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Bid
for Nigeria's oil blocs tentatively set for mid-February: minister
AFP
LAGOS
Petroleumworld.com 01 11 07
Bid for the sale of Nigeria's offshore oil blocs, suspended several
times last year, has tentatively been fixed for around the middle of
February, Energy Minister Edmund Daukoru said Wednesday.
"The bid round will come up at about the middle of February. This
is however tentative," he told AFP after a cabinet meeting.
"There are one or two things we are putting together ahead of the
bid round. It is still premature to say the exact number of blocs"
to be put on sale, he said, adding that a committee was working on the
issue.
The Nigerian government last December suspended until 2007 the sale
of around 60 crude oil blocs, initially anticipated for the last quarter
of last year, officials from the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR)
said.
Industry sources had last month predicted that the bidding round might
take place in February.
The DPR director, Tony Chukwueke, had in October told journalists that
the government was increasing the number of blocs up for tender to 60
from 50 previously, owing to increased interest by Asian investors,
they said.
"We have had a flood of investors from Asia who are interested
in our downstream sector, in so far as we give them opportunity in the
upstream and this is forcing us to increase the number of blocs on tender
... from 50 blocs initially announced to 60," Chukwueke had said.
He said that the new government policy gives preference to companies
that agree to invest in the downstream sector of the industry.
Nigeria, which derives more than 95 percent of its foreign exchange
earnings from oil, hopes to realise about 500 million dollars from the
bloc bid round, he also said.
The country normally produces about 2.6 million barrels of oil per day
but a quarter of this has been affected in the past months due to restiveness
in the oil-rich Niger Delta.
Some 37 Nigerian troops and dozens of Nigerian oil workers were killed
by separatist militants in the delta last year while more than 60 foreigners,
mostly oil workers, were kidnapped.
Nigeria, which derives more than 95 percent of its foreign exchange
revenue from oil and is Africa's largest producer, lost more than half
a million barrels a day last year due to unrest by those who want to
see more of the earnings put back into the local communities.
According to the country's Finance Minister Nenadi Usman, 570 billion
naira (around 4.4 billion dollars / 3.5 billion euros) in revenue was
lost to unrest last year.
"Early in the second quarter of 2006, there was a loss of production
of 600,000 barrels per day from the joint venture operations,"
Usman said this week.
"The loss was due principally to social disruptions in the Niger
Delta which continued until the end of fiscal year 2006," she added.
AFP
10 1651 GMT 01 07
Copyright© 2001 AFP.All
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