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Tullow Oil summons shareholders over sale of it’s stake in Albertine

Uganda oil in the Albertine graben

Kampala, Uganda | THE INDEPENDENT | Tullow Oil has set dates for meeting its shareholders as part of the planned sale of its stake in the Lake Albert Development Project in Uganda.

The company according to the UK rules issued a circular and notice for its general meeting relating to the sale of its entire stake in the Albertine graben to Total for USD 575 million. The sale according to a news release has been approved by the Financial Control Authority of the UK, the conduct regulator for over 58,000 financial services firms and financial markets.

But the transaction is conditional upon the approval of the company’s shareholders who will meet on July 15. The process of approval according to the rules requires a simple majority shareholding approval. They are expected to vote and approve the deal before the sale can be concluded in Uganda.

Tullow management and board recommends that all shareholders vote or procure votes in favour of the resolution being proposed saying transaction is of critical importance to the company.

Tullow Oil in April said it had signed a deal to sell all its stake in the project to France’s Total for a sum of USD 575 million. The announcement breathed new life into Uganda’s oil and gas sector following a long stalemate that had affected the country’s commercial oil production time.

It is expected that the conclusion of the deal will pave the way to the long-awaited Final Investment Decision which is needed to propel the oil and gas sector towards production.

The government and Tullow had disagreed over tax settlement involving the earlier planned farm down to Total and China’s CNOOC at USD 900 million. Under the new arrangement, Total is to acquire Tullow’s entire interests in Blocks 1, 1A, 2 and 3A in western Uganda and the proposed East African Crude Oil Pipeline System.

Tullow will be paid USD 500 million payable at completion and USD 75 million payable after the project’s final investment decision.

CNOOC had previously exercised preemption rights over the earlier planned USD 900 million farm-down which meant it would have taken 50% of the stake. But it did not exercise that right in the upcoming USD 575 million deal.

Total will assume majority shares holding in the Lake Albert Development project once the transaction is complete. The approval by shareholders in July will be another milestone. But Tullow says the transaction also remains subject to a number of other conditions including customary government and the execution of a binding tax agreement.

The completion of the transaction is expected in the second half of 2020.  Tullow is also selling its stake in the South Lokichar Basin in neighbouring Kenya.

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