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Own goal — How PetroSA’s multibillion-rand offshore gas deal was thwarted by an unpaid soccer player

Equator Holdings told PetroSA it could raise R1bn to refurbish offshore gas infrastructure. Instead, it was liquidated for failing to pay a R35,000 a month salary to a soccer player.
Own goal — How PetroSA’s multibillion-rand offshore gas deal was thwarted by an unpaid soccer player



In December 2023, PetroSA entrusted a potential R21.6-billion gas infrastructure deal to notorious wheeler dealer Lawrence Mulaudzi.

Three months later the deal was dead, killed not by environmental groups or Russian sanctions, but by 34-year-old soccer player Cheslyn Chase Jampies.

Last year, Jampies asked the Gauteng Division of the High Court in Johannesburg to liquidate Tshakhuma Tsha Madzivhandila Football Club (TTM), after the club failed to pay his R35,000 a month salary.

With time and interest, Jampies’ claim against the club rose from R70,000 to R725,000.

TTM, which is owned by Mulaudzi, failed to oppose the case. And on 7 March this year, the court ordered that TTM be placed in final liquidation.

Records from the National Soccer League, filed in Jampies’ case, show that Tshakhuma Tsha Madzivhandila Football Club (Pty) Ltd is NOT the legal entity behind the club. Instead, Mulaudzi registered the club in the name of his investment company, Equator Holdings (Pty) Ltd.

This is where PetroSA and the R21.6-billion gas deal comes in.

Gas baron


In January 2023, Equator bid for the R3.7-billion contract to refurbish PetroSA’s gas-to-liquids refinery in Mossel Bay (RFP 0001/2023). That deal went to Russia’s Gazprombank Africa. But Equator bid for and won an even bigger contract: RFP 0004/2023 to finance and refurbish PetroSA’s offshore gas infrastructure, at a potential cost of R21.6-billion.

A joint venture between Equator and another company, Theza Oil and Gas, was also appointed to develop PetroSA’s offshore gas wells.

The two deals meant Mulaudzi was poised to become one of the most significant players in the gas industry, with control over offshore gas wells and the infrastructure to bring the gas onshore.

In our original investigation, we pointed out that Equator had been eliminated from the Gazprombank tender – scoring 0 out of 100 – because the “[a]uthenticity of entity could not be established”, making the decision to hand it two other deals highly suspect.

Read more: PetroSA taps notorious political operator for massive offshore gas deal

In January this year, Mulaudzi told us: “We are … pleased as a company to enter into this partnership with PetroSA which will provide security of gas supply and unlock infrastructure bottlenecks in the energy space for [the] South African economy… We have every intention to deliver, and we will!”

What was not apparent at the time was that PetroSA had just awarded two multibillion-rand gas infrastructure deals to a soccer club that now plays in the third division Motsepe League.

No assets worth mentioning


In terms of the Gas Financing and Infrastructure agreement, signed with PetroSA in December, Mulaudzi’s Equator Holdings would have until 8 June 2024 to show that it could secure a funding commitment for the refurbishment project, estimated by PetroSA to require R21.6-billion.

Unbeknown to PetroSA, however, Equator Holdings could not even come up with R725,000 to pay Jampies.

“If you can’t properly run a football club that’s worth about a few million, how are you going to juggle R21.6-billion?” the former Bafana Bafana player told us in a recent interview.

Back in 2020, TTM had bought the Premier League status of Bidvest Wits for a rumoured fee of R35-million, but two years later, the club was struggling. 

“The first month came, our monies were short. Obviously, me as the club captain, I stand as the mouthpiece between the management and the players,” Jampies told us.

“When we go and ask, ‘Hey, what do we tell the boys?’ Because we are the senior players, they come to us to help them financially… so we needed answers and we never got that. We were brushed off many times, we were told, ‘just hang on’.”

Meanwhile, Mulaudzi, the club’s owner and chairman, continued spending lavishly. Jampies recalled how a member of the club’s management team came in one morning “reeking of alcohol and he has the audacity to tell us, the chairman was at a funeral [this] weekend and spent R200,000 on alcohol”.

In October 2022, TTM stopped paying Jampies altogether.

“Every piece of furniture I’ve accumulated over the past 14 years, I had to sell one by one because I didn’t have an income… I was being ignored, I was being lied to … the chairman wasn’t taking my calls, he just rubs it off,” he told us.

He added: “I lost my cars, I lost my furniture, I lost my bed, I lost my TV, my microwave, every fork, spoon and knife I had to sell.”

In January 2023, just as Mulaudzi was gearing up to bid for PetroSA’s multibillion-rand gas deals, Jampies filed a case with the Dispute Resolution Chamber of the National Soccer League, which governs all the leagues in the country.

“The reason I pursued this is because football is all I know,” he told us. “I cry, I bleed, I talk football, that is my life… And I cannot sit back and allow some incompetent people that doesn’t have any remorse… to just take it from me in the space of four months. I cannot do that.”

In June 2023, the National Soccer League ordered TTM to pay Jampies his outstanding salary plus damages. 

The ruling, authored by advocate Fana Nalane SC, is damning. Among other issues, he raised doubts about the authenticity of a mutual separation agreement that TTM produced as evidence. Jampies had previously refused to sign such an agreement and denied that it was his signature on the document.

The panel agreed, ruling that TTM had “failed … to prove the authenticity” of the document and instructed the team to pay Jampies R725,000.

When TTM failed to pay, Jampies’ lawyers asked the National Soccer League for a copy of the club’s legal membership form, which showed that the club was registered to Equator Holdings trading as Tshakhuma Tsha Madzivhandila Football Club.

With this in hand, they asked the high court to liquidate Equator Holdings. 

In his affidavit, Jampies told the court: “[Equator’s] non-payment of the amount due to me provides confirmation of [Equator’s] distressed financial position … I hold no security for my claim and its apparent that [Equator] does not possess any assets worth mentioning.”

The high court agreed and ordered that Equator be wound up by a liquidator. Ewan Simmonds, one of the lawyers now representing the liquidated company, told us: “In terms of the liquidation process, the order is not provisional, but is final and no one has filed any appeal against it. To date we have not received a response from the director, Mr Lawrence Mulaudzi.”

AmaBhungane also had no luck in reaching Equator. Calls, emails and WhatsApps to Mulaudzi and one of the other directors went unanswered.

Clueless


Embarrassingly, it appears that PetroSA was in the dark about Equator’s liquidation.

In terms of the agreement, Equator had 180 days – until June this year – to “deliver satisfactory evidence to PetroSA that it has secured the financing for the refurbishment project”.

“In line with our internal policies, satisfactory evidence includes proof that funds have been secured and are immediately available, without any conditions, from a reputable financier/bank or partner,” PetroSA told Mulaudzi.

Despite Equator’s liquidation, Mulaudzi appears to have written to PetroSA confirming that Equator had secured R1-billion in funding from Black Mountain Investment Management, a little-known asset management company.

However, in a letter dated 19 June 2024 – a copy of which we have seen – PetroSA told Mulaudzi that this was not good enough and noted that “the letter appears to be a mere expression of interest to provide funds, which falls short of the evidence required under the Agreement. There is no evidence of the financial capacity of [Black Mountain] from a reputable bank or financier or a credit-approved/binding term sheet.”

Although the original tender documents estimated that $1.2-billion would be needed for the refurbishment project, it appears that PetroSA was willing to settle for R1.2-billion plus contingencies. Black Mountain’s unconfirmed offer of R1-billion “falls short of the amount required”, PetroSA said.

PetroSA also raised concerns about the technical partner Equator had secured: Khewija Engineering & Construction, based in Fourways. 

Until 2016, Khewija operated under the name Kellogg Brown & Root South Africa. Kellogg Brown & Root is a controversial US defence and construction firm; its employees have been implicated in everything from sexual assault to human trafficking, while the firm has been accused of exposing US soldiers to asbestos-contaminated “burn pits” in Iraq and Afghanistan.

In 2015, the local division of Kellogg Brown & Root was bought out and the company changed its name to Khewija. In its 19 June letter, PetroSA asked Equator to provide “CVs of the key personnel” as well as “evidence of Khewija’s track record of project execution in similar environments from 2015 (since management buyout) to date”.

According to PetroSA’s letter, Equator signed an agreement with Khewija to execute PetroSA’s offshore gas infrastructure project. Despite this, online company records show that Khewija was placed in final liquidation three weeks later. Phone calls to its office went unanswered and emails bounced back. 

Last week, we asked PetroSA if the deal with Equator Holdings was still going ahead.

If the deal had been cancelled, we asked, when was it cancelled and why? And if the deal was still on, had Equator been able to come up with the money?

In a formal letter, PetroSA responded to our questions by saying, “No comment”, “No comment” and “No comment”.

In follow-up questions, we asked about the 19 June letter and pointed out that it appeared that PetroSA had awarded a critical gas infrastructure deal, potentially worth R21.6-billion, to a soccer team. 

The response: “PetroSA cannot comment on [this] enquiry”.

Developing the offshore gas industry is key to minister Gwede Mantashe’s plan to make the Eastern Cape the “gas capital” of the country.

The plan is not going well: TotalEnergies has hinted at plans to walk away from its long-held interest in the offshore gas block 11B/12B, and Gazprombank is yet to make good on its promise to provide the funding necessary to restart PetroSA’s gas-to-liquids refinery.

Last week Mantashe turned to the well-worn trope of blaming civil society for the gas industry’s woes, telling Parliament that it was imperative to “challenge the foreign-funded NGOs that oppose every initiative to explore oil and gas,” which he said “deject investments in this sector”. DM

Comments

Gary De Sousa Jul 25, 2024, 11:31 PM

You could not make yhis story up in lala land or any of those involved have no brains or buisness brains. How can the regime not have oversight of this size of project

Charles Parr Jul 26, 2024, 08:56 AM

They probably did have oversight of this and congratulated themselves on putting their best brains in there.

Senzo Moyakhe Jul 28, 2024, 09:55 AM

They have brains?

Bucs Mageza Africa Jul 28, 2024, 01:16 PM

regime has oversight just captured individuals acting in nefarious ways

Bucs Mageza Africa Jul 28, 2024, 01:17 PM

my grandfather used to tell me an Ant can kill an elephant,,

gfmmodels Jul 28, 2024, 05:57 PM

Well the ant will be in for a BEEG surprise.

obi.ik Jul 29, 2024, 10:39 AM

If your father was good at history he would have used apartheid to buttress his point. He he would have told you how immigrant ants killed indigeneous elephants inside South Africa.

Charlie Victor Jul 26, 2024, 02:54 AM

Geez, the lengths the cadres will go to to loot... Scary thing is this is one that was picked up.

Niek Joubert Jul 26, 2024, 06:13 AM

This fixation on BEE since the Mbeki days is a recipe for disaster. When will they ever learn?

Walter Spatula Jul 27, 2024, 01:25 PM

They will never learn.

Iam Fedup Jul 26, 2024, 06:42 AM

PetroSA has been crooked ever since Don Mkwanazi took over almost 30 years ago. And, like fools, we keep paying…

Al Saville Jul 26, 2024, 08:57 AM

100%

dredges.girder0m Jul 26, 2024, 07:05 AM

What happened to ‘due diligence’? Management should be replaced because even considering partners like these tells you management knew..

obi.ik Jul 29, 2024, 10:44 AM

Nepotism and cronyism are mortal enemies to due diligence.

Relentless One Jul 26, 2024, 08:09 AM

Cadres, Cadres, Cadres....and all their crooked cronies and politicians AGAIN......

Heinrich Holt Jul 26, 2024, 08:20 AM

Sometimes I wonder who is the greatest fool. The fool, or the one who gets fooled. Or is it just us, the mere voter and taxpayer, who gets fooled.

Klaus Muller Jul 28, 2024, 12:32 PM

We are trapped in an insidious system, like "Best Constitution" which cooked up this malignant piece of "all for politicians, nothing for taxpayers"

henk schagen Jul 26, 2024, 08:26 AM

Please keep tracking this. It is astonishing that management can be so inept/corrupt!

gora.ebrahim Jul 26, 2024, 08:36 AM

You simply cannot make this up. The whole saga is shocking and leaves me cold. PetroSa should be charged for incompetence. These types of deals have become endemic in South Africa.

Cachunk Jul 26, 2024, 08:39 AM

Utter, complete, sheer incompetence from the deployed cadre morons.

carlbotha Jul 26, 2024, 08:45 AM

moer n boer ... ... en kap n ... .... kadre

Lynda Tyrer Jul 26, 2024, 08:53 AM

Thank goodness for Jampies and as for Mulaudzi he is a con. Time Mantashe was removed from his post he is only looking for money to loot. As per usual he blames others for his lack of background checks.

Rae Earl Jul 26, 2024, 08:54 AM

Ramaphosa, in parliament, told the recipient of stolen VBS money Julius Malema, to speak to the ever useless inept and corrupt Gwede Mantashe if he wanted guidance in his life. What hope is there for our mineral resources under its prime wrecking ball Mantashe? What hope for Juju? Shame on you Prez!

William Dryden Jul 26, 2024, 08:55 AM

What is the government doing about this scam, surely there must be an oversight committee to check what is going on, or is Mantashe to incompetent to do this.

Alley Cat Jul 26, 2024, 09:45 AM

Haha!! I'm assuming your question about Mantashe's incompetence is a rhetorical one? He has been proven time and time again to be incompetent!

D'Esprit Dan Jul 26, 2024, 09:12 AM

"making the decision to hand it two other deals highly suspect." No, corrupt to the core. Surely bidders have to produce financials to show solvency and balance sheet capable of undertaking ventures of this size? Standard practice for construction projects of any significant size.

Indeed Jhb Jul 26, 2024, 11:54 AM

Yes it is a requirement. But it is tricked off a list of stuff to submit. That is called compliance with requirements

Amadeus Figaro Jul 28, 2024, 08:47 AM

I have often wondered where are the bid, advance payment bonds etc.

Hilary Morris Jul 26, 2024, 09:39 AM

My initial reaction was 'only in South Africa! Then came to Gwede Manatashe's name and all became clear. Only in SA......

marionjpeters Jul 26, 2024, 12:36 PM

Agreed

ndoda.biyela Jul 26, 2024, 09:40 AM

How could this even happen, it really sounds like the authorities do not take the people of the country serious. Why were grossly incompetent people allowed to run PerroSA? Shame on Govt, really insulting to citizens.

cracklin62 Jul 26, 2024, 09:40 AM

Another of many own goals.

cracklin62 Jul 26, 2024, 09:40 AM

Another of many own goals.

Hari Seldon Jul 26, 2024, 09:53 AM

its totally unbelievable - what a bunch of thieves and clowns. Zapiro we need your magic to try illustrate this circus. Hope the soccer player gets his money plus more. What makes me angry is there are decent human beings under all this being exploited.

Anthony Krijger Jul 26, 2024, 10:04 AM

This boggles my brain. I could not have thought up a more bizarre way of running an SOE. No one will take the blame, the ANC will point fingers at anyone but themselves. No one will be fired as no one ever gets to account for themselves in this Banana Republic we live in.

Peter Hartley Jul 26, 2024, 10:14 AM

I sometimes have to shake my head to check that I am not dreaming. Yet another story that is so unbelievable. Are those now running PetrosSA totally incompetent? And who is the Minister responsible? Oh of course it is Mantashe isn't it! Enough said. How he keeps his job I do not know.

Les19 Jul 26, 2024, 06:24 PM

He keeps his job in the same way as Cele, and other inept cadres kept their jobs in ramaphosa's previous cabinet. A fish rots from the head down.

Adenira Jul 26, 2024, 10:56 AM

It's an extraordinary story and one which would have been dismissed as made up, hadn't some serious research been done.

Albert.questiaux Jul 26, 2024, 10:58 AM

No simple background check made or previous project verification done before awarding a R21 600 000 000 contract. Staggering management incompetence. I'll get my five year old granddaughter to apply for a contract at Petro SA. Seems there an excellent chance of getting it.

Pieter van de Venter Jul 26, 2024, 11:23 AM

Two points that came to mind : 1. Obviously, the appointment was made on instruction from senior politicians - Gwede, et al 2. It becomes clearer by the day that BEE is the critical ingredient for stae capture, fraud and theft.

Ifitwalkslikeaduck P Jul 26, 2024, 11:33 AM

Gwede still retaining this ministerial portfolio is absolute pure (sad) comedy. The director general of the department and management of PetroSA have the thickest skins and the stickiest of looting hands. 12 odd years ago I heard that this funding was promised to the Guptas....so not surprised.

Indeed Jhb Jul 26, 2024, 12:01 PM

Same old same old. That is how SOE's are run. Incompetent connected people and when the money is gone - no problem we will ask for more. Scrap B3E3 it's killing us

Pierre Mare Jul 26, 2024, 01:12 PM

one name said it all - Gwede Mantashe

schalkschut Jul 28, 2024, 03:35 PM

Yes!

gomi.thobejane Jul 26, 2024, 05:27 PM

Corruption in PetroSA still continues unabated. Sickening.

Aluwani Nengovhela Jul 26, 2024, 08:11 PM

1. Mulaudzi is a seasoned tenderpreneur in the oil and gas space. He's also a BEE shareholder in Total South Africa. 2. Mulaudzi is a very flashy businessman whom at one stage used to spend R200k or more on alcohol every weekend. He also dated another flashy businesswoman, Shawn Mkhize.

Easy Does It Jul 26, 2024, 09:08 PM

Maybe there is a method in the madness. SASOL I believe will stop producing "LNG" from 2025 so there is definitely going to be a shortage. Now if the off shore gas infrastructure fails then we would have to go Gwede and ask if we could please frack to help the country. Get the popcorn out.

Cachunk Jul 27, 2024, 12:38 AM

gwede must be the stupidest cadre in the anc circus of clowns, which means he has finally come first at something.

trevorgray8 Jul 27, 2024, 02:37 PM

WHAT is our president actually doing about the myriad of train wrecks unfolding in front of our eyes???

Senzo Moyakhe Jul 28, 2024, 10:01 AM

Such is Greedy Mantoush's level of avarice and immorality he would likely defeat Sauron in the cesspits of Mount Doom, with Sauron wearing the One Ring...

schalkschut Jul 28, 2024, 03:28 PM

You can not help to laugh at the incompetence of the executive of such an important SOE as Petro SA to award a billion(!) Rand contract to a bancrupt soccer club! And where was the minister when such a big contract was negotiated?

Jacci Babich Jul 30, 2024, 05:22 PM

Gwede Mantashe must go. With such big money and shady deals involved the stink of corruption is in the air. Environmental matters matter more!