Z Energy is allowed to buy the Caltex and Challenge! petrol station chains but must sell 19 of its retail sites and one truck-stop, the Commerce Commission has ruled in a split decision that acknowledges possible retail price coordination between fuel retailers occurs in some regions.
The competition watchdog's delayed decision on the $785 million deal giving Z about 49 percent of the retail transport fuels market allows NZX-listed Z to buy the 'downstream' assets of American oil giant Chevron, which is exiting all but its exploration activities in New Zealand.
While the four commissioners considering the issue agreed there would be no substantial lessening of competition in six of the seven markets where Z and Chevron overlap, they split three-to-one on the decision to allow Z to buy the Chevron and Challenge! chains, with Dr Jill Walker dissenting even after determining 20 sites where Z will have to sell its existing operations because of competition concerns in 22 areas.
Z, which was formed from the retail and other downstream assets of Royal Dutch Shell's New Zealand operation, must close retail sites in the following locations: Northland (3), Auckland (1), Waikato (3), Bay of Plenty (1), Wellington (1), top of the South Island (2), Christchurch (3), Canterbury outside Christchurch (4), and one in Otago, with a truck stop in Kawerau also to be sold.
"In all other local areas, we concluded that the merged entity would face sufficient competition from remaining BP, Mobil, Gull and/or independent service station owners."