A National Oil Company`s Global Championship Journey
Transcription
A National Oil Company`s Global Championship Journey
A National Oil Company’s Global Championship Journey: Sharing by PETRONAS Disclaimer ©2012 PETROLIAM NASIONAL BERHAD (PETRONAS) All rights reserved. No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the permission of the copyright owner. PETRONAS makes no representation or warranty, whether expressed or implied, as to the accuracy or completeness of the facts presented. PETRONAS disclaims responsibility from any liability arising out of Reimagining Energy™ reliance on the contents of this publication. 1. Who we are 2. Corporate Enhancement Program (CEP) 3. The Culture survey OUR BEGINNINGS We were formed as the custodian & manager of Malaysia’s petroleum resources • PETRONAS was incorporated on 17 August 1974 under the Malaysian Companies Act 1965 • Exclusive rights to explore and produce petroleum resources within Malaysia. 1st Office in Jalan Dato’ Onn (1974) • 100% owned by the Government of Malaysia, PETRONAS reports directly to the Prime Minister. • The Production Sharing Contract (PSC) scheme was introduced in 1976 to replace the Concession system, giving PETRONAS greater control over the petroleum resources and its development. Total workforce: 15 3 FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE Ranked among the world’s top ten most profitable oil companies BY REVENUE Profit (USD billion) 50 44.5 BY PROFITS 68 12 41.1 40 30 20 30.9 26.9 25.7 21.9 20.1 17.1 16.3 14.1 10 0 Source : FORTUNE Global 500 July 2012 4 BUSINESS OPERATIONS Evolved from only 8 OPU’s in 1985 to more than 200 companies and subsidiaries globally Lubricants Petrochemical • • Exploration & Production • • • • • • • • • • • Malaysia Algeria Cameroon Chad Mauritania Mozambique South Sudan Sudan Australia Brunei Indonesia • • • • • • • • • • • M’sia‐Thai JDA Myanmar Vietnam Turkmenistan Uzbekistan Cuba Venezuela Iraq Oman Canada Egypt Malaysia Vietnam • • • • • • • Refineries • • Malaysia South Africa • • • • Malaysia Australia Egypt Canada *Petrochemical, lubricants and petroleum products Trading & Marketing* • • • • • • Retail • • • LNG China India Indonesia Philippines Thailand Europe North & Latin America • • • • • Malaysia Thailand Sudan & South Sudan Indonesia Philippines Vietnam South Africa Sub‐Saharan Africa India Indonesia Philippines Thailand UAE China Gas & Power • • • • • • • Malaysia Indonesia Singapore Thailand Uzbekistan Ireland United Kingdom 5 5 Source : Corporate Briefing Pack OUR JOURNEY PETRONAS growth has been impressive since three decades ago 39,000 50 Net profit RM billion 40 25,733 30 20 23,450 110 10 8,107 6,715 2,116 Manpower 13,136 0 1974 ‘76 ‘79 ‘84 ‘88 ‘95 ‘04 ‘09 2010 Period of Rapid Growth (’74‐’84) (’84‐’88) Business •Oil exploration • International and PSC strategy and Focus development •Upstream processes new businesses (depletion of local resources) (’88‐’95) • Expansion of domestic downstream business • International expansion (’95‐’10) (’10 ‐ Beyond) • Global LNG • Capability based Corporate global E&P • Superior Enhancement performance & Program (CEP) resilience 6 Source : A Vision Realised OUR DNA Our vision and mission being our DNA to deliver strong performance and geared for growth A Global Energy Champion known for its resilience and distinctiveness Mission Shared Values • We are a Business Entity • Loyalty • Petroleum is Our Core Business • Integrity • Our Primary responsibility is to develop and add value to the National Resource • Our Objective is to Contribute to the Well Being of the People and the Nation • Professionalism • Cohesiveness GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT Becoming more challenging and complex ‐ PETRONAS must reassess its way of doing business 1 Talent crunch Heightened uncertainty arising from geopolitical instability Oil prices remain on elevated trend with recurring volatility 7 2 3 6 Technology Rising commodities prices 5 breakthrough and innovation Source: PETRONAS Corporate Information and Research (CIRU); CSP 4 Costs remain stubbornly high ‘Resource Nationalism’/ Protectionism limits access to resources 8 CORPORATE ENHANCENEMT PROGRAM (CEP) Since 2010, Corporate Transformation is imperative to meet the fast changing global environment • Ensuring greater Ownership & Accountability • Elevating Governance & Transparency to international standards • Focusing resources to Core Business activities • Establishing clear and visible Succession Planning & Leadership Development Tan Sri Dato’ Shamsul Azhar Abbas President & Chief Executive Officer Dato’ Wee Yiaw Hin Executive Vice President Exploration & Production Datuk Anuar Ahmad Executive Vice President Gas & Power Datuk Wan Zulkiflee Wan Ariffin Chief Operating Officer & Executive Vice President Downstream) Datuk Manharlal Ratilal Executive Vice President Finance CEP Structural changes begin from the very pinnacle of PETRONAS … Reconstitution of the PETRONAS Board to drive greater strategic ownership Establishment of Board Committees (Governance & Risk, RemCo) to elevate standards of corporate governance Creation of EXCO to drive impactful integrated business strategies, apart from providing leadership bench & clear succession planning Refinement of organisational structure with greater focus on core business, bottom line, portfolio management & cost discipline More transparent practices such as quarterly financial release, announcements of plans, full Annual Report disclosures THE IMPETUS FOR STRUCTURAL CHANGE External volatilities compel the need to initiate real & meaningful change… Structural changes to drive strengthened culture of behaviours that are: Externally oriented Empowered & accountable Quick to make decisions Open & candid More risk tolerant PETRONAS FOCUS FROM INTERNAL TO EXTERNAL VIEW Measuring whether PETRONAS has attained HPC is strongly related to CEP & global championship CEP 2011 2010 “PETRONAS Organisational Culture Survey 2011” Measures attainment of HPC 2007 PETRONAS Tracking Survey (PTS) 2003 ‐ 2008 PETRONAS Tracking Survey (PTS) Measures mindset & behaviour People Commitment Survey (PCS) Measures employee commitment • Growing external orientation PETRONAS ORGANISATIONAL CULTURE SURVEY 2011 How do we go from good to great? PETRONAS WAY FORWARD Our manifestation of CEP Nonetheless, we must take cognisance of the increased scrutiny and requirement for enhanced level governance, professionalism and transparency. During the announcement, the Canadian Prime Minister declared that further foreign takeovers by state‐owned enterprises will be found “on an exceptional basis only”. I am personally convinced that similar level of scrutiny is to become a norm. I hope we all now understand the very need to transform is no longer an empty, baseless threat. In fact, this is the very reason that compelled me to introduce the Corporate Enhancement Programme (CEP) back in 2010. Moving forward, it is our level of professionalism; together with rigorous governance and transparency which will elevate PETRONAS global standing, thereby the ability to successfully secure future opportunities. Tan Sri Dato’ Shamsul Azhar Abbas Intranet announcement on PETRONAS’ acquisition of Canada’s Progress Energy, 11 Dec 2012 Thank You HRT Observable Characteristics1: Mindsets & Behaviours CEP expectations: • Externally oriented • Empowered and accountable • Quick to make decisions • Open and candid and • More risk tolerant Mindset Behaviour Traits (CCR) HPC Measurement EVP • Drive global vision and direction • Maximise business opportunities • Build business partnerships CCR = Credible (HR Brand) • Commit to learning and development • Strengthen interpersonal effectiveness CHRO HR Professionals Market Focus Cohesive • Customer & ness Employee Satisfaction Index Partner “Mindset” Adaptable1 Reliable Proactive1 Agile1 Enabler1 “Mindset” Solution – Provider1 Competent Compassion Operational Excellence Shared Values “Empowered within Boundaries1” • Lead change and innovation • Demonstrate professionalism and expertise • Get results • Foster collaboration and teamwork Shareholder Value Loyalty • POCS Consistent People Practices Leadership Behaviour Competencies Integrity • Vacancy Management • Capability Professio Development nalism • Succession Planning Organisational Learning • Competency level HR Corporate House is anchored along the 6 Imperatives supported by the Triple Plus elements, and the Enhanced HR Operating Model Strategic Enabler and Partner to the Business HR Vision Key Strategic Thrusts HR Imperatives Global workforce management Rapid Global Talent Sourcing Attraction and retention of talents Global Workforce & Leadership Mobility Differentiated Workforce Flexible Employee Benefits Partner/ service the business Customercentric Employee Experience Empowered Leaders with Clear Ownership and Accountability Triple Plus Business Savvy with Excellent Competencies to Deliver Value Performance Driven Culture and Customer-Focused Mindset Enhanced HR Operating Model Global HR Shared Services Enhanced HR Operating Model Strategy (COE) Performance Enhancement (COE and BU/OPU Partners) Transactions & Administration (BU/OPU Partners) Shared Services Center CHRO and End User Corporate Enhancement Program (CEP) The diversity of the Board and establishment of Board Committees seek to elevate standards of corporate governance Tan Sri Dato’ Shamsul Azhar Abbas President & Chief Executive Officer Tan Sri Dr Wan Abdul Aziz Wan Abdullah Non Independent Non Executive Director Tan Sri Dato’ Seri Hj Megat Najmuddin Datuk Seri Dr Hj Megat Khas Independent Non Executive Director, Chairman of the PETRONAS Board Governance & Risk Committee Datin Yap Siew Bee Datuk Muhammad Ibrahim Datuk Anuar Ahmad Non Independent Executive Director Non Executive Director Tan Sri Mohd Sidek Hassan Chairman of the Board Dato’ Wee Yiaw Hin Executive Director Independent Non Executive Director, Chairperson of the PETRONAS Remuneration Committee Datuk Wan Zulkiflee Wan Ariffin Executive Director Tan Sri Amirsham A Aziz Independent Non Executive Director Dato’ Mohamad Idris Mansor Independent Non Executive Director Krishnan CK Menon, FCA Datuk Manharlal Ratilal Datuk Mohd Omar Mustapha Independent Non Executive Director Independent Non Executive Director, Executive Director Chairman of the PETRONAS Board Puan Faridah Haris Hamid Audit Committee Company Secretary Encik Abdul Rahman Musa Joint Company Secretary 19