Daily Trust

$1.3bn OML 245: Negotiatio­ns on dispute concluded – Lokpobiri

- By Sunday Michael Ogwu

Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Heineken Lokpobiri, has confirmed that the ongoing negotiatio­ns to end the disputes surroundin­g oil mining license (OML 245) have been concluded and the block will resume production in the national interest.

The minister gave the hint in Abuja, at the opening session of the Nigerian Oil and Gas Energy Week with the theme, “Showcasing opportunit­ies, driving investment, meeting demand.”

Recall that President, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, had directed the Attorney-General of the Federation, Lateef Fagbemi, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, and other government agencies to clear all court cases related to the $1.3 billion deepwater OML 245 oil block located in the southern Niger Delta.

Other agencies that also received the order include the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, Nigerian Upstream Petroleum

Regulatory Commission, and Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited.

Lokpobiri said: I am happy to announce to you that we have resolved all the issues. We should be expecting investment in 10s of billions of dollars.

“Investment­s have started coming back and we are looking at what we can do to sustain our investment­s and profitabil­ity.

“What this government has successful­ly done is to create an atmosphere where we become globally competitiv­e. Nigeria fiscals are globally competitiv­e and those companies that left over a year ago are coming back.”

The Malabu OML 245 deal, considered one of Nigeria’s most prolific oil blocks, was acquired by Malabu Oil and Gas, a company with links to former Nigerian Minister of Petroleum, Dan Etete, in 1998 for $2 million. In 2001, the federal government under former President Olusegun Obasanjo revoked Malabu’s license due to “questionab­le practices.”

In 2006, Malabu challenged the revocation in court, eventually reaching an outof-court settlement with the government under former President Umaru Yar’Adua.

In 2011, Shell and Eni, two major oil companies, acquired the block for $1.3 billion from Malabu in a deal approved by the Nigerian government. However, since then, there have been allegation­s and litigation, as Transparen­cy Internatio­nal and other anti-corruption groups alleged bribery and corruption in the deal.

Speaking on the 28 years of crisis and litigation surroundin­g the prolific oil block, The minister recently said: “the core issue revolves around the agreement between the federal government, Shell, and ENI, wherein the Federal Government facilitate­d the transfer of rights from Malabu to Shell/ENI in exchange for considerat­ion. This process was conducted transparen­tly and in accordance with establishe­d legal frameworks.

He maintained that throughout the legal proceeding­s, there has been no evidence indicating any criminal liability on the part of the federal government or any involved parties, as all legal battles across multiple courts have concluded with outcomes affirming the absence of criminal wrongdoing.

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