Business Day

BP back-pedals on LNG project off Senegal

- Arathy Nair Bengaluru/London

Golar LNG has received a force majeure notice from a BP unit seeking to delay receipt of a floating liquefied natural gas (LNG) facility for the African Tortue Ahmeyim project.

The notice is the latest force majeure claim issued in the LNG sector, which is struggling with a seasonal plunge in demand as well as the spread of the coronaviru­s, which has further hammered the consumptio­n of the super-chilled fuel globally.

BP is expecting a one-year delay due to the pandemic and now sees no possibilit­y for reducing that time-frame, according to a statement from Golar’s unit Gimi MS.

BP was expected to take delivery of the facility in 2022 and charter it for 20 years to liquefy gas from its Greater Tortue Ahmeyim project on the maritime border between Mauritania and Senegal.

“While the full impact cannot yet be determined, as a reasonable and prudent operator, BP is engaging transparen­tly and collaborat­ively with key stakeholde­rs to mitigate risks,” a BP spokespers­on said.

“This includes issuing a force majeure notice to Golar in line with the terms of the lease-andoperate agreement dated February

26 2019. This is a direct result of the ongoing business impacts due to Covid-19.”

Golar said it was in talks with BP to establish the duration of the delay and the extent to which this has been caused by the coronaviru­s outbreak.

American oil company Kosmos Energy owns about 28% of the project, for which gas is projected to start flowing in the first half of 2023, but it has said it wants to reduce its stake to roughly 10%.

The plant is designed to produce an average of about 2.5million tonnes of LNG per annum. The constructi­on of the floating facility was expected to cost about $1.3bn, excluding financing costs.

Golar also said it was talking to its main building contractor, Keppel Shipyard, to reschedule activities to reduce its capital spending commitment­s for 2020 and 2021.

Companies invoke force majeure when they cannot meet their contractua­l obligation­s because of circumstan­ces beyond their control.

BP WAS EXPECTED TO TAKE DELIVERY IN 2022 AND CHARTER IT FOR 20 YEARS TO LIQUEFY GAS FROM ITS GREATER TORTUE AHMEYIM PROJECT

 ?? /Reuters ?? BP has issued a force Delay: majeure notice to Bermudareg­istered Golar.
/Reuters BP has issued a force Delay: majeure notice to Bermudareg­istered Golar.

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