Quarterly report pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d)

Revenue

v3.19.3
Revenue
9 Months Ended
Sep. 30, 2019
Revenue [Abstract]  
Revenue 6. REVENUE

Substantially all of the Company’s revenues are attributable to its Gabon operations. Revenues from contracts with customers are generated from sales in Gabon pursuant to a COSPA. These contracts have been and will be renewed or replaced from time to time either with the current buyer or another buyer. Since August 2015, the COSPA has been executed with the same buyer, initially for a one-year period, with amendments to extend the period through January 31, 2018. On February 1, 2018, a new COSPA was entered into with this same customer, which terminated January 31, 2019. A new COSPA with a different customer was executed for the period from February 2019 through January 2020.

The COSPA with the third party is renegotiated near the end of the contract term and may be entered into with a different buyer or the same buyer going forward. Except for internal costs (that are expensed as incurred), there are no upfront costs associated with obtaining a new COSPA.

Customer sales generally occur on a monthly basis when the customer’s tanker arrives at the FPSO and the crude oil is delivered to the tanker through a connection. There is a single performance obligation (delivering oil to the delivery point, i.e. the connection to the customer’s crude oil tanker) that gives rise to revenue recognition at the point in time when the performance obligation event takes place. This is referred to as a “lifting”. Liftings can take one to two days to complete. The intervals between liftings are generally 30 days; however, changes in the timing of liftings will impact the number of liftings that occur during the period. Therefore, the performance obligation attributable to volumes to be sold in future liftings are wholly unsatisfied, and there is no transaction price allocated to remaining performance obligations. The Company has utilized the practical expedient in ASC Topic 606-10-50-14(a) that

states that the Company is not required to disclose the transaction price allocated to remaining performance obligations if the variable consideration is allocated entirely to a wholly unsatisfied performance obligation. 

The Company accounts for production imbalances as a reduction in reserves. The volumes sold may be more or less than the volumes to which the Company is entitled based on the its ownership interest in the property, and the Company would recognize a liability if its existing proved reserves were not adequate to cover an imbalance.

For each lifting completed under the COSPA, payment is made by the customer in U.S. Dollars by electronic transfer within thirty days after the date of the bill of lading. For each lifting of oil, the price is based on an average of Dated Brent in the month of lifting adjusted for location and market forces.

Generally, no significant judgments or estimates are required as of a given filing date with regard to applicable price or volumes sold because all of the parameters are known with certainty related to liftings that occurred in the recently completed calendar quarter. As such, the Company deems this situation to be characterized as a fixed price situation.

In addition to revenues from customer contracts, the Company has other revenues related to contractual provisions under the Etame PSC. The Etame PSC is not a customer contract, and therefore the associated revenues are not within the scope of ASC 606. The terms of the Etame PSC includes provisions for payments to the government of Gabon for: royalties based on 13% of production at the published price, a shared portion of “profit oil” determined based on daily production rates, and a carried working interest of 7.5% (increasing to 10% beginning June 20, 2026). For both royalties and profit oil, the Etame PSC provides that the government of Gabon may settle these obligations in-kind, i.e. taking crude oil barrels, rather than with cash payments.

In the current and prior periods, royalties owed to the government of Gabon were settled through a monthly cash payment. In October 2019, the government of Gabon notified the Company that it was electing to take its royalties in-kind beginning in January 2020.

With respect to the government’s share of profit oil, the Etame PSC provides that the corporate income tax liability is satisfied through the payment of profit oil. In the condensed consolidated statements of operations, the government’s share of revenues from profit oil is reported in revenues with a corresponding amount reflected as current income tax expense. Prior to February 1, 2018, the government did not take any of its share of profit oil in-kind. These revenues have been included in revenues to customers as the Company entered into the contract with the customer to sell the crude oil and was subject to the performance obligations associated with the contract. For the in-kind sales by the government beginning February 1, 2018, these are not considered revenues under a customer contract as the Company is not a party to the contracts with the buyers of this crude oil. However, consistent with the reporting of profit oil in prior periods, the amount associated with the profit oil under the terms of the Etame PSC is reflected as revenue with an offsetting amount reported as a current income tax expense. Payments of the income tax liability is reported in the period in which the government takes its profit oil in-kind, i.e. the period in which it lifts the crude oil. The only in-kind payment in the current year was $7.3 million and occurred with the April 2019 lifting. As of September 30, 2019 and December 31, 2018, the foreign taxes payable attributable to the government’s share of profit oil was $3.2 million and $3.3 million, respectively.

Certain amounts associated with the carried interest in the Etame PSC discussed above are reported as revenues. In this carried interest arrangement, the carrying parties, which include the Company and other working interest owners, are obligated to fund all of the working interest costs that would otherwise be the obligation of the carried party. The carrying parties recoup these funds from the carried interest party’s revenues.

The following table presents revenues from contracts with customers as well as revenues associated with the obligations under the Etame PSC.

Three Months Ended September 30,

Nine Months Ended September 30,

2019

2018

2019

2018

Revenue from customer contracts:

(in thousands)

Sales under the COSPA

$

19,660

$

18,931

$

62,420

$

74,587

Gabonese government share of Profit Oil

2,193

Other items reported in revenue not associated with customer contracts:

Gabonese government share of Profit Oil taken in-kind

9,385

7,347

9,385

Carried interest recoupment

511

573

1,951

1,929

Royalties

(2,568)

(3,623)

(9,120)

(10,757)

Total revenue, net

$

17,603

$

25,266

$

62,598

$

77,337