpokiti Blend crude oil lifting
Hello Allan
Confirming telecon between Wakefield (Glencore) / Bechter (Transworld) regarding the prospects of loading our originally scheduled 26-28 March 2008 Ukpokiti Blend crude oil lifting. We would like to confirm our commitment to load the cargo at the soonest possible time for all parties concerned at the agreed contractual pricing and our declaration dated 27th March 2008 remains unchanged.
As previously requested, can you please supply us with a fully detailed "sequence of events" as background to your email dated 3rd April 2008 informing us that the terminal cannot perform the lift.
We look forward to hearing from Transworld at your earliest convenience and keeping us updated as to when our Ukpokiti lifting can take place."
The email of 22 April and following events
"Without acknowledging any liability, Transworld proposes that we both agree to make a good faith effort to amicably resolve any disputes arising from the aborted loading. In the meantime, when we receive the NNPC [Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation] 'allowable' for May and confirmation of available support vessels (etc.), Transworld will prepare a new agreement to supply 271,000 barrels of crude oil during a date in May to be agreed upon".
"We expect to receive all government clearances necessary for a late June lifting of 271,000 barrels. To that end, please find attached a draft contract together with a comparison document showing the differences between this draft and the agreement entered into in March.
Please let us know if you have any comments. If you have none, we will circulate an execution copy for signature".
"We refer to my email to yourself dated 9th April 2008 which confirms a telecon between yourself and Martin Wakefield. This email clearly states our commitment to load our originally scheduled 26-28 March 2008 Ukpokiti as soon as possible at the agreed contractual pricing and our declaration dated 27th March 2008 remains unchanged".
He then provided an alternative form of words which included reference to the period 27 March to 2 April 2008. As regards the "entire agreement" clause, he said that Glencore was not entirely happy to see that this wording had been added, but would agree to it subject to Transworld "honouring your agreement referred to in my email dated 9th April 2008", and mentioned that "we also currently have a hedge exposure due to the non-lift which in this market is costly".
Liability: discussion and conclusions
Conclusions on the law
Art 33 of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation General Terms and Conditions
OTHER TERMS AND CONDITIONS
EXCEPT AS SPECIFICALLY DETAILED ABOVE, NIGERIAN NATIONAL PETROLEUM CORPORATION'S GENERAL TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF SALE OF NIGERIAN CRUDE OIL – PART 11 OF THE CONTRACTS (LATEST EDITION) SHALL COVER THIS SALE.
"Any existing claims, costs, expenses, fees or demands arising in connection with this Contract which have not been notified to SELLER with supporting documents shall not be accepted by SELLER and SELLER hereby expressly disclaims any liability for such claims, costs, expenses, fees or demands unless notice in writing with supporting documents has been delivered to SELLER in respect of such claims, costs, expenses, fees or demands prior to or within fourteen (14) days of the expiration of the Contract period or the early termination of this Contract. Upon failure of the BUYER to deliver such notice within the period stated herein, BUYER shall be deemed to have waived its rights to such claims, costs, expenses, fees or demands."
Damages
The appropriate premium
Glencore's case
Transworld's primary case
Transworld's first alternative case
"… Glencore found themselves in the unenviable position of having sold 271,000 barrels of futures as a hedge against this cargo which now had been taken away from them. The futures position was no longer a hedge. It had become what is often called "an outright position". They were short these barrels at a price considerably below the then current market price, with little prospect of it going back down. Sensibly, … Glencore immediately reversed the position by buying back 271,000 barrels of July 2008 futures, but by doing so, established a loss of just over $8 million."
Transworld's second alternative case
Conclusion