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Nigeria stops Shell property sale, approves Exxon-Seplat deal

Nigeria has actually obstructed Shell's. sale of its whole onshore and shallowwater oil. operations, but approved a comparable deal by Exxon Mobil,. the nation's upstream oil regulator said on Monday.

Shell's property sale for up to $2.4 billion to Renaissance. consortium, comprising five business, was first revealed in. January. Exxon's deal with Seplat Energy has waited for. regulatory approval for more than two years given that a $1.28. billion cost was revealed in February 2022.

In a speech at an occasion in the capital Abuja, Nigerian. Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) CEO Gbenga. Komolafe stated the Shell offer could not scale (the) regulative. test, however did not elaborate. Exxon's deal was given. ministerial approval.

President Bola Tinubu had actually signified on Oct. 1 that the. Exxon-Seplat deal would get ministerial approval in a matter. of days after getting clearance from the regulator.

We invite the regulator's statement and eagerly anticipate. officially receiving the ministerial consent as we pursue the. conclusion of the sale, Exxon said in a statement.

A Shell representative did not immediately respond to a. request for comment.

The rejection is a blow to Shell's strategy to pivot toward. deepwater for future investments and reflects the growing. difficulties that oil companies face in Nigeria.

Oil majors operating in Nigeria, Africa's biggest oil. exporter, have actually been pulling away from onshore operations obstructed. by theft and sabotage, opting to focus future financial investments on. newer and more financially rewarding deep overseas fields.

The Shell assets hold a combined projected volume of 6.73. billion barrels of oil and condensate and 56.27 trillion cubic. feet of associated and non-associated gas.

Under Exxon's deal, Seplat will own 40% of four oil mining. leases and associated infrastructure, including the Qua Iboe. export terminal, and 51% of the Bonny River natural gas liquids. recovery plant previously owned by Mobil Producing Nigeria. Limitless, Exxon's local unit.

In trying to exit the oil-rich Niger Delta, Shell follows. Exxon Mobil, TotalEnergies and Eni who wanted. to do so due to security issues.

NUPRC approved the sale of onshore possessions by Eni's regional. system to Oando in July and another from Equinor to new. entrant Job Odinmim.

Environmental activists and some communities opposed the. Shell-Renaissance offer, connecting Shell to a string of lawsuits for. ecological repair and payment for land and rivers. damaged by oil spills.

In April, NUPRC started evaluating Shell's divestment to the. consortium, which consists of 4 Nigerian expedition and. production business and a global energy group.

(source: Reuters)