Indian firms win oil exploration rights in Libya

Agence France Presse

New Delhi, January 31:

India’s state-run Indian Oil Corp and Oil India Ltd have won a licence to look for oil in Libya in their first joint foray overseas, a report said today.

The two companies won a bid to explore onshore Block-086 in “the highly prospective Sirte basin,” the Press Trust of India news agency quoted Indian Oil Corporation (IOC) officials as saying. IOC and Oil India forged an alliance last month to look for oil and gas in other countries. Under the terms of the licence, IOC and Oil India will get 18.4 per cent of any future production in the block, with the remaining 81.6 per cent going to Libya’s national oil company, PTI said. If oil is found in the licence area, Libya, which is a member of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries, will fund half of the exploration and development costs. Oil India will be the operator of the block, part of the first offering of concessions by Libya after the lifting of US sanctions, the report said.

Indian officials said the companies will bid for at least two out of the 40 licences Libya proposes to offer in a second round next month, it added. Oil India and another Indian state-run company ONGC Videsh won exploration.

US companies win 11 of 15 deals:

TRIPOLI: Three giant US oil companies have won 11 of 15 Libyan oil exploration and production sharing agreements contested by 56 international companies, the official Jama-hiriya news agency reported. Prime Minister Shokri Ghanem made the official announcement in Tripoli on Saturday. Oil and investment companies from 28 countries bid for the oil exploration concessions, marking the first time Libya has allowed foreign bids. — AP