Roundtable Discussion; The Future of Mineral Sands. Watch the video here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Nigerian lawmakers to probe state oil firm deals without tenders

Fri, 03rd May 2013 18:54

* Activists say contracts given to firms with no experience

* Say transparent bidding process lacking

* State oil firm denies any wrongdoing

By Tim Cocks

LAGOS, May 3 (Reuters) - Nigerian lawmakers said that nextweek they will investigate deals in which the state-oil firmgave two local firms with no previous operating experience therights to make potentially billions of dollars from oilfieldswithout competitive bidding.

Local activists raised the issue with the parliament lastweek, while Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) hasdenied any wrongdoing.

"We have invited them (the activists) to come and table thematter and substantiate their claims ... We have also invitedNNPC to get their side," Senator Emmanuel Paulker, the head ofthe Senate committee on upstream oil and gas, told Reuters.

The lower house passed a motion late on Thursday toinvestigate the deals, which activists say cast doubt on pledgesby President Goodluck Jonathan's government to improvetransparency and end an era of backroom deals that havecharacterised Africa's biggest energy industry for decades.

Activists say multi-layered deals on oil blocks throughsecretive local companies, often lacking technical expertise,are at best inefficient and at worst an avenue for corruption.

In 2011, Septa Energy and newly formed Atlantic Energy,owned by tycoon Jide Omokore, signed "strategic partnershipagreements" with the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company(NPDC) to help it operate oil mining leases (OMLs) 4, 38, 41,and 30, 34, respectively.

Reuters obtained copies of the deals on Friday.

The chief executive of Atlantic Energy Scott Aitken waspreviously the head of Seven Energy, which owns Septa. Neithercompany was immediately available for comment.

"NO NEED FOR BIDDING PROCESS"

Activists from a region of the Niger Delta, where the blocksrun by Atlantic Energy are located, allege the deals breachrules requiring the government to openly tender for stakes inoil blocks. They also accuse Oil Minister Diezani Alison-Maduekeof having an indirect financial interest in Atlantic, which wasdenied by the state oil firm that she heads.

"The protesters complained of the secret and arbitraryfarm-out of (the blocks) ... to both Atlantic Energy DrillingConcept and Septa Energy Limited without regard to the law anddue process," Afam Ogene, the proposer of the motion, toldparliament late on Thursday.

The NNPC, the NPDC's umbrella company, said in an emailedstatement there was legally no requirement to tender the deals.

"There was never any sale of equity involved ... As such,there is no need for a bidding process," it said.

"There is no evidence indicating that the honourableminister of petroleum resources has any direct or indirectpecuniary interest in the company (Atlantic)," it added.

Former operator Royal Dutch Shell sold its 45percent stake in the blocks to various bidders, includingHeritage Oil and a consortium involving Eland Oil in 2011. At the same time NNPC transferred its 55percent stake to its production arm NPDC.

NPDC then planned to operate the blocks itself but industryexperts say it lacked the capacity or finances to do so.

The agreements struck with Atlantic and Septa were supposedto resolve this, but the companies quickly sub-contracted outthe work to other oil operators with relevant experience.

"It is worrisome that the entire racket became possiblethrough a mischievous process of hinging the transaction on thestrategic alliance agreement, an action deliberately designed tocircumvent due process and transparency," Ogene said.

Copies of the original agreements obtained by Reuters showAtlantic gets 30 percent of oil profits from OML 34 and 30,while SEPTA gets 10 percent of oil profits on OMLs 4, 38 and 41.

Related Shares

More News
27 Oct 2022 07:30

Shell announces $4bn share buyback as Q3 profits beat expectations

(Sharecast News) - Oil giant Shell announced a $4bn share buyback on Thursday as it posted better-than-expected third-quarter profits.

21 Apr 2022 11:53

Shell turning to China to offload Russian business - report

(Sharecast News) - Shell is reportedly looking to China as it looks to offload its Russian business.

15 Feb 2022 15:54

Shell preparing to sell North Sea gas fields - report

(Sharecast News) - Shell is reportedly preparing to launch the sale of its stakes in two clusters of gas fields in the southern British North Sea, par...

7 Feb 2022 10:52

Berenberg nudges up target price on Shell

(Sharecast News) - Analysts at Berenberg slightly raised their target price on oil and gas giant Shell from 2,350.0p to 2,375.0p on Monday, stating th...

31 Jan 2022 10:53

TOP NEWS SUMMARY: Shell and BHP share unifications go into effect

TOP NEWS SUMMARY: Shell and BHP share unifications go into effect

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.