Libya announced on Tuesday it will sign a $900-million exploration deal with British energy giant BP, which London says plans to return the North African country after a 33-year absence.
”We are going to sign with BP an oil-exploration and -prospecting accord on Libyan territory worth $900-million,” said the head of Libya’s National Oil Corporation, Shokri Ghanem.
The announcement came ahead of a visit to the oil-rich nation by British Prime Minister Tony Blair who is starting a tour of Africa before he leaves office next month.
”BP will be announcing that they’re going back into Libya,” a spokesperson for Blair said, confirming that the outgoing premier was due to hold talks with Libyan leader Moammar Gadaffi.
There has not yet been any official confirmation from BP itself.
The Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries member is the African continent’s second-largest oil producer at 1,7-million barrels per day. It also has natural-gas reserves estimated at 1 314-billion cubic metres.
The Financial Times reported in January last year that BP had entered negotiations over a multibillion-dollar gas-exploration and -development agreement in Libya.
It said discussions involved a liquefied-natural-gas project that could supply the North American or European markets.
Libya is seeking massive investment to boost its energy sector, whose development was stunted under United Nations sanctions imposed after a United States airliner was downed in 1988 by a bomb over the Scottish town of Lockerbie, killing 270 people. — Sapa-AFP