Shell to sell onshore operations for $2.4bn
Shell is concluding arrangements to sell its Nigeria's
troubled onshore oil and gas operations after an agreement with a
consortium of five mostly local companies for up to $2.4 billion.
The
British energy giant pioneered Nigeria's oil and gas business beginning in the
1930s. It has struggled for years with hundreds of onshore oil spills as a
result of theft, sabotage and operational issues that led to costly repairs and
high-profile lawsuits.
Since
2021, Shell has sought to sell its
Nigerian oil and gas business, but will remain active in Nigeria's more
lucrative and less problematic offshore sector.
Shell's
exit is part of a broader retreat by western energy companies from Nigeria as
they focus on newer, more profitable operations. Exxon Mobil,
Italy's Eni and
Norway's Equinor, have struck
deals to sell assets in the country in recent years.
The
British major will sell The Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria
Limited (SPDC) for a consideration of $1.3 billion, it said in a statement,
while the buyers will make an additional payment of up to $1.1 billion relating
to prior receivables at completion.
"This
agreement marks an important milestone for Shell in Nigeria, aligning with our
previously announced intent to exit onshore oil production in the Niger Delta,
simplifying our portfolio and focusing future disciplined investment in Nigeria
on our Deepwater and Integrated Gas positions," Shell head of upstream Zoë
Yujnovich said.
The
buyer, the Renaissance consortium comprises ND Western, Aradel Energy, First
E&P, Waltersmith, all local oil exploration and production companies, and
Petrolin, a Swiss-based trading and investment company.
The
sale, which Renaissance confirmed, requires the approval of the Nigerian
government.
Renaissance
will take over the responsibility for dealing with spills, theft and sabotage,
said Shell, which has faced in recent years multiple lawsuits for
compensation over damage caused as a result of spills in the Niger delta.
Nnimmo
Bassey, executive director of Nigerian advocacy group Health of Mother Earth
Foundation said: "Shell must own up to its responsibility."
"This
means full payment for the remediation and restoration of the polluted areas as
well as reparations to the host communities. They cannot walk away from the
virtually irreparable harm they have caused," Bassey said in a statement.
Shell's
SPDC Limited operates and has a 30% stake in the SPDC joint venture that holds
18 onshore and shallow water mining leases. Shell's resources in SPDC reached
around 458 million barrels of oil equivalent by the end of 2022.
Other
partners in the joint venture are the state's Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation (NNPC), which holds 55 per cent, TotalEnergies with 10 per cent and
Italy's Eni with five per cent.
Apart
from its operations and stakes in several fields deep offshore, Shell still has
a liquefied natural gas plant and other assets in Nigeria.

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