Exclusive: Conoco moves to sell North Sea
oilfields: sources
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[May 14, 2018]
By Ron Bousso
LONDON (Reuters) - U.S. oil major
ConocoPhillips is preparing to sell its North Sea fields as the company
focuses on shale operations in its home market, industry and banking
sources said.
The disposal of Conoco's North Sea assets after more than 50 years in
the British offshore basin could fetch as much as $2 billion, but it was
unclear how much of the portfolio would be put up for sale, the three
sources said.
Conoco declined to comment.
The company has yet to launch a formal process or appoint a bank but
executives from Conoco have spoken in recent weeks to a number of North
Sea operators and bankers to "gauge the appetite for the sale", one of
the sources said.
The assets include a 24 percent stake in the west Shetlands region's
Clair field, which its operator BP says is the largest undeveloped oil
and gas resource in the UK North Sea. The Clair Ridge project is
expected to begin production this year, according to BP.
Other fields include holdings in the Britannia and J-Block hubs.
Conoco's production in the UK North Sea reached 75,000 barrels of oil
equivalent per day in 2017, its annual report said.
The company tried to sell some of its North Sea assets in 2014 but the
process failed, the sources added.
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Logos of ConocoPhillips are seen in its booth at Gastech, the
world's biggest expo for the gas industry, in Chiba, Japan, April 4,
2017. REUTERS/Toru Hanai
Conoco is the latest major oil company seeking to exit the North Sea
as production in the aging basin declines, other areas become more
competitive and costs for dismantling aging infrastructure weigh.
Conoco earlier this year said it would cut some 450 jobs in Britain,
more than a quarter of its UK workforce.
(Additional reporting by Gary Williams and Ernest Scheyder in
Houston; Editing by Dale Hudson)
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