Eni in Talks to Grow Presence in the Gulf

By Davide Barbuscia and Giselda Vagnoni
Sunday, December 2, 2018

Italian major Eni is in talks to grow its footprint in Oman and the United Arab Emirates as part of plans to build its asset base in the oil-rich Gulf and offset its reliance on Africa, a source close to the matter said.

The international oil company has a limited presence in the Middle East, where some of the world's biggest oil and gas reserves lie, producing more than half its output in Africa.

"Eni is in talks with Oman for various opportunities," the source told Reuters, adding recent geopolitical tensions in the area had not curbed its interest.

Last year Eni sealed its first deal in Oman, winning a majority stake in offshore acreage and selling on part to Qatar Petroleum.

This year it took a first step into Abu Dhabi, paying $875 million for stakes in two oil concessions and then buying part of the giant Ghasa gas field from state oil group Adnoc.

The source said Eni had submitted an expression of interest for a minority stake in Adnoc's refinery business, confirming an earlier Reuters report.

Abu Dhabi has put on sale 40 percent of Adnoc's refining unit valued at $8 billion but will never sell to a single company, the source said, adding many others were interested including Chinese and Indian firms and France's Total.

"Eni is also interested in other downstream opportunities," the source said, pointing to Adnoc's ambitions in that area.

Last year Adnoc presented a 2030 strategy plan to open up its energy markets to foreign operators and attract the skills needed to develop E&P, refining and petrochemical industries.

Thanks to bumper gas discoveries in Mozambique's Mamba field and Egypt's Zohr, Eni has one of the strongest discovery records in the industry and one of the fastest time to market records.

"Getting into refining would give Eni a natural hedge to all its upstream business as well as allowing it to diversify away from Africa," said Santander oil analyst Jason Kenney.

Sources have also told Reuters Eni is in the race to get into Qatar's plans to expand its liquefied natural gas industry, saying teaming up with Qatar Petroleum in Mexico was a preparatory move. 

(Reuters, Reporting by Davide Barbuscia and Giselda Vagnoni in ROME and Stephen Jewkes in MILAN; editing by David Evans)

Categories: Middle East Offshore Energy Shale Oil & Gas

Related Stories

Eni Advances Major Deep Water Gas Hubs with Dual FIDs

Oil Drops 7% After Trump Predicts War Could End Soon

Aramco Warns of Severe Oil Market Fallout from Hormuz Blockade

OSV Market: Asia Pacific Downshifts for the Long Haul

Lamprell Secures ONGC Deal for Subsea Pipeline Replacement Project

Asia’s Oil Reliance on Middle East Explained

Oil Prices Go Up 3% as Iran Crisis Disrupts Supply

Arabian Drilling Reactivates Fleet as GCC Offshore Contract Starts

QatarEnergy Selects Technip Energies JV for North Field West Expansion Work

Vantage Drilling’s Ultra-Deepwater Drillship Heads to India Under $260M Contract

Current News

US to Deploy Amphibious Assault Ship, Marines to Middle East

Indian Gas Tankers Prepare to Sail Through Strait of Hormuz

Offshore Vietnam: Energy Imports Rise as Domestic Production Falls

Eni Advances Major Deep Water Gas Hubs with Dual FIDs

Eni Advances Angola Gas Project, Secures $9B Credit Facility

TVO Customizes Tethered BOP Technology

Eni: New Gas Discoveries in Libya

Petronas Makes New Hydrocarbon Discovery in Southeast Asia

PTTEP Picks Everllence Compressors for Thailand’s Offshore CCS Project

IEA Unleashes Record 400M Barrel Oil Stockpile Release Amid Iran War Disruptions

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