Libya's NOC Withholding Total's Share of Waha Crude

By Ahmad Ghaddar and Ron Bousso
Thursday, May 3, 2018

Libya's National Oil Corp (NOC) is withholding Total's share of crude from the Waha concession as a dispute drags on over the French oil major's purchase of Marathon's stake in the concession two months ago, Libyan oil and industry sources said.

Total closed a $450 million deal to buy Marathon Oil's 16.33 percent stake in Waha in March, but the deal drew criticism in Libya and the NOC is currently examining whether to intervene in one way or another.

Total, which has already paid Marathon for the stake, says it informed the Libyan authorities about the deal in advance and they raised no objections at the time.

However, Total CEO Patrick Pouyanne has also said the two sides are still in talks on some fiscal issues surrounding the deal.

According to two Libyan oil sources and an industry source with knowledge of the matter, all speaking on condition of anonymity, Total has so far not received any of its share of crude cargoes from Waha.

Total has also not been compensated for the cargoes, one of the sources said.

Total declined to comment. The NOC was not immediately available for comment.

According to a loading programme for Es Sider, the port used for Waha exports, of the fourteen 600,000 or 1 million barrel cargoes planned for May, NOC has ten of them. ConocoPhillips, which has a 16.33 percent stake in Waha, has two cargoes, and Hess, with an 8.16 percent stake, has another two.

Cargoes for the partners in the concession can vary from month to month, with a special department in the NOC deciding on the matter, one of the Libyan oil sources said.

In January, Marathon was allocated two 600,000 barrel cargoes, worth more than $88 million at current prices.

But from the start of this year, Marathon's cargoes have been sold on to oil trader Vitol via NOC, the Libyan oil source and trading sources said. Vitol's deal lasts until at least August, the Libyan source said.

It is not clear whether the change in hands of the Waha concession from Marathon to Total will affect Vitol's contract.

Vitol declined to comment.


(Additional reporting by Aidan Lewis in Tunis and Julia Payne in London; Editing by Mark Potter)

Categories: Shale Oil & Gas Contracts Finance Energy Government Update

Related Stories

Velesto Terminates NAGA 3 Jack-Up Rig Sale to Indonesian Firm

James Fisher, Aquaterra Launch Global Decommissioning Partnership

Arabian Drilling Set to Resume Ops with Three Offshore Rigs

ONGC Plans Major New Indian Oil Reserve

Offshore Vessel Pair Ordered from Grandweld Shipyard

Saipem Lands $2B FPSO Deal for Offshore Gas Field in Indonesia

Saudi Arabia Eyes Oil Pipeline Expansion to Red Sea

TotalEnergies Sells Malaysia Offshore Gas Field Stake to Inpex

Markets: Oil Majors Reload Exploration Hoppers Across Sub-Saharan Africa

Oil Slumps as US-Iran Reach Initial Peace Deal to Reopen Strait of Hormuz

Current News

Velesto Terminates NAGA 3 Jack-Up Rig Sale to Indonesian Firm

Noble Gets $136M Brunei Drillship Job

James Fisher, Aquaterra Launch Global Decommissioning Partnership

Tetragon Energy Advances Oil and Gas Exploration Activities off Philippines

Arabian Drilling Set to Resume Ops with Three Offshore Rigs

Oil Jumps 3% on Renewed US-Iran Conflict

Hormuz Traffic Falls to Five-Week Low as Tensions Escalate

Eni Enlists OneSubsea for Deepwater Umbilical Supply off Indonesia

EnQuest Clears Key Hurdle for $833M Malaysia Offshore Deal

ONGC Plans Major New Indian Oil Reserve

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com