ATP blames moratorium for Chapter 11
By Emily Pickrell
"ATP expects its oil and gas operations to continue in the ordinary course throughout the reorganization process and sees the reorganization as a helpful step toward deleveraging the company to position it for future development of its assets," the company said in a news release on its filing in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Houston.
ATP said it has obtained a commitment for $618 million in debtor-in-possession financing - $250 million in additional funds and the rest for first lienholders.
That financing, along with revenue, will fund operating expenses during the Chapter 11 reorganization, the offshore oil and gas company said.
In the filing ATP listed assets of $3.6 billion and debts of $3.5 billion.
It said the moratorium from May to October of 2010 kept it from bringing six development wells into production.
"As of the date of this filing, three of these wells are yet to be drilled," the company said in the news release. "Had ATP been allowed to drill and complete these wells, ATP believes it would have provided a material production change in 2010 continuing to today."
ATP has said that it plans to pay its suppliers in full under normal terms for any goods and services provided after the filing date Friday.
ATP's shares closed at 46 cents Friday, down 94 percent from $7.65 at the year's start.
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