Total Deepwater Oil Block Sale |
Ejiofor Alike with agency report
France’s Total SA, Europe’s second largest oil company, has put one of its offshore Nigerian oil fields up for sale for the second time, the company said, after a 2012 deal with Sinopec Corp of China failed.
Total
has hired BNP Paribas to find buyers for its Usan deepwater oil field located
in Oil Mining Lease (OML) 138, which could be worth about $2.5 billion,
according to sources familiar with the matter.
“We have selected an advisor to pursue the sale process of
Usan,” a spokeswoman for Total was quoted by Reuters as stating.
BNP Paribas declined to comment.
Usan is
not expected to be an easy sale for Total because deepwater exploration
requires significant investment and the new owner’s returns could be limited if
Nigeria raises taxes on foreign investor profits following the passage of the
Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB).
Before
deciding to sell the asset, which is about 100 km off the Nigerian coast, Total
was planning to drill several horizontal deepwater wells and build a deep
offshore drilling rig.
“Anything
in Nigeria is a tough sell,” said a London-based sector banker. “And anything
with capex (capital expenditure) is even tougher these days. Very few players
would be willing to acquire assets that have big investment commitments
attached.”
Total
said in November 2012 it had sold its 20 per cent interest in the field to
China’s Sinopec for about $2.5 billion in cash. It is not known why the sale
failed.
The
Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) is the OML 138 concession
holder. Other partners include Chevron, ExxonMobil and Nexen, which is owned by
Chinese state company CNOOC Ltd.
Total is
working on several asset disposals to meet a $10 billion 2015 cash flow
generation target. The French group is seeking to raise about $2.5 billion
through the sale of its Super Glu maker Bostik, Reuters reported.
A deal for the Usan field may have to involve a local company
because Nigeria, Africa’s top oil producer, is renewing efforts to recoup the
benefits from its oil and gas sector.
But few Nigerian players would have the money and ability to complete the necessary drilling and building works, several sector bankers said.
This means Total’s hopes may lie again in the hands of Asian buyers like China’s CNOOC, which already has an interest in the Usan field, or India’s ONGC and Indian Oil.
International oil and gas majors are not expected to show interest because most of them are under pressure from shareholders to cut capital expenditure and improve dividends. Most are seeking to divest from Nigerian onshore fields instead.
Earlier
this year, ConocoPhillips sold its indigenous operations to Nigerian oil
company Oando for $1.5 billion.
Chevron
is also in the process of selling assets in Nigeria and Shell is still in the
process of selling four oil fields in the country.
Taleveras
and Transcorp are among the best-placed Nigerian potential buyers because they
have the strongest financial firepower, said one of the sources.
A sector
banker said state-backed NNPC could also be interested, though it already has a
number of commitments with foreign investors, Oando is digesting the
ConocoPhillips deal and Seplat, another indigenous operator, is focused on
Chevron’s assets.
“(Total)
needs a couple of local players with deep pockets. The international banks
aren’t showing as much interest as they were, and the local banks no longer
have capacity to raise that kind of debt,” said a local industry source.
Commodity
traders and miners such as Glencore or Mercuria could also be interested, in
theory, as they have been actively hunting for oil and gas assets to diversify
from volatile mining operations, said several sector bankers.
But
trading houses may not have the required expertise to operate deepwater assets,
said one of the bankers.
Glencore
and Mercuria were among the short-listed bidders for Shell’s Nigerian energy
assets worth about $3 billion, but they lost out to the Taleveras/Aiteo Group,
a more aggressive bidder.
RBC
Capital Markets said in a report this week that Total was likely to miss
production and cash flow targets for next year as it grapples with project
disruptions. Total will updated the market at a mid-year outlook investors’ day
on September 22.
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