Millennium Post (Kolkata)

Aramco agrees $12.4 bn deal to sell pipelines’ stake

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DUBAI: Saudi oil producer Aramco has agreed a $12.4 billion deal to sell a 49 per cent stake in its pipelines to a consortium led by U.S.-based EIG Global Energy Partners.

Announced late on Friday, it is the company’s largest deal since its record $29.4 billion initial public offering in late 2019.

The lease and leaseback agreement includes a 49 per cent stake of newly formed Aramco Oil Pipelines Co and rights to 25 years of tariff payments for oil carried on Aramco’s pipelines, it said in a statement.

Aramco will retain a 51 per cent stake in the new company.

EIG, which has invested more than $34 billion in energy and energy infrastruc­ture, was the deal’s underwrite­r and will work with Aramco in the coming days to decide on other parties for the consortium, a source familiar with the deal said. Abu Dhabi state investor Mubadala is in discussion­s on being part of it, a spokesman said.

Aramco will retain operationa­l control of the pipeline network and assume all operating and capital expense risk, the companies said. The deal will have no impact on Aramco’s oil production.

Aramco will also offer socalled “staple financing” which the buyers can use to back their purchase, sources have told Reuters.

“We will continue to explore opportunit­ies that underpin our strategy of long-term value creation,” CEO Amin Nasser said.

Other bidders in the deal process included Apollo Global Management and New Yorkbased Global Infrastruc­ture Partners (GIP).

U.S. asset manager BlackRock and Canada’s Brookfield Asset Management Inc stepped away from bidding, Reuters reported on April 6, citing sources familiar with the deal.

Abu Dhabi’s National Oil Co (ADNOC) has signed similar deals over the last two years, raising billions of dollars through sale-and-leaseback agreements tied to its oil and gas pipelines.

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