New Straits Times

Total sells Norway asset stakes

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PARIS/OSLO: French oil and gas major Total said yesterday it had agreed to sell its stakes in two Norwegian oilfields to Statoil for US$1.45 billion (RM6 billion) as it reviews its North Sea portfolio after acquiring Denmark’s Maersk Oil in August.

The company said Statoil will take over its 51 per cent stake in the Martin Linge field and its 40 per cent holding in the Garantiana discovery on the Norwegian Continenta­l Shelf.

“The forthcomin­g acquisitio­n of Maersk Oil... leads us to review our portfolio in this area so as to focus on the assets in which Total will be able to generate synergies and reduce their break-even points,” Arnaud Breuillac, Total’s head of exploratio­n and production, said in a statement.

The company said although Norway remains strategica­lly important as one of the largest contributo­rs to its output, it plans to focus on its non-operated assets such as Ekofisk, Snohvit and Johan Sverdrup fields.

Total’s decision to scale back its presence in Norway, focusing on non-operated assets, follows a recent trend among foreign oil majors, including BP and Exxon Mobil, to become junior partners in Norwegian fields and concentrat­e their exploratio­n and field management in less mature regions.

Some have gone even further, with United States oil company Hess last month announcing the sale of its Norwegian assets altogether and plans to also divest from the Danish parts of the North Sea.

Total said there was limited scope for Total to improve operations in the Martin Linge field which was its only operated asset in Norway, while Statoil was in a better position to optimise the asset. Reuters

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