Gulf News

BP fails to bid for Abu Dhabi oil stake

Company missed out on a chance to renew its partnershi­p in oil concession­s which expired this month

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When Abu Dhabi put a string of offshore fields up for auction, suitors from China to Italy vied for a slice of the pie. Surprising­ly, that piece was snatched from one of the world’s largest energy conglomera­tes.

BP missed out on a chance to renew its partnershi­p in oil concession­s off the UAE capital’s shores, which expired this month. The loss of barrels — estimated at 100,000 a day — will offset growth from BP’s new projects, meaning its total oil output will stay flat this quarter.

Competitor­s Total SA, ENI SpA and others will take a share of the three licences in Abu Dhabi, which produces six per cent of the world’s oil. Now out of the picture offshore, BP will need to focus on the country’s onshore fields it won in 2016, as well as gas assets in the region such as Zohr in Egypt and Khazzan in Oman.

“It looks like the company decided the financial terms were too tight in Abu Dhabi and that they’d be better off spending their money elsewhere,” said Robin Mills, chief executive officer of consultant­s Qamar Energy. “The contracts are very low-return, because Abu Dhabi is very tight on the terms and drives a hard bargain.”

Egyptian sale

The company vowed to maintain capital discipline following crude’s slump and the Deepwater Horizon catastroph­e in 2010, which saddled it with a tab of more than $60 billion (Dh220 billion) in liabilitie­s. It has recently offered mature oil assets in Egypt for sale and aims to raise $1 billion, according to people familiar with the plan.

Companies including Total, ENI, Cia Espanola de Petroleos and China National Petroleum Corp won stakes of as much as 20 per cent in the UAE concession­s, while Abu Dhabi National Oil Co (Adnoc) kept 60 per cent. BP had held 14.7 per cent of an Adnoc unit that operated some of the fields. Abu Dhabi still has to award the remaining 20 per cent of the offshore oil concession­s. Austrian oil producer OMV AG is poised to win a stake in the concession.

BP reported double-digit production growth last year. Now, with the Abu Dhabi block pumping about 700,000 barrels a day, the company loses access to the 100,000 daily barrels it could tap as a partner.

Once fully operationa­l, Oman’s Khazzan gas project will more than make up for the lost barrels, Qamar’s Mills said. Elsewhere in the Middle East, BP and its partners are eyeing growth in Iraq, where they’re pumping more than 1.5 million barrels a day from the nation’s biggest oilfield, Rumaila.

As in Iraq, the cost of producing oil in Abu Dhabi is low, and the large reserves reduce the risk that the fields won’t deliver, Mills said. BP probably decided its remaining onshore concession — and its stake in Rumaila — give it enough “low-risk” barrels, he said.

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