NEW DELHI, Jan 21: Sudan has offered ONGC Videsh Ltd three more oil and gas blocks for exploration and production and invited Indian firms to set up a coastal refinery to boost fuel supplies to the African continent.
The offer made by visiting Sudanese Oil Minister Mohamed Zayed Awad is part of the African nation’s efforts to seek greater energy engagements with India, to which it owes USD 240 million in oil dues.
OVL, the overseas investment arm of state-owned Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC), already has a 25 per cent stake in Greater Nile Oil Project (GNOP) in Sudan that produces about 50,000 barrels of oil per day.
“They have offered more oil blocks for exploration and asked for Indian companies’ expertise to raise production from existing fields,” Oil Minister Dharmendra Pradhan said after meeting Awad on sidelines of the 4th India-Africa Hydrocarbons Conference here.
Awad said Sudan has offered Blocks 8, 15 and 24 for exploration of oil and has asked OVL to consider buying a stake in producing Block 17. Block 17 currently produces 7,000 bpd of oil.
Pradhan said Sudan is also keen on Indian firms setting up a coastal refinery to meet not just local fuel demand but also export to other African nations.
“The issue of USD 240 million pending dues was also discussed and modalities are being worked out for that,” he said.
Sudan has not paid OVL for the oil from GNOP it consumed. The cash-starved nation wants the Indian firm to raise output from the producing Block 17 and exploration areas offered and recoup the dues from it.
Star Oil is the operator of Block 17 with 66 per cent stake while the remaining is with Sudan’s Sudapet.
Also discussed was renewal of licence for Block 2B, which is part of GNOP. The licence for the block expires in November and OVL and its partners China National Petroleum Company (40 per cent stake), Petronas of Malaysia (30 per cent) and Sudapet (5 per cent) want a 5-15 year extension.
OVL had in 2003 bought 25 per cent stake in GNOP which comprised of Block 1, 2 and 4 in the undivided Sudan. It lies in the prolific Muglad basin about 780 kms in the South-West of Khartoum, the capital of Sudan.
Upon secession of South Sudan from Sudan, Blocks 2A, 2B and 4N are in Sudan and Blocks 1A, 1B as well as 4S are in South Sudan.
Block 2B is producing 50,000 bpd of oil while Block 4 is under exploration phase.
The crude oil produced from oil field of GNOP, is transported through a 1504-km pipeline to Port Sudan at Red Sea. (PTI)