Home Business Italian Eni To Sell Its Subsidiary, Agip Oil, To Wale Tinubu’s Oando 
BusinessNews

Italian Eni To Sell Its Subsidiary, Agip Oil, To Wale Tinubu’s Oando 

577

Italian oil giant Eni has received formal consent from the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) to sell its subsidiary, Nigerian Agip Oil Company (NAOC), to Oando Plc. Oando is run by President Bola Tinubu’s nephew, Wale Tinubu.

In a statement posted on the company’s website on Wednesday, Eni said it has received formal consent to complete the transaction. During an industry conference in Abuja on July 3, NUPRC CEO Gbenga Komolafe announced that Oando has successfully acquired 100% of Eni’s shares in its subsidiary, Nigerian Agip Oil Company (NAOC). He indicated that an official announcement regarding the deal would follow shortly.

Confirming this in the statement, Eni said:

Having already obtained all other relevant local and regulatory authorities’ authorisations, this achievement will allow Eni to proceed to the completion of the transaction for the sale of Nigerian Agip Oil Company Ltd (NAOC), Eni’s wholly owned subsidiary focusing on onshore oil & gas exploration and production as well as power generation in Nigeria, to Oando PLC, Nigeria’s leading national energy solutions provider, listed on both the Nigerian and Johannesburg Stock Exchange.

Eni’s 5% stake in the Shell Production Development Company Joint Venture (SPDC JV) is excluded from the sale and will remain part of the company’s portfolio. The sale is the first approved under the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) and the new upstream regulatory body, the NUPRC. NUPRC initially resisted the move but approved it after Eni obtained all relevant local and regulatory authorities’ authorisations.

The Nigerian onshore oil industry has recently witnessed significant exits by other major international oil companies.

Read: DSS Joins Call Against Protest, Says Organisers Want Regime Change

About The Author

Related Articles

NewsPolitics

Cotê D’Ivoire: Thousands Rally in Abidjan as Opposition Demands Electoral Reforms Ahead of October Election

Thousands of opposition supporters gathered in Abidjan on Saturday, May 31, to...

News

Togo Stops Issuing Mining Permits to Reform Outdated Mining Code

Togo has suspended the issuance of new mining permits for prospecting and...

News

ICYMI: Ghana Shuts Down Washington Embassy Over Visa Fraud Scandal

Ghana has temporarily closed its embassy in Washington, D.C., following the uncovering...

In a ministerial meeting of the Confederation of Sahel States (AES) held in Bamako on January 16, 2025, key decisions emerging from the session include establishing a Regional Investment Bank and launching transformative infrastructure projects across member states.
News

Confederation of Sahel States Moves to Establish Joint Judicial Body

The Confederation of Sahel States (CSS), comprising Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso,...