Friday, November 22, 2024

Sudan Tribune

Plural news and views on Sudan

Sinopec buys Kazakh oil assets, returns to Sudan.

BEIJING, Oct 22 (Reuters) – China’s Sinopec has bought over $160 million worth of oil assets in Kazakhstan from a U.S. firm and re-entered Sudan by taking a small oil stake, adding to the state refiner’s growing foreign portfolio, sources said on Thursday.

Sinopec Group acquired First International Oil Company (FIOC), which has petroleum operations in the central Asian country, including five oil exploration blocks and one small producing field, the industry sources said.

“It’s Sinopec’s first takeover of an oil firm but a small one, with small production,” a Sinopec official close to the deal said, adding that the assets are located in the onshore areas around the Caspian basin.

The producing oilfield pumps 200,000 tonnes a year, or 4,000 barrels per day, sources said.

Sinopec Group, parent of New York and Hong Kong-listed Sinopec Corp, has also returned to oil-rich Sudan, which is reeling from a two-decade political conflict that the United Nations said had caused one of the worst humanitarian crises.

Sinopec bought from a regional oil company a total of 6 percent stake in oil block 3 and block 7 in Sudan, both due to start production next year.

Sinopec, whose oil workers drilled wells in Sudan in the 1990s, backed out before its public listing in 2000 from the north African country, which was then under U.S. sanctions, worried that international investors would dump its shares.

The U.N. Security Council early this month shied away from endorsing a U.S.-drafted resolution to impose oil sanctions against Sudan for atrocities against civilians, which China had threatened to veto.

Cash-rich state oil firms are hard pressed to hunt for oil and gas reserves overseas as China is importing 43 percent of its crude oil needs, up from last year’s 38 percent, to meet robust oil demand.

This pressure is particularly great for Sinopec, as it imports more than three quarters of its crude needs and accounts for more than 80 percent of China’s total crude oil imports now running at a record of 2.5 million barrels per day.

But compared to domestic rivals China National Petroleum Corp. (CNPC) and Sinochem, Sinopec has been slow in making acquisitions.

Top of its shopping list is a 16,467-sq-mile (42,630-sq-km) gas block in Saudi Arabia, where Sinopec is expected to explore and produce natural gas in a 80-20 joint-venture with state-owned Saudi Aramco.

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