Exxon Mobil Relinquishes Stake in Ghana Offshore Block

Cooper Inveen
Friday, June 4, 2021

Exxon Mobil has relinquished its 80% interest in Ghana’s Deepwater Cape Three Points offshore block, a spokesman told Reuters on Thursday.

“Exxon Mobil is prioritizing near-term capital spend on the most advantaged assets with the lowest cost of supply in the portfolio including developments in Guyana, Brazil and the U.S. Permian Basin,” Preba Arkaah, a spokesman for Exxon in Ghana, said in an email.

Representatives of Ghana’s energy ministry and petroleum regulatory agency could not be immediately reached for comment.

Exxon Mobil acquired the rights to explore the Deepwater Cape Three Points block in 2018. The U.S.-based company held an 80% interest in the concession, while state-run Ghana National Petroleum Corporation held 15%.

The sale appears to be a part of a shift in the company’s West Africa strategy, with Savannah Energy having announced on Wednesday that it is in talks with Exxon to acquire its assets in Chad and Cameroon.

Ghana, which exports cocoa and gold, began commercial production in late 2010 from its flagship Jubilee reserves, which sit between the Cape Three Points and Tano offshore blocks.

(Reporting by Cooper Inveen; Editing by Bate Felix and David Evans)

Categories: Energy Industry News Activity Africa Regulations

Related Stories

BP Looks to Shed Gulf of America Projects, sources say

Britain Offers Grid Connections to More Than 700 Projects In Energy Investment Push

TGS to Create Major Offshore Seismic Dataset for Equatorial Guinea

Current News

Shell Plans to Launch $1b Wind Farm Sale

BP Looks to Shed Gulf of America Projects, sources say

Cadeler Installs Final Turbine at RWE's 1.4GW Sofia Offshore Wind Farm

JERA Takes Delivery of First LNG Cargo from Australia's Barossa Gas Project

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News