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NAOC-Oando Deals, Equinor – Project Odinmim Divestments Completed – NUPRC

 

SPDC-RENAISSANCE $2.4 billion deals undergoing due diligence.

As Seplat -ExxonMobil deal on course

The Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) has announced the completion of oil assets sale between NAOC and Oando, and Equinor – Project

The commission chief executive, Gbenga Komolafe, who declared this at the on-going NOG Energy Week in Abuja, maintained that the signing ceremonies for the two deals would come up any moment.

 

Komolafe also unveiled the latest information on $1.2 billion ExxonMobil downstream assets sale to Seplat Energy, maintaining that the NUPRC was yet to receive correspondence on ministerial consent for the deals.

Giving an update on Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) – RENAISSANCE $2.4 billion deals, Komolafe said that the deals were already undergoing due diligence.

 

“For some of you who were at the panel session on Monday, the Chairman of IPPG (Independent Petroleum Producers Group) raised issues about the need for us to give update on the divestments programmes on-going. Now, I am here to give you real-time update on the four major divestments in Nigeria.

“The NAOC-Oando divestment has been concluded. Signing ceremony will come up any moment.

“The EQIONOR – PROJECT ODINMIM project divestment also completed. For the SPDC – RENAISSANCE deals, documents have been submitted. Those documents are undergoing due diligence as we speak.

“On the MPN – SEPLAT expression of interest on commitment to apply for ministerial consent, we are yet to receive any as we speak

ExxonMobil- Spelat deals have been delayed for over two years.

The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC Ltd) in March finally signed a settlement agreement with Mobil Producing Nigeria Unlimited, Mobil
Development Nigeria Inc., and Mobil Exploration Nigeria Inc. resolving the long-standing compliance issues under Section 14 of the 2019 Joint Operating Agreement (JOA) contained in the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA).

This settlement was reached between the
management of the two organizations in March, thereby granting consent to the sale of ExxonMobil’s 40 percent stake in MPNU assets to Seplat Energy Plc for $1.3 billion.

The agreement is expected to pave the way for the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) to close the deal by granting the parties involved the Subject-to-Clearance Consent within 30 days.

The $1.2 billion deal between ExxonMobil and Seplat Energy involved the acquisition of a 40% stake in MPNU, which includes four oil mining licenses, more than 90 shallow-water and onshore platforms, and 300 producing wells.

However, the transaction has been delayed due to disputes between the parties and a court ruling that temporarily prevented ExxonMobil from selling its assets to Seplat Energy.

Nigerians’ Annual Spending On Fuelling, Servicing of Generators Hits N16.5Trn

Seplat Energy confirmed that it signed a Sale and Purchase Agreement with ExxonMobil Corporation for the deal, subject to regulatory and ministerial approvals.

The NNPC Ltd, which has been the holder of the Federal Government equity interests in all the joint venture operations in Nigeria, including MPNU, triggered a dispute over the deal.

The national oil company argued that ExxonMobil was entitled to have been given the pre-emptive right-of-first-refusal to the sale of its shares in Nigeria, citing its long history of a joint partnership with MPNU.

It also claimed that the assets in Nigeria were among its prime targets in its planned takeovers and acquisitions following divestment plans by the International Oil Companies (10Cs) from Nigeria.

In May 2022, NUPRC received a letter from Seplat Energy confirming the EXxonMobil share sale deal, the Commission however declined the mandatory regulatory ministerial consent to formalize the deal in the overriding national interest.

The NNPC then filed a case in the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja, to stop ExxonMobil from going any further with the transaction.

The court in July 2022, granted an ex-parte order of interim injunction in favour of NNPC, restraining ExxonMobil and its shareholders from completing the Share Sale and Purchase Agreement previously signed with Seplat Energy.

This dispute has persisted for over two years, however in June 2023, ExxonMobil top oficials led by Mr. Liam Mallon, President of ExxonMobil Upstream Company, visited President Bola Tinubu to discuss the deal, and the team also revisited the issue on Tuesday, May 28, 2024, when the paid another courtesy call on the President, to address other related matters.

In response to these visits, the President directed Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, Minister of State, Petroleum (Oil), to resolve the divestment issues between ExXonMobil and Seplat Energy and finalize the deal.

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