Showing posts with label total. Show all posts
Showing posts with label total. Show all posts

Wednesday, 18 April 2012

Global Witness: Libya's oil sector 'murky'





LONDON, April 18 (UPI) -- "Murky" practices by Libya's state-owned National Oil Co. highlight the need to reform the country's energy policies, Global Witness said.

The advocacy group said it obtained documents from Libya that indicate the country's oil revenues were grossly mismanaged under Moammar Gadhafi's government.

Global Witness said the documents suggest low-quality crude oil was sold on false pretenses to Exxon Mobil, which cost the company about $4 million. Other companies like Norwegian fertilizer company Yara received "large discounts" on natural gas prices from the Libyan National Oil Co.

"Murky dealings within Libya's National Oil Company, and the systematic mismanagement of the country's oil wealth have effectively denied millions of dollars to the people of Libya," said Giulio Carini, a campaigner at Global Witness.

Italian energy company Eni revealed in early April that it was being investigated by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for alleged illegal payments to Libyan officials.

Global Witness called on the Libyan interim government to release all of its records on oil contracts for the sake of transparency.

"The case for reform of the country's oil sector could not be stronger or more urgent," said Carini.


Tuesday, 10 April 2012

Libya's NOC confirms 'routine' probe into oil contracts with foreign majors





Libya's prosecutor general is reviewing oil contracts with international oil companies concluded by the ousted regime of Moammar Qadhafi as a routine measure, the National Oil Company's marketing director Ahmed Shawki said Monday.

"We don't have any information about actual investigations inside the NOC. We don't have any issues so far with the international oil and gas contracts, and business is going forward," Shawki told Platts by telephone from Tripoli.

He was commenting on a report in the Wall Street Journal that the transitional government in Tripoli and the US Securities and Exchange Commission were investigating the activities of a number of oil companies such as Italy's Eni, the biggest operator in Libya, and France's Total.
The Wall Street Journal in a report Sunday quoted Abdelmajeed Saad, the deputy Libyan prosecutor, as saying that the companies were being investigated for alleged "financial irregularities."

The newspaper cited a March letter from the prosecutor's office to the NOC internal auditor asking him to supply oil company documents. It said the letter mentions oil transactions between NOC and international traders Vitol and Glencore as examples of documents it was seeking. It added that while the probe is focusing on Qadhafi-era contracts, the letter indicates that the request includes activities during the civil war last year.

But Shawki stressed that the work being carried out by the prosecutor general was a routine review of all production-sharing contracts and oil sales contracts as part of the transitional government's commitment to transparency and to make sure there were no irregularities.

"So far, I don't believe NOC has any problems with international oil companies, or contracts signed during the Qadhafi regime," Shawki said.

"As I said before, this is just a routine due diligence work done by the General Prosecutor for financial and contractual irregularities, and nothing more than this," he added.

Shawki said he could not comment about oil sales contracts concluded by the transitional government during the crisis because he was not involved. 

Neither Glencore nor Vitol could be contacted for comment because of the Easter holiday.

However, both Total and Eni have said that they are cooperating with the SEC investigation.

Eni said in a Form 20-F filing to the US SEC last week that on June 20, 2011, it received from the US regulator "a formal judicial request of collection and presentation of documents (subpoena) related to Eni's activities in Libya from 2008 to 2011."

It added that the subpoena "is related to an ongoing investigation without further clarifications nor specific alleged violations in connection to 'certain illicit payments to Libyan officials,' possibly violating the US Foreign Corruption Practice Act." The company had further received a request at the end of December 2011 for collection of further documentation aimed at integrating the previous subpoena, it said.

"Eni is fully cooperating with the US SEC," it said.

Total also referred to an investigation in similar filing to the US SEC.

"In June 2011, the US SEC issued to certain companies, including, among others, Total, a formal request for information related to their operations in Libya. Total is cooperating with this non-public investigation," the French major said without elaborating further.

The investigation comes at a crucial time for the new Libyan leaders as they try to grapple with a surge in violence in the aftermath of the revolution, which ended in October with Qadhafi's ouster and death. 

It also comes as Libya, an OPEC oil producers and major exporter to Europe, is ramping up its oil production, currently estimated at 1.4 million b/d, just short of a pre-crisis level of 1.7 million b/d.


Source: Platts