US-based
Chevron announced Tuesday it was selling its interest in two Nigerian oil
blocks, becoming the latest multi-national to part with assets in Africa ’s biggest crude producer.
The move
will see Chevron sell its 40-percent stakes in oil mining leases 83 and 85
located in shallow water off Nigeria ’s
Bayelsa state in the country’s southern Niger Delta region.
The blocks
contain the Madu and Anyala fields and are owned through a joint venture with
Nigerian state oil firm NNPC.
Chevron
declined to provide information on reserves. Local media reported that the
blocks contain reserves of some 250 million barrels of oil.
Chevron has
been Nigeria ’s
third-biggest oil producer, after Shell and Exxon, with daily output at 238,000
barrels of crude per day in 2012. It will continue to have a major presence in Nigeria .
The move
marks the latest sale of Nigerian assets by a multi-national company and comes
amid uncertainty in the country’s oil industry, with a sweeping overhaul of
regulations, royalties and taxes delayed for years and still stuck in
parliament.
Shell has
been seeking to sell off its stakes in several onshore blocks, and analysts say
the British-Dutch firm appears willing to shift more of its focus offshore,
where the risks of sabotage, theft and militant attacks are lower.
In
November, French oil group Total announced the sale of its 20-percent stake in
a Nigerian offshore bloc to China ’s
Sinopec for $2.5 billion.
Meanwhile
in December, Nigerian firm Oando announced the purchase of ConocoPhillips’
interests in the country.
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