Italian energy major Eni has completed the sale of its stakes in several non-core oil permits in the Congo to Anglo-French oil and gas company Perenco for $300 million.
First announced in June 2023, the deal has been concluded following the receipt of necessary approvals from the relevant authorities.
The sale of non-core assets forms part of Eni’s strategic plan to focus on its upstream operations on key development projects.
Eni, which has had a presence in Congo for over five decades, considers the country central to its objectives concerning supply security and energy transition efforts.
Currently, Eni is developing Congo’s extensive gas reserves, notably through the $5 billion Congo LNG [liquefied natural gas] project.
The Congo LNG project is expected to have an overall LNG production capacity of three million metric tonnes per year by 2025.
It involves the installation of two floating natural gas liquefaction plants at the already-producing Nenè and Litchendjili fields, as well as at additional fields that are due to be developed.
In a press statement, Eni said: “Eni currently supplies gas to the Congo Electric Power Station (CEC), which provides 70% of the country’s electricity production, and is strongly committed to promoting energy transition in the country, including developing agri-feedstock production initiatives destined for biorefining and not in competition with the food supply chain.”
In a separate announcement, Perenco UK announced the completion of the plug and abandonment of three subsea wells at the Gawain field in the UK Southern North Sea.
The campaign, part of decommissioning activities, also involved removing associated subsea infrastructure.