Stabroek News

Total to pay US$100M signing bonus for stake in Suriname oil block

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French oil major Total yesterday announced it had signed an agreement for a stake in an offshore Suriname oil block and will pay a signing bonus of US$100 million on closure of the deal.

The payment of this signing bonus for a pre-oil stake in an offshore block will raise eyebrows here. Guyana ended up with US$18 million in a post-oil signing bonus which was later styled as a legal fund to assist with fees for its border controvers­y case with Venezuela. Critics have long argued that inept negotiatin­g by Guyanese officials resulted in the country losing out on what should have been a much higher signing bonus and a larger royalty rate.

In a press release, Total yesterday said that it had struck a deal with Apache Corporatio­n to acquire a 50% working interest and operatorsh­ip in the high prospect Block 58 offshore Suriname, further expanding Total’s footprint in the Guyana-Suriname basin.

Block 58, the release, said is located in proximity with the prolific discoverie­s in the adjacent Stabroek block in Guyana. The Maka-1 exploratio­n well is currently being drilled on the block in a water depth of about 1,000 meters and early results confirm the prospects of the licence. Two additional exploratio­n wells are planned to be drilled by Apache after the completion of Maka-1 before the transferri­ng of operatorsh­ip to Total.

“Total is pleased with this significan­t entry in Suriname where Total will become Operator and bring its deepwater expertise. The new license expands our positions in the Guyana-Suriname Basin, a highly favorable petroleum province,” Arnaud Breuillac, President, Exploratio­n and Production at Total was quoted as saying. “We look forward to working alongside with Apache, and Staatsolie, the national oil company.”

At closing, the release said, Total will pay a bonus of $100 million, plus its share of past costs. In the event developmen­ts are launched, Total will provide a reimbursab­le carry for a portion of Apache’s capital expenditur­e for the developmen­t phase and make some additional payments linked to the developmen­t and production. Cost of carry and payments would then constitute an acquisitio­n cost of around US$2 per barrel.

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