TotalEnergies Looks To Divest Nigerian Asset, Joining Big Oil Exodus

Hamilton Nwosa
Writer
TotalEnergies Looks To Divest Nigerian Asset, Joining Big Oil Exodus

Ad

Kolos, ref, loud, gum and fast lane, By Funke Egbemode

By Funke Egbemode Scene One: Henry is poor and he knows it. He plays those betting games with fancy names, drinks, smokes, and loves loud music. He is in his late 30s with a wife and two children. They all live in a room in one of the new areas in Lagos, not too far…

Tribute to Professor Joy Ogwu By Kingsley Dike 

By Kingsley Dike There are very few people in this world whose chance encounter with you has such a transformative impact on your growth and development as a person. Professor Joy Ogwu, former Nigerian Foreign Minister and Permanent Representative to the United Nations, who recently passed, was one of them. I had met her at…

Ad

France’s supermajor TotalEnergies plans to sell its minority stake in an onshore oil-producing joint venture in Nigeria in what will be the latest divestment of Nigerian oil assets by an international major.

TotalEnergies will put up for sale its 10-percent interest in a company operating 20 licenses onshore Nigeria and in shallow waters, the French firm’s chief executive Patrick Pouyanné said at an earnings conference call on Thursday.

“Disruption of local communities are sources of great concerns,” Pouyanné said on the call, as carried by Bloomberg.

The licenses are being operated by another supermajor, Shell, which is also looking to divest Nigerian assets. The sale of Shell’s stake in the joint venture attracted bids from four Nigeria-based companies, Bloomberg reported early this year, quoting sources with knowledge of the sales process.

As early as in the spring of 2021, Shell’s chief executive Ben van Beurden said the supermajor does not see its upstream oil operations in Nigeria as compatible with its strategy to become a net-zero energy business.

“We cannot solve community problems in the Niger Delta,” said the top executive at Shell, which has encountered numerous problems in Nigeria’s onshore in recent years, including oil theft and pipeline sabotage, as well as lawsuits brought up by local communities over oil spills.

In February 2021, The Hague Court of Appeal ordered Shell to compensate Nigerian farmers for two oil spills in the country 13 years ago, in the first lawsuit in which a company had been held liable in the Netherlands for its actions abroad. The ruling of the Dutch court set a precedent for future lawsuits brought against oil firms in the countries where they are based, instead of the countries where oil spills or oil pollution has allegedly taken place.

Shell and TotalEnergies are not the only companies divesting from Nigeria’s upstream. ExxonMobil agreed earlier this year to sell its equity interest in Mobil Producing Nigeria Unlimited to Nigerian company Seplat Energy. The sale includes ExxonMobil’s shallow-water affiliate, while the U.S. supermajor will retain its deepwater assets.

NB: Charles Kennedy wrote this article for Oilprice.com

Ad

X whatsapp