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BP strikes deal for 10% stake in Abu Dhabi's ADCO concession

After almost two years of negotiations to improve terms to help operate the United Arab Emirates' biggest oilfields

BP strikes deal for 10% stake in Abu Dhabi's ADCO concession

BP logo is seen at a fuel station of British oil company BP in St. Petersburg

Reuters Dubai

British Petroleum (BP) became the second Western oil major to renew a 40-year onshore concession in Abu Dhabi on Saturday after almost two years of negotiations to improve terms to help operate the United Arab Emirates' biggest oilfields.

The British oil company signed an agreement with state-run Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) giving it a 10% stake in the Abu Dhabi Company for Onshore Petroleum Operations (ADCO), which operates the concession.

"BP becomes a 10% shareholder in ADCO," ADNOC said in a statement. ? "The agreement includes BP becoming asset leader for the Bab asset group within the concession."

The ADCO concession, including the Bab, Bu Hasa, Shah and Asab fields, has total resources of between 20-30 billion barrels of oil equivalent over the term of the concession.? The fields produce 1.6 million barrels per day (bpd) and are expected to reach 1.8 million bpd from 2017.

 

Total was the first oil major to renew the concession, securing a 10% stake in January last year and putting its peers under pressure to improve terms after ADNOC said the French company made the best offer.

Asian and other Western oil firms also bid for stakes after a deal with major oil companies in the concession first granted in the 1970s expired in January 2014.

Total and BP had both held 9.5% equity stakes in the ADCO concession since the 1970s. Shell and Exxon were also partners in the old concession.

Since then other Asian energy companies were granted smaller stakes.? INPEX Corporation of Japan, and GS Energy of South Korea received 5% and 3% stakes respectively.

ADNOC said it, "continues to look for partners to take up the remaining 12% stake of the 40% earmarked for foreign partners."

As part of the deal, BP said it would issue 392,920,353 of new ordinary shares to be held on behalf of Abu Dhabi's government at a price of 4.47 pounds ($5.58) per ordinary share.

This represents approximately 2% of BP's issued share capital, excluding treasury shares.

($1 = 0.8004 pounds)

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First Published: Dec 18 2016 | 1:45 AM IST

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