Energy quest
With the beginning of 2006 raising questions on Romania’s energy strategy, Corina Mica talks to Philip Stephenson, deputy CEO of the Rompetrol Group
It was the deal of last year in Romania’s
energy field.
Rompetrol Group became the first local
company to ever take over a massive
firm in the European Union in its purchase
of French-based petroleum storage
and distributing firm Dyneff.
The price is still confidential, pending
completion of the takeover in the
first quarter of this year, and includes
Dyneff’s 226 petrol station network,
which it owns, operates and franchises,
as well as huge storage capacity on the
Mediterranean and Atlantic Ocean.
The deal puts Rompetrol at the forefront
of Romanian companies taking
on the EU before the country actually
joins the political bloc, especially when
its logo begins to appear as a common
feature on the French roadside.
Key to the transaction was the group’s
deputy CEO, Texas-native and Harvard
graduate Philip Stephenson, who has
been involved in top management at
Rompetrol for the past five years.
Rompetrol was founded back in 1974
as Romania’s international arm in the oil
and gas industry. The company was sold
off in 1993 through mass privatisation
and managed to recover from the point
of view of turnover after its current
management took the helm in 1998.
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The management position at Rompetrol is Stephenson’s first taste of the challenging energy business. Prior to joining the firm he ran a private equity fund called International Equity Partners.
“We raised 80 million USD from institutions around the world and invested in emerging markets, and that’s how I first came to Romania,” he says. In 1997 he met Dinu Patriciu, the owner and CEO of Rompetrol, with a combined intention to invest in Romania.
Stephenson helped to establish the Romania and Moldova Direct Fund, which made three local investments: Rompetrol, tile producer Sanex and dry goods distributor First Logistics and Distribution.
Now Stephenson works principally out of the group’s Bucharest operational headquarters, reporting directly to Patriciu.
“Working with good people, dealing with intellectually challenging issues, and getting to visit new places all the time is the thing I enjoy the most about my current posting,” he says.
His special areas of focus include financial planning and fundraising, the creation of strategic partnerships within the international energy industry, divestitures of non-core group businesses, legal affairs and investor relations for the group, which last year reported gross revenues of 2.5 billion USD (just over two billion Euro).
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The Texan’s professional background includes work as senior official in the Office for International Affairs at the US Treasury Department, under special appointment by then president George Bush Snr.
Speaking about particular difficulties he had to overcome in running business in Romania and potential problems ahead, Stephenson says: “I think we have built the company around the mentality of a ‘new Romania’, which is optimistic, open, forward-looking and meritocractic. But we’ve had direct challenges from the ‘old Romania’ that still exists and has the opposite characteristics: pessimistic, secretive, mired in the past, and allocates wealth according to privilege and ‘connections’. In our case this has meant fighting politicallymotivated legal and administrative challenges brought against the company and some of its officers.”
Not an easy ride
Rompetrol and the Romanian state are
now involved in a series of controversial
issues.
Last year the General Prosecutor’s Office
(PG) charged Rompetrol with alleged
tax evasion, money laundering
and fraud, as well as failed measures
to make promised investments in its
two local refineries after it took them
over: Vega in Ploiesti and Petromidia
on the Black Sea coast.
Subsequently, after failed attempts
to obtain the deferment of fundamental
rights and protections owed to
the Rompetrol Group, pursuant to
the Bilateral Investment Treaty between
the Netherlands (where Rompetrol
is registered) and Romania,
the company initiated international
arbitration proceedings against
the Government of Romania at the
World Bank’s International Center
for the Settlement of Investment Disputes
(ICSID) in Washington DC.
Irrespective of the group’s legal
dispute with the Romanian state, Stephenson
views the country’s economic
future as having “tremendous potential.
But only if its political leaders don’t
‘snatch defeat from the jaws of victory’.”
He says, ideally, young Romanians
should stay in the country rather than
emigrate. “Perhaps they could lead a debate
that could set a goal that everyone
believed in and worked towards – something
very aspirational like to be the
25th richest country in the world by the
year 2025.”
Nevertheless, until Romania becomes
the world’s 25th richest country, the deputy
CEO focuses entirely on capitalising
on the group’s current activities.