Nigeria may add 480,000 barrels to its daily crude oil output as the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited and ExxonMobil took a step towards resolving the disagreement surrounding the sale of the latter’s asset to Seplat Energy.
On Thursday, the NNPCL confirmed it had signed a settlement
agreement with ExxonMobil companies in Nigeria over the proposed divestment of
a 100 per cent interest in Mobil Producing Nigeria Unlimited to Seplat Energy
Offshore Limited.
This is coming barely 24 two days after President Bola
Tinubu announced his intervention in the debacle between NNPCL and ExxonMobil
hindering the sale of the assets to Seplat.
The Minister of States for Petroleum, Heineken Lokpobiri,
said recently that Nigeria had lost about $30bn in the past two and a half
years as a result of the unsuccessful divestment.
The minister expressed concerns that Nigeria was losing
about 480,000 barrels of crude oil per day due to the Seplat/ExxonMobil crisis.
He said the asset was producing about 600,000bpd until the
crisis began in 2022, saying the nation was losing millions of dollars daily.
ExxonMobil and Seplat Energy had in 2022 announced a $1.6bn
sales agreement deal that would see Seplat purchase ExxonMobil’s complete
shares in the NNPCL.
However, just when all hopes were high for the completion of
the deal, a letter dated May 16, 2022, by the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum
Regulatory Commission to ExxonMobil, stated that the deal could no longer hold
because the NNPCL had exercised its right of pre-emption first refusal on the
assets.
Right of pre-emption is a legal right to parties in a joint
venture to be the first to be considered for any planned sale or takeover of
assets in the JVs if either party chooses to trade them off.
According to reports, the NNPCL objected to the sale of
ExxonMobil’s equity to Seplat and insisted on exercising its first refusal
right after which the company reportedly made an offer above $1.6bn to
ExxonMobil.
But after about two years of litigation, there seems to be
an end in sight to the crisis.
According to the minister, the oil output from the asset
dropped to 120,000bpd down from 600,000bpd since the disagreement began.
Lokpobiri said, “For the past two and a half years, oil has
been hovering around $80 per barrel. 480,000bpd, multiply it by two and a half
years, it will give you about $34bn. If one asset was doing about 600,000
barrels; but because of the problems which we are trying to resolve, production
declined to 120,000 barrels, which means we’ve lost about 480,000bpd. Multiply
it by $80, every day you get about $240m; multiply it by two and half years; we
are talking of over $30bn. Inject that into our economy today, the dollar will
naturally drop. This exchange rate is a matter of demand and supply”.
The intervention of the President appears to have yielded
the desired results with the NNPCL announcing the signing of a settlement
agreement.
The energy company said, “Settlement agreement between NNPC
Ltd. and Mobil Producing Nigeria Unlimited, Mobil Development Nigeria Inc., and
Mobil Exploration Nigeria Inc. signed regarding the proposed divestment of a
100 per cent interest in Mobil Producing Nigeria Unlimited to Seplat Energy
Offshore Limited”.
It is believed that the resolution of the controversies
surrounding the sale of the asset to Seplat would add about 480,000 barrels to
Nigeria’s low oil production.
Seplat reacts
Alluding to this, Seplat’s Director of External Affairs and
Social Performance, Chioma Afe, described the development as a good step.
Afe, in an interview with The PUNCH on Thursday, noted that
the energy firm was waiting for approvals to be finalised, especially with the
regulators.
“What Exxon and NNPC announced is a step in the right
direction and it is a positive outcome,” Age stated.
She told our correspondent that the company did not have the
details of the agreement as of Thursday, saying she would not be able to speak
to its significance.
“What I can speak to is what we can take from that
statement, which is that it is a good step.
This was one hurdle. We needed NNPC and ExxonMobil to come to the table
to sign an agreement that we agreed to the divestment. Which is excellent,” she
explained.
Afe disclosed that other things need to take place,
including the regulatory approvals and final government stamp, saying“We are
waiting on that”.
Speaking on the impact of the resolution, Afe said it would
serve to grow the overall business of Seplat.
On the nation’s economy, she said, “It will add to the
number (of barrels) the country is seeking to be able to meet our OPEC number,
that is more important; what it will contribute to the national number. It will
contribute significantly to what the national output will be and that’s what we
are very keen on”.
ExxonMobil has yet to reply to an inquiry sent by our
correspondent as of press time.
The divestment deal between Seplat and ExxonMobil has been
stalled for over two years.
On July 12, 2022, NNPC blocked ExxonMobil’s asset sale to
Seplat.
The report stated that NNPC won a court decision temporarily
blocking ExxonMobil Corporation from selling assets in Nigeria to Seplat Energy
Plc.
A judge in Abuja had granted NNPC an “order of interim
injunction” on July 6, 2022, barring Exxon “from completing any divestment” in
a unit that ultimately operates four licenses in Nigeria.
The Lagos-based producer, Seplat, had agreed to acquire the
United States oil major’s subsidiary for at least $1.28bn in February.
The report stated that NNPC wished to block the transaction
and to take over the permits itself.
NNPC sued Mobil Producing Nigeria Unlimited on July 5, 2022,
asking the Federal High Court either to order that a dispute had occurred
between the parties over preemption rights or to order them to take the matter
to arbitration.
Seplat, which was not party to the lawsuit, had said its
deal with Exxon was “still valid” and the company “remains confident that the
matter will be brought to a proper conclusion by the law.”
But with the announcement of NNPC on Thursday, the coast may
be clear for the deal to be concluded.
The acquisition would give Seplat additional production of
about 95,000 barrels of oil equivalent a day from shallow-water assets that
Exxon operated in a joint venture with NNPC.
For more than a decade, international oil companies active
in Nigeria have been offloading large parts of their portfolio across the
country to domestic players, a trend that has recently accelerated. PUNCH
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