THISDAY

OML 42: Seven Banks Refinance Neconde’s $640m Facility

- Alike Ejiofor

A consortium of seven local and internatio­nal lenders has signed an agreement to refinance Neconde Energy Limited’s Senior Secured Medium-Term Loan Facility Agreement, worth $640 million (N2.3trillion).

The refinancin­g of the facility followed the renewal of Neconde Energy Limited’s Oil Mining Licence (OML) 42 for the next 20 years, effective June 2019, by the federal government.

This developmen­t, according to the indigenous oil and gas exploratio­n and production company, was a demonstrat­ion of support for the company’s commercial and financial operations by both local and internatio­nal financial institutio­ns.

The consortium of seven lenders comprises four Nigerian banks and three internatio­nal lenders.

The banks are Access Bank, Fidelity Bank, Zenith Bank and First Bank (UK) Limited.

The internatio­nal lenders are the Africa Import Export Bank (Afrexim), Africa Finance Corporatio­n (AFC) and Glencore Energy (UK) Limited.

Apart from being a member of the lending consortium, Glencore is also the off-taker of Neconde’s equity crude oil production.

With the refinancin­g, Neconde is now positioned to achieve its field developmen­t plans for the plum asset.

Neconde acquired Shell, Total and Nigerian Agip Oil Company’s 45 per cent joint equity interest in OML 42 in an open and competitiv­e bid

in 2011.

The acquisitio­n was financed by the consortium of reputable local and internatio­nal financiers.

The Chairman of Neconde Energy Limited, Dr. Ernest Azudialu-Obiejesi, said in a statement at the weekend that the loan refinancin­g affirmed the strong financial fundamenta­ls of the company as a leading player in the upstream sector of the oil and gas industry.

“This restructur­ing frees up capital for Neconde to invest in more developmen­t activities that will result in production increase,” he added.

Neconde is in a Joint Venture (JV) with the Nigerian Petroleum Developmen­t Company (NPDC) in OML 42. The JV’s production presently stands at an average of 50,000 barrels of oil per day and upon completion of the developmen­t activities planned in the 2019 work programme, the JV expects to hit a production output of about 100,000bpd.

In the third quarter of 2018, Neconde alongside its JV partner, NPDC, secured a robust and independen­t alternativ­e crude evacuation system.

This initiative was borne out of the need to find a more reliable alternativ­e to the Trans-Forcados Pipeline, which is prone to repeated outages.

The new evacuation system (“Barging”) has become the primary evacuation system for the JV and has since proven to be a more reliable and consistent channel of evacuating its crude oil for export.

The JV, it was learnt, intends to consolidat­e on this major achievemen­t and improve its cash flows from the asset.

In January 2011, Neconde participat­ed in and emerged successful in the competitiv­e bid for the acquisitio­n of 45 per cent stake in OML 42 previously held by Shell, Total Exploratio­n and Production Nigeria Limited and Nigerian Agip Oil Company Limited.

Only recently, it secured the renewal of its lease for OML 42 for a further tenor of 20 years by the federal government through the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR).

“Neconde’s status as an indigenous company with an excellent management team offers a viable option through which the rich reserves of the Niger Delta could be brought into production with attendant economic benefits for the local communitie­s and the country,” the company said in the statement.

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