Business
Second US crude oil cargo arrives | The Express Tribune
Private sector-led initiative strengthens energy infrastructure, signals renewed investment under SIFC reforms
ISLAMABAD:
The second US crude cargo has landed in Pakistan, opening a new area of cooperation between Pakistan and the United States (US).
Pakistan has traditionally imported oil from the Middle East, with Saudi Arabia being the largest crude oil exporter to the country. The arrival of the second US crude oil cargo at Cnergyico’s Single Point Mooring (SPM) marks another milestone in Pakistan’s energy and industrial journey.
Commissioned in 2012 with an investment of $120 million, the SPM was an ambitious project that initially faced scepticism from many industry observers, particularly within the public sector. Since its commissioning, over 150 million barrels of crude oil have been imported through Cnergyico’s SPM. It remains Pakistan’s only facility capable of receiving large vessels such as Suezmax and VLCC tankers.
The second ship carrying US crude oil was berthed at the SPM on Wednesday.
When the United States imposed global tariffs, Pakistan faced a pressing challenge of a trade imbalance exceeding $3 billion. The government sought to address this by boosting exports and exploring opportunities for energy imports. While the US administration extended relatively low tariff rates for Pakistan, the burden to balance trade still fell largely on the private sector.
Pakistani exporters responded by expanding market reach, while energy imports, an essential component of trade realignment, were spearheaded by private enterprises.
“Cnergyico’s initiative to independently import US crude oil is a case in point, demonstrating that national resilience often begins with private enterprise rather than bureaucracy,” industry officials say.
In recent years, Pakistan’s refining industry has faced uncertainty, particularly around the brownfield refinery policy. This policy vacuum created operational and investment hurdles for local refineries. The establishment of the Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC) changed that dynamic by introducing coordination, policy clarity, and a focus on removing bureaucratic bottlenecks.
Recognising refineries as strategic national assets, the SIFC, along with the current Minister for Petroleum, took concrete steps to stabilise and support the sector. This proactive approach has been critical, especially amid regional tensions and shifting global energy dynamics.
The refinery upgrade initiative will not only save foreign exchange but also bring investment of over $6 billion into the sector.
“From Cnergyico’s SPM to exporters, manufacturers, and IT firms, private enterprises are expanding capacity, replacing imports, and earning foreign exchange despite institutions like the FBR and other regulators treating them with hostility,” said an industry official. “Despite challenges, the private sector remains the true engine of national progress.”
Business
Reeves urged to cut windfall tax and not ‘sacrifice’ oil and gas workers
A trade union has urged the Chancellor not to “sacrifice” oil and gas workers and ease the windfall tax at the Budget this month.
Louise Gilmour, GMB Scotland secretary, has written to Rachel Reeves to urge her to cut the levy – which was placed on the industry by the last government and extended since Labour took office last year – saying that every day an oil and gas worker is out of a job is a “Government failure”.
Many in the industry and opposition politicians have warned that the 38% charge on the profits of firms were risking investment and jobs.
“While oil and gas workers are forced to leave the industry or follow work abroad, there is little sign of the renewables jobs meant to replace them, not in the UK at least,” she said.
“Every day an oil and gas worker spends out of work is a Government failure and there is both an economic and a moral case for action.
“Energy workers must be supported through the transition, not sacrificed to it.”
She added: “Of course, we must encourage and adopt new renewable sources of energy but our transition need not be so rushed and self-harming.
“Promised UK jobs with terms and conditions even close to matching those in oil and gas have yet to be created and any hope of a successful transition rests on their experience and expertise and the financial strength of their companies helping build the energy infrastructure of tomorrow.
“This will be impossible if ministers fail to protect our oil and gas sector while mapping a measured, planned and successful transition to net zero.”
Ms Gilmour also hit out at the shuttering of the Grangemouth oil refinery earlier this year, describing it as both “needless” and the dismantling of a “bulwark of UK energy security”.
“For years to come, we will need oil and gas to heat our homes and power our industries,” the union leader said.
“If we need it, and we have it, then we should produce it and allow workers to build families and communities on a successful and lucrative industry capable of underpinning energy supplies.”
The UK Government has been contacted for comment.
Business
Sotheby’s CEO sees ‘very strong demand’ ahead of $1.4 billion art auctions
The fall auction sales in New York next week are expected to top $1.4 billion, marking a 50% increase from last year and a potential rebound for the art market after three years of declines, according to art experts.
A star-studded lineup of famous trophy works — from a $150 million Gustav Klimt portrait to a multimillion-dollar gold toilet — will lead the auctions at Sotheby’s, Christie’s and Phillips next week. Often the most important week of the year for the art market, the sales follow stronger-than-expected results for recent sales in Paris and London and could restore confidence in the art market.
Dealers and auction executives said the improvement is being driven by stronger demand as well as better supply. Falling interest rates, soaring stock prices and trillions of dollars in wealth creation in both public and private markets in recent months are fueling greater confidence by wealthy buyers.
At the same time, a parade of ultra-rare masterpieces are starting to come cross the auction block as sellers become more confident in prices and bidding.
“All year long we’ve seen very strong demand in the art market,” said Charles Stewart, Sotheby’s CEO. “Our demand levels have been setting records, whether that’s bidders per lot or our hammer [prices] versus our low estimate or our sell-through rates. What we’ve seen more recently, though, is the supply catching up with the demand. Something’s definitely shifted in the last two months.”
The big headliners for the week come from the estates of Leonard Lauder — the billionaire heir to the Estée Lauder Companies — and Jay and Cindy Pritzker, of the Pritzker real estate dynasty. Sotheby’s is selling 55 works from the Lauder collection for a total of over $400 million. The works include Klimt’s colorful “Portrait of Elisabeth Lederer,” estimated at over $150 million, as well as two Klimt landscapes, one estimated at over $70 million and the other over $80 million. It also features six bronze Matisse sculptures and one of Edvard Munch’s famous “Midsummer Night” paintings.
This David Hockney work at Christie’s, “Christopher Isherwood and Don Bachardy,″ is estimated to go for $40 million to $60 million.
Crystal Lau | CNBC
The Pritzker collection includes 37 works estimated at over $120 million, including a Van Gogh still life estimated at more than $40 million.
Christie‘s has several sought-after works estimated at between $40 million and $60 million, including Monet’s “Nymphéas” water lily painting, David Hockney’s “Christopher Isherwood and Don Bachardy.” It’s also offering Mark Rothko’s “No. 31 (Yellow Stripe)” for more than $50 million.
“I think next week will be a giant sigh of relief that we’ve gotten over the worst,” said Andrew Fabricant, the veteran art advisor. “The mood is better, and given the quality of what they’ve got, I think they’ll do well. You don’t need 20 years of art history to understand the appeal of those Klimt paintings.”
Sotheby’s will benefit in part from the opening last week of its new global headquarters at the famous Breuer Building in Manhattan. The building — considered a masterpiece of brutalist architecture, strategically located on the Madison Avenue luxury shopping corridor — is already packed with crowds, with more than 10,000 visiting the exhibit as of Wednesday. The buzz and visibility is core to Sotheby’s strategy of attracting new collectors and educating the next generation of bidders about about art and culture.
“This is a tremendously important moment for us,” Stewart said of the building’s opening. “I think a number of our consigners [sellers] were also excited by the opportunity.”
Still, after three years of declines in auction sales, some dealers and art experts wonder whether next week’s rebound will have staying power. As older collectors fade from the auction scene, the next generation of buyers and collectors is showing different priorities and tastes.
While older collectors often sought status trophies and “wall power” by well-recognized artists, younger collectors are leaning toward emerging artists and lower-priced works. The generational divide has led to two different art markets — a multimillion-dollar high-end that’s been declining and a vibrant lower-priced market that’s attracting younger collectors.
Sales for works priced over $10 million fell 44% in the first half of the year compared to 2024, and plunged 72% from the post-pandemic peak of 2022, according to the Bank of America Private Bank “Art Market Update.” No works sold at auction for more than $50 million in the first half of this year, compared with 13 sales at that price point in the same period in 2022.
In 2024, dealers with sales of less than $250,000 reported a 17% increase in sales, compared with a 9% decline for those in the $10 million-plus segment.
“The more mature collectors are aging out and the next cohort may come with different motivations or tastes,” said Drew Watson, head of art services at Bank of America. “Many of that older generation of collectors over the past 30 years — the hedge fund principals, the private equity investors — are getting to the point where they are not as focused on accumulation and more focused on succession and transition.”
Watson said the declines in auction market totals, due largely to weakness at the very high end, has obscured an increasingly thriving gallery and art fair scene filled with younger collectors buying and learning about new artists. Younger collectors are also more interested in forging direct connections with artists rather than buying in the secondary market or auctions.
“Collecting as a lifestyle seems to be on the rise,” he said. “The art fairs are packed.”
Sotheby’s will be auctioning off Maurizio Cattelan’s solid gold toilet, called “America” as part of its fall auction.
Crystal Lau | CNBC
The sales next week will also feature a work that’s already sparked global debate over wealth and art. Sotheby’s will be auctioning off “America,” a solid gold toilet made by the Italian artist Maurizio Cattelan, who also created the infamous duct-taped banana (titled “Comedian”) that sold at Sotheby’s for $6.2 million.
“America” is one of two toilets that Cattelan made from 100 kilograms (about 220 pounds) of solid 18-karat gold. One version went on exhibit at the Guggenheim Museum in New York in 2016, where it was installed in a bathroom and attracted long lines of visitors.
It later went on display at the Blenheim Palace in England, where it was stolen and assumed to have been melted down for the gold.
The second one, which is the work being sold, went to a private collector. The New York Times reported that Steve Cohen, the hedge fund billionaire and New York Mets owner, is the seller.
While Sotheby’s hasn’t given a sales estimate for “America,” the gold itself would be worth about $13 million with today’s prices, which have soared over the past year.
Stewart said “America,” like “Comedian,” is a true cultural phenomena.
“What I loved about the banana last year was how it stirred discussion,” he said. “Everywhere I went around the world, people had a point of view on it, whatever it might be, and it prompted so much animated debate. I think ‘America’ will be much the same, because there’s so many different threads of the work that are fascinating — whether it is the object itself, whether it is the title, whether it is the gold, whether it is the art-historical references. When you put it all together, it’s just something that’s tremendously exciting.”
Many dealers and art experts take a different view, saying “America” is pure spectacle rather than art, and says little about serious collectors or artists.
“It’s a headline grabber that has nothing to do with art whatsoever,” Fabricant said.
Business
‘Failings at every level’ led to botched insulation scheme
A botched net zero scheme which has caused damp issues in thousands of homes was the result of ”serious failings at every level”, a UK government official has said.
Last month, the National Audit Office found that 98% of the 23,000 homes that had external wall insulation installed under two separate schemes will result in damp and mould if left unaddressed.
Its damning report also found that hundreds of homeowners’ health and safety had been put at immediate risk because the insulation work had not been done correctly.
Appearing before Parliament, Jeremy Pocklington, the most senior civil servant at the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero, said the failures were “unacceptable”.
These schemes commonly used external wall insulation, which involved fixing insulation boards to the exterior brickwork and then applying render to make it waterproof. It can go wrong when water becomes trapped behind the boards.
The damage also applies to about a third of homes which had internal insulation installed under the ECO4 scheme and the Great British Insulation Scheme, available to residents in England, Scotland and Wales.
More than three million homes have been insulated under a variety of government schemes over the last 20 years. Billions of pounds of public money have been spent on it.
Appearing before the Public Accounts Committee, Mr Pocklington began his evidence session by saying his thoughts were with the families and households affected.
The chair of the Public Accounts Committee, Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown MP, said the NAO report findings were the ”worst” he’d seen in 12 years of chairing the committee and accused the department of negligence.
Mr Pocklington said there had been poor oversight of the ECO4 and the Great British Insulation Scheme by Trustmark, the body responsible for overseeing the quality of the insulation work.
However, he added that the department ”did not oversee these schemes in the way that they should have done”.
Independent MP Rupert Lowe said this amounted to ”systemic failure of a government department”.
Acknowledging this remark, Mr Pocklington, said ”there are serious failings at every level of the system that are systemic”, and that the department “didn’t take enough steps to ensure that Trustmark was set up to deliver appropriately”.
Simon Ayers, the chief executive of Trustmark, earlier told the panel of MPs that his organisation had raised the issue of faulty installations with the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero from late-2022, but they were “informal operational meetings” and minutes were not taken.
Mr Pocklington explained that the department had been under pressure after dealing with the Covid pandemic and the effect on energy prices of the war in Ukraine.
Labour MP Clive Betts asked Mr Pocklington whether the department would take responsibility for all of the homeowners that have been ”badly treated” under all of the government’s energy efficiency schemes, not just those carried out since 2022.
Mr Pocklington said the focus was on the two schemes which had taken place since 2022.
Asked by Mr Betts if the government would “stand behind” affected homeowners, Mr Pocklington said the government’s responsibility was ”to ensure that the schemes we put in place operate effectively and that there are appropriate systems of consumer protection in place”.
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