ADNOC said in a statement it signed the agreement with US giant ExxonMobil and Japan's INPEX to raise output at the Upper Zakum offshore field by around 350,000 barrels per day to one million bpd by 2024.
The agreement extended the concession of the two companies by a decade to end by 2051.
Located 83 kilometres northwest of Abu Dhabi, Upper Zakum is the world's fourth-largest oilfield and the second-largest offshore, containing almost half of the United Arab Emirates' proven reserves -- nearly 100 billion barrels.
The agreement is part of efforts by ADNOC to push UAE production capacity to 3.5 million bpd from about 3.2 million bpd currently.
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Japan's INPEX began the partnership with ADNOC to develop Upper Zakum in 1978. They were joined by ExxonMobil in 2006.
No financial details were given for the agreement but the ongoing project is estimated to cost around USD10 billion. ADNOC has 60 per cent of the concession, ExxonMobil 28 per cent and INPEX 12 per cent.
Yesterday, ADNOC said it will float a minority stake in its petrol station subsidiary in the first privatisation of the totally state-owned oil sector.
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