The National - News

Adnoc awards two stakes to Italy’s Eni

▶ The interests are the first-ever in the UAE for the energy major

- JENNIFER GNANA

Abu Dhabi National Oil Company awarded Eni two stakes in the emirate’s offshore concession areas in 40-year agreements for a combined $875 million, marking the Italian oil major’s entry in the UAE’s oil and gas sector, following recent wins in Egypt and Cyprus.

The Italian company won a 10 per cent stake in the Umm Shaif and Nasr concession as well as a 5 per cent share of Lower Zakum – fields that were previously part of the Adma-Opco entity.

“Our partnershi­p with Eni, and other concession partners, will enable us to accelerate our growth, increase revenue and improve integratio­n across the upstream value chain, as part of our ongoing transforma­tion and build on the foundation­s that have been laid to deliver a more profitable upstream business,” said Dr Sultan Al Jaber, Minister of State and Adnoc group chief executive.

Eni, which joins an Indian consortium led by ONGC Videsh and Japan’s Inpex in Lower Zakum, paid a participat­ing fee of Dh1.1 billion ($300m) for its stake. It also paid Dh2.1bn ($575m) to enter Umm Shaif and Nasr. The twin concession­s will be operated by Adnoc Offshore on behalf of all partners. Adnoc will retain a 60 per cent stake across the various split concession­s, with the remainder shared between various partners.

Abu Dhabi’s recent partners on the various offshore concession­s up for renewal this month have so far been from Asia, reflecting the company’s pivot to secure market access in the East.

Eni’s involvemen­t, analysts suggest, could be a way to balance Adnoc’s current mix of partners and also to bring on the Italian firm’s expertise in large-scale gas exploratio­n offshore the Eastern Mediterran­ean at a time when Abu Dhabi is also strongly focussed on unlocking gas potential.

“This is the first award by Adnoc to a major in the offshore renewal, and shows it is looking to find a balance in its strategic partners between companies from major buyers (Japan, India) and IOCs [internatio­nal oil companies] with technology and project delivery expertise,” said Tom Quinn, research analyst in Dubai with energy consultanc­y Wood Mackenzie.

Eni, which apart from Egypt’s giant Zohr field and offshore Cyprus, also picked up politicall­y-sensitive concession­s off the coast of Lebanon has little exposure to the low-cost reservoirs of the Middle East. The Italian firm’s success in securing contracts in Abu Dhabi is set to balance its more riskier ventures around the region.

“Eni has said it is pursuing new “organic, convention­al and long life-cycle” projects as part of its 2017-2020 business objectives. The [former] Adma-Opco concession fits well into this,” said Vandana Hari, founder and chief executive of energy advisory firm Vanda Insights.

“It is a major producing area and Adnoc plans to further boost its production capacity. The stake will give the Italian company a footprint in the UAE, which offers low-cost production and a stable environmen­t for investment,” said the Singapore-based analyst.

While Eni’s focus in the region has so far been upstream developmen­t for oil and gas, its chief executive Claudio Descalzi hinted at downstream synergies with Abu Dhabi’s state oil company, saying such collaborat­ion “would create significan­t added value to Adnoc’s refining assets”.

Adnoc, which plans to double refining capacity and triple its petrochemi­cal output is expected to announce its downstream strategy “very soon”, Dr Al Jaber said last month in Abu Dhabi.

Adnoc has yet to announce partners for the remaining 15 per cent stake in Lower Zakum, 30 per cent for Umm Shaif and Nasr and 20 per cent of SARB and Umm Lulu, of which another 20 per cent was awarded to Mubadala-owned Cepsa last month.

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