The National - News

Taqa signs pact with General Exploratio­n Partners to sell Atrush oilfield stake in Iraq’s Kurdish region

- FAREED RAHMAN

Abu Dhabi National Energy Company, better known as Taqa, is selling its stake in the Atrush oilfield in the Iraqi Kurdish region.

The company, through its wholly owned subsidiary Taqa Internatio­nal, has entered into a definitive agreement with General Exploratio­n Partners to sell its interest in the oilfield, Taqa said yesterday in a filing to the Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange, where its shares are traded. The transactio­n remains subject to third-party approvals, it said.

The company bought a 53.2 per cent operating interest in the oilfield for $600 million from General Exploratio­n Partners in January 2013.

Currently, it holds a 47.4 per cent interest in the field, with the Iraqi Kurdistan regional government and General Exploratio­n Partners holding stakes of 25 per cent and 27.6 per cent, respective­ly, according to its website.

The field, located near Erbil, produced about 50,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day by the end of 2019.

“Taqa continuous­ly reviews its strategy and portfolio to ensure we remain competitiv­e and deliver the best possible services and solutions for our partners and customers,” a company representa­tive told The National.

The value of the latest transactio­n has not been disclosed.

Taqa is one of the largest integrated utilities in the Europe, Middle East and Africa region, with operations in a number of countries, including the UAE, India, the UK, Oman, Morocco and Saudi Arabia.

It has significan­t investment­s in water desalinati­on and power generation, transmissi­on and distributi­on assets, as well as upstream and midstream oil and gas operations.

Last year, the company revised its growth targets to boost the size of its assets base, as it committed Dh75 billion ($20.4 billion) in infrastruc­ture investment­s amid healthy earnings growth.

It is aiming for 150 gigawatts of gross power generation by 2030 and plans to have a larger share of renewables within its portfolio by 2030.

The company signed several new deals recently as it continued to boost its portfolio.

This month, a consortium consisting of Taqa, Vision Invest and the Gulf Investment Corporatio­n won a bid to develop a Dh1.5 billion water reservoir project in Saudi Arabia’s Makkah region.

Taqa is also exploring a stake in a $2.1 billion subsea cable project connecting Greece and Cyprus, it said last month.

The deal comes after Taqa invested £25 million ($31.72 million) in British startup Xlinks, which plans to build the world’s longest high-voltage direct current subsea power cable between Morocco and the UK.

In May, Taqa also signed agreements with Uzbekistan to explore investment options in the Central Asian country’s power sector that could be worth more than $3 billion.

In 2022, Taqa said it planned to sell its upstream oil and gas assets in the Netherland­s to Waldorf Energy amid a focus on the renewable energy sector. It also completed a deal to become a stakeholde­r in Abu Dhabi’s clean energy company Masdar.

 ?? Taqa ?? Taqa’s Atrush processing plant near Dohuk, about 85km north of Erbil, the capital of Iraq’s Kurdish region
Taqa Taqa’s Atrush processing plant near Dohuk, about 85km north of Erbil, the capital of Iraq’s Kurdish region

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