On November 9, 2012, Heritage announced the successful
completion of the acquisition of a 45 per cent interest in Oil Mining Lease
(OML) 30, with effect from November 1, 2012.
In August last year, the company
announced its intention to sell part of a gas block and borrow money from Genel
Energy Plc to raise $450 million, easing concerns about how it will fund oil
field purchases in Nigeria.
The cash, the company said, would partly
fund Heritage Oil's acquisition of a stake in Nigeria's OML 30 oil assets
announced last month.
Heritage’s entry into the Nigerian
oil and gas sector, according to a report in the London-based Financial Times
(FT), is an unlikely alliance: a polo-loving local businessman and an oil
company founded by a former supplier of mercenaries, with ties to coup plotters
trying to overthrow African governments.
But it could provide the prototype
for a new wave of companies hoping to take on the majors that have long
dominated the Nigerian oil industry.
At least that is what investors in
Heritage Oil are being asked to believe following a sale of assets in the
Kurdistan region of northern Iraq to help finance a push into Nigeria’s
troubled energy sector.
Heritage’s ambitions to transform
itself into a significant producer in Nigeria, alongside local partner
Shoreline Power, is based on its $850 million purchase of a cache of oil blocks
in the conflict-scarred Niger Delta from Royal Dutch Shell, Total of France and
Eni of Italy, which was completed in November.
The
deal brings together Tony Buckingham, the founder, chief executive and leading
shareholder of Heritage with Nigerian businessman Kola Karim.
Karim’s Shoreline Energy International conglomerate is partnering the FTSE 250 company to create an indigenous Nigerian company seeking to reverse the fortunes of Shell’s neglected OML 30.
Karim’s Shoreline Energy International conglomerate is partnering the FTSE 250 company to create an indigenous Nigerian company seeking to reverse the fortunes of Shell’s neglected OML 30.
Buckingham’s colourful history, which
ranges from helping to supply mercenaries to fight insurgents as well his links
to coup plotters trying to overthrow the government of oil-rich Equatorial
Guinea, to creating fortunes for himself and investors through a range of oil
and mining deals, is well known to London-based investors.
Less well known is western-educated
Karim. His business interests have extended to co-ventures with companies such
as Costain, the UK support services group, and Schlumberger, the US-based oil
services company. Beyond his ambitions to build an indigenous group capable of
becoming a significant upstream oil operator in Africa’s biggest energy
industry, Karim is also patron of the Lagos Polo Club.
His group’s interests span
construction, power generation, engineering and telecoms across sub-Saharan
Africa. Shoreline is, however, less experienced in managing oil operations than
some of the other Nigerian groups seeking to establish themselves as the
government encourages indigenous participation in the industry.
Paul Atherton, chief financial
officer at Heritage, said the new venture was expected to raise production from
OML 30, located in the western delta near Warri, Delta State, from a current
level of 35,000 barrels a day to 55,000 b/d in the short term by improving
extraction techniques, FT reported.
But further investment could see the
block, which will formally be operated by the state-controlled, crisis-prone
Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), increase production to 150,000
b/d within three to four years, according to Atherton.
Previous attempts to reinvigorate
production at OML 30, one of Nigeria’s most prolific blocks, have faltered.
Production, which began in 1963, has declined sharply from a peak rate of
280,000 barrels attained in 1973.
Shell, which has long been Nigeria’s
foremost foreign investor, is reorganising its interests in the country. The
company has yielded handsome revenues there for decades, but it has also been
implicated in environmental corruption scandals and became embroiled in the
banditry that stalks the delta.
Shell sold stakes in three licences
in the Niger Delta in 2010 to Seplat, which has since improved output at the
fields. Shell went on to sell stakes in other licences to First Hydrocarbon Nigeria,
an affiliate of London-listed Afren, and Neconde Energy, a local consortium.
Atherton argued that the security
situation in the area is now stable, following an amnesty, which the government
said brought more than 20,000 armed men from their bases in the Niger Delta’s
creeks.
Production from OML 30 between 2006
and 2009 was severely hit by a combination of funding and security issues.
Heritage said it would prevent interruptions in production by improving
relations with the community and giving it a share of profits in exchange for
helping to reduce vandalism.
International oil companies “have so
many licences, they don’t have the capital and manpower to focus on all of
their licences”, said Atherton.
With oil theft still rife in the
Niger Delta and a contentious overhaul of industry legislation in the offing,
some western groups are gradually selling down their Nigerian interests –
particularly vulnerable onshore fields – to local operators, who in turn are
forming alliances with less familiar western players or Asian groups.
Three weeks ago ConocoPhillips, the
US oil group, announced it was selling its Nigerian businesses for a total of
$1.79 billion to Lagos-based, Toronto-quoted Oando, one of the most ambitious
local integrated energy groups. Oando will take on onshore and offshore
interests delivering 43,000 barrels of oil a day.
But the challenge facing the new wave
of indigenous companies, some backed by western groups, is to prove that they
can turn round the long-term decline in output in Nigeria, one of the world’s
largest oil producers.
Investors in Heritage will be hoping
the polo-loving Karim and the swashbuckling Buckingham can succeed where others
have failed.
Source:
Thisday
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