Nigerian Multi-Millionaire Oil Tycoon Igho Sanomi To Acquire $2.5 Billion Shell Asset
Oil giant Royal Dutch Shell
has agreed to sell a prolific Nigerian oil block, Oil Mining License
29, and an associated pipeline, for $2.5 billion to a consortium led by Taleveras Group, an oil trading firm founded and owned by a 39 year-old Nigerian multi-millionaire Igho Sanomi, according to the Wall Street Journal.
Shell had been looking
to divest from four of its onshore Nigerian assets since last year –
OMLs 18, 24, 25 and 29, as well as the Nembe Creek Trunk line, a 60-mile
aging pipeline which has served as Nigeria’s major crude oil
transportation channel- moving oil through the Niger Delta to the
Atlantic coast, but which has been beleaguered by leaks stemming from
oil theft for many years.
Taleveras will be getting a sweet deal. Of all the assets, Shell put up for auction, OML 29 was the most coveted.The Africa Oil & Gas Report magazine
reports that OML 29’s remaining reserves (P1+P2) are about 2.2Billion
barrels of oil equivalent (BOE), while its hydrocarbon fields could
deliver as much as 160,000 barrels of oil per day and 300MMscf/d at
peak, with focused, aggressive work programme.
The Nembe Creek Trunk
Line is also an extremely valuable asset as many other oil exploration
companies in Nigeria pay to use it to transport their oil to
international markets.
According to the Wall Street Journal,
a Shell spokesman said the Netherlands-based oil major has signed sales
and purchase agreements for some of the oil mining leases that it was
looking to divest, and would make a market announcement in the event of a
successful completion.
Taleveras Group, the
company acquiring OML 29, is owned by one of Nigeria’s most successful
young entrepreneurs, Igho Sanomi. Sanomi, 39, founded the Taleveras Group
in 2004 at the age of 29, as an energy trading company. Today, the
company trades over 100 million barrels of crude oil as well as several
million tons of gasoline, LPG and jet fuel annually. In April 2012,
Sanomi’s company acquired production sharing contracts (PSCs) for three
offshore oil blocks in Ivory Coast.
In June 2013, Taleveras
sold a 65% stake in one of its Ivorian offshore upstream projects to
Lukoil of Russia for an undisclosed price. Taleveras also owns a stake
in a power distribution firm in Nigeria.culled

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