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$617 Million Dispute in Congo Oil Deal

Rig Lynx
  • By Rig Lynx
  • Mar 07, 2019
  • Category : Archives
  • Views : 850

Bloomberg: An international court ordered the Democratic Republic of Congo to pay DIG Oil Ltd. of South Africa $617 million for failing to honor two oil contracts, weeks before outgoing President Joseph Kabila finally approved one of the deals.

The previously undisclosed ruling is the latest twist in an 11-year dispute over concessions in the central African nation, which may hold as much as 6 percent of the continent’s oil reserves. Kabila’s belated assent to one of the contested contracts suggests the state may be seeking ways to avoid paying the penalty.

The Paris-based International Court of Arbitration said Congo “failed to execute its obligations” by withholding presidential approval of production-sharing agreements signed in December 2007 and January 2008, according to a Nov. 7 ruling seen by Bloomberg and verified by the Oil Ministry and DIG Oil.

DIG Oil sealed the first contract for three blocks in central Congo and was part of a consortium of companies that secured the latter for a single permit in the east of the country. After Kabila didn’t provide the necessary approval for both agreements, it sought to terminate both accords and win damages, rather than have them enforced. One of the contracts was re-allocated to new investors more than eight years ago.

Andrea Brown, executive director of DIG Oil, and Oil Ministry Chief of Staff Emmanuel Kayumba declined to comment on the ICA’s decision.

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