Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Abu Dhabi Group Enters Bidding On Lukoil Assets


(MENAFN- The Arabian Post) Arabian Post Staff -Dubai

A major Abu Dhabi conglomerate has confirmed that it has formally expressed interest in acquiring overseas assets of a large Russian oil group, aligning with other global energy players eyeing the same prize.
International Holding Company said it has notified the U. S. Treasury Department of its interest in buying foreign-based assets of Lukoil, placing it in active contention alongside the likes of Chevron, ExxonMobil and private-equity firm Carlyle Group.

The U. S. Treasury has authorised companies to begin discussions with Lukoil regarding its international holdings until 13 December, giving potential bidders a limited window to conduct preliminary talks. The assets in play are estimated at a book value of about US$22 billion and span refineries in Europe, oilfields in Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Iraq, Mexico, Nigeria and Egypt, and a global fuel-retail network.
Lukoil's foreign operations account for roughly 0.5 % of global crude output.

IHC, chaired by Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan, has been expanding its investment footprint significantly, covering sectors such as healthcare, energy, real estate, agriculture and mining across the U. S., India, Latin America and Africa. The firm has outlined a possible deployment of US$30 billion–US$35 billion over an 18-month cycle to secure new deals.

Chevron and ExxonMobil have already been reported to be assessing parts of Lukoil's global portfolio. Chevron is understood to favour assets that overlap with its existing operations, notably in Kazakhstan's Tengiz and Karachaganak fields, and Nigeria's OML-140 licence. Carlyle is also surveying the opportunity, though no public due-diligence milestones have been confirmed.

Lukoil's decision to divest its international business was prompted by U. S. sanctions that targeted it and a peer state oil firm as part of efforts to pressure Moscow in its war in Ukraine. These sanctions disrupted Lukoil's overseas operations and triggered the sale process. One potential bidder, Swiss trader Gunvor, withdrew after the U. S. labelled it a“Kremlin puppet” and declined to licence its proposal.

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The bidding process poses complex legal and regulatory hurdles. The U. S. Treasury licence dictates that any sale must ensure Lukoil is entirely severed from its international business and that transaction proceeds be escrowed in a blocked account until sanctions are lifted. Failure to meet these conditions may prompt Washington to veto any deal. Some of Lukoil's joint ventures include“right-of-first-refusal” clauses, complicating the sale of specific assets such as those in Kazakhstan.

IHC's interest signals a strategic shift in global energy-asset transactions, reflecting the evolving contours of supply-chain dynamics, state-backed investments and regulatory oversight. For IHC, acquiring Lukoil's overseas portfolio would complement its global ambitions and bolster its energy-sector credentials. For Lukoil, the sale offers a path to contain sanctions-induced disruptions - but only if the buyer satisfies strict U. S. licensing conditions and countersignatories across multiple jurisdictions.

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The Arabian Post

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