The acquisition of stake in Progress Energy Resources Corp for 1 billion Canadian dollars (USD 900 million) mark IOC's maiden entry into North America.
"I am pleased to announce that we have just finalised a further 25 percent equity participation from an Indian party and an established Asian LNG buyer," the Malaysian state firm's president and chief executive Shamsul Azhar Abbas said at the LNG Supplies for Asian Markets conference in Singapore.
The Malaysian firm, through its wholly-owned subsidiary Petronas International Corp, had in 2011 bought Canada's Progress Energy Resources Corp in a Canadian Dollar 5.2 billion deal to get the Altares, Lily and Kahta shale gas assets in north-eastern British Columbia.
In March 2013, it sold a 10 per cent stake in the integrated shale gas development and LNG project to Japan Petroleum Exploration Co (Japex) and another 3 percent to Petroleum Brunei.
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"We are in advanced talks with other buyers for the remaining 12 per cent," he said, without providing any further details.
The Malaysian firm is planning to build a liquefied natural gas terminal off Canada's Pacific Coast, aimed at exporting natural gas to Asian markets. Progress Energy has more than 1.9 trillion cubic feet of proved and probable gas reserves in British Columbia.
IOC, which had previously ventured into overseas oil and gas exploration and production with state-owned explorer OIL India Ltd, is currently talking to Petronas alone. There has been no decision so far on taking OIL on board for the acquisition.