The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Shell sells US$1.3 bln of oil and gas assets in Norway, Malaysia

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LONDON/ OSLO: Royal Dutch Shell announced the sale of oil and gas assets in Norway and Malaysia for over US$1.3 billion, bringing it closer to a target of US$30 billion in disposals by year-end.

The Anglo-Dutch company agreed to sell to OKEA, a Norwegian producer backed by private equity firm Seacrest Capital, its 45 per cent interest in the Draugen Norwegian offshore field and a 12 percent in the Gjoa block for a total of US$566 million, the two companies said.

Earlier, Shell announced the completion of the sale of a 15 per cent stake in Malaysia LNG (MLNG) Tiga to the Sarawak State Financial Secretary for US$750 million.

Shell committed to the ambitious three-year sale plan following the decision to acquire BG Group in 2015, a deal that was completed in February 2016 for US$54 billion.

The latest announceme­nt bring the total assets Shell has sold or agreed to sell since 2015 to around US$27 billion, according to Reuters calculatio­ns.

Shell will remain present in oil-rich Norway through its stakes in several fields, including Ormen Lange and Knarr, which it operates.

For OKEA, co-founded by the county’s former oil minister Ola Borten Moe in 2015, the deal provides the first sizeable stakes in a producing field on the Norwegian continenta­l shelf.

OKEA said the two fields will deliver around 22,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day net to the company.

Bangchak Corporatio­n PCL, a Thai downstream oil and gas company, had entered into a strategic partnershi­p with Seacrest Capital Group to finance the acquisitio­n, OKEA said.

OKEA also said it had launched a US$180 million, five-year, fully underwritt­en senior secured bond to help finance the deal.

Shell-operated Draugen, which has been producing oil since 1993, had about 24 million barrels in reserves left at end-2017, data from the Norwegian Petroleum Directorat­e (NPD) shows.

The Gjoa field, operated by Neptune Energy, had 13 million barrels of oil and 13.5 billion cubic meters of natural gas at end-2017, according to NPD data.

OKEA has a tiny stake in Aker BP-operated Ivar Aasen field, and a 15 percent interest in Repsoloper­ated (REP.MC) Yme field, which is expected to start producing oil again in late 2019.

The Norwegian government approved Yme’s more than eight billion crown (US$978 million) redevelopm­ent project in March.

A previous attempt by Talisman Energy to restart the field, which was shut in 2001, failed in 2016 due to structural problems with its new production platform. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Shell committed to the ambitious three-year sale plan following the decision to acquire BG Group in 2015, a deal that was completed in February 2016 for US$54 billion. — Reuters photo
Shell committed to the ambitious three-year sale plan following the decision to acquire BG Group in 2015, a deal that was completed in February 2016 for US$54 billion. — Reuters photo

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