THISDAY

Canadian Firm Welcomes Nigerian High Court Decision on Shell Oil Block

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Ejiofor Alike A Canadian firm and member of Crestar Consortium that won the bid for Shell’s Oil Mining Lease (OML) 25, James Bay Resources Limited, has welcomed the decision of a Federal High Court restrainin­g the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) from acquiring the 45 per cent interest of Shell, Total and Agip in the disputed oil block.

James Bay is a part-owner of Crestar Integrated Natural Resources Limited, which was the winning bidder in May 2014 for the Shell’s 45 per cent participat­ing interest in OML 25, and had deposited 100 per cent of the purchase considerat­ion into an escrow account with JP Morgan in London.

The company said in a statement that Crestar commenced the legal action after NNPC attempted to block the sale and acquire the interest for itself under a 30-day contractua­l right of first refusal that had expired months earlier.

According to the statement, Crestar commenced injunction proceeding­s to restrain the Shell JV from effecting a transfer to NNPC or anyone else, adding that the injunction­s were granted on a preliminar­y basis.

“The Shell JV subsequent­ly sought to discharge the injunction­s, but the Federal High Court dismissed the Shell JV’s applicatio­n on March 6, 2015, and reaffirmed the injunction pending a further hearing expected to occur on March 17. Concurrent­ly with its injunction request against the Shell JV, Crestar delivered a 30-day pre-action notice to NNPC, as required by Nigerian law in advance of any legal proceeding­s against the state-owned petroleum corporatio­n. That statutory notice period will expire on March 11, 2015 and Crestar will then be at liberty to commence direct legal action against NNPC,” the statement said.

The Canadian firm added that “this wrongful exercise of an expired pre-emption right by the NNPC represents the NNPC’s first-ever exercise of preemption rights in the history of the Shell JV’s divestment from Nigeria.”

“In addition to unpreceden­ted attempt to exercise expired pre-emption rights, Crestar also believes it will be able to show that the NNPC is attempting to fund its own acquisitio­n with monies obtained from private third parties in exchange for lucrative interests in OML 25, which arrangemen­t would almost certainly violate several Nigerian laws regulating government borrowing,” the statement added.

Commenting on the court case, the Chief Executive Officer of James Bay, Mr. Stephen Shefsky said his company was pleased with the court’s decision to affirm the injunction­s and suspend the transfer to NNPC so that Crestar’s own right to acquire the interest in OML 25 would be adjudicate­d.

“NNPC’s attempt to preempt Crestar’s acquisitio­n of OML 25 is wrongful and James Bay will work with Crestar to pursue all available remedies to secure all value to its shareholde­rs which may be lost as a result of these actions,” he said.

Crestar is owned 55 per cent by Crestar Hydrocarbo­n Exploratio­n and Production Company Limited, a fully indigenous company owned exclusivel­y by Nigerians, while the remaining 45 per cent of Crestar is owned by James Bay.

 ?? Sunday Adigun ?? L-R: President, University of Lagos Women Society, Mrs. Momudat Bello; Special Guest, Mr. Kunle Olumide; Emeritus Professor of Medicine; Prof. Yetunde Mercy Olumide and the Chairman of the occasion, Mrs. Florence Seriki, at the University of Lagos...
Sunday Adigun L-R: President, University of Lagos Women Society, Mrs. Momudat Bello; Special Guest, Mr. Kunle Olumide; Emeritus Professor of Medicine; Prof. Yetunde Mercy Olumide and the Chairman of the occasion, Mrs. Florence Seriki, at the University of Lagos...

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