Shell setback upsets Nigeria's quest to lure investment

Shell setback upsets Nigeria's quest to lure investment

People sit at the Shell booth on the day of the opening of the Nigeria Oil and Gas 2022 meeting in Abuja, Nigeria July 4, 2022. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde/File Photo

Nigeria's decision this week to block Shell's $2.4 billion (Ksh.309.6 billion) sale of its onshore assets has sent a negative signal to investors the country urgently needs to strengthen its all-important oil sector, analysts said.

President Bola Tinubu has been seeking with some success to woo foreign investment as Africa's most populous country grapples with a fiscal crisis.

But this week the upstream regulator surprised many in the industry by declining to approve Shell's $2.4 billion (Ksh.309.6 billion) deal with the Renaissance consortium, dominated by local firms.

It did not give reasons for its decision and Shell has yet to comment. The company has ties that stretch back more than half a century and is one of the biggest investors in Nigeria's oil, which is the backbone of its economy and biggest foreign currency earner.

A similar deal by Exxon Mobil to sell onshore assets to Seplat Energy was approved this week, but only after a wait of more than two and half years.

Clementine Wallop, director for sub-Saharan Africa at political risk consultancy Horizon Engage said the difficulty of getting regulatory approval clashed with the president's quest to win outside investment.

"On the one hand, you have a government that says we're open for business. We want to improve the ease of doing business. We want to engage with the world's largest energy investors, and on the other hand, there have been these long delays to the approvals," Wallop said.

"The delays have been an impediment to the success of the Tinubu regime's big investment push. It has had an effect outside the energy industry as well."

DOWNWARD TREND

As Nigeria's economy has failed to recover from the shock of the pandemic and its impact on oil demand, total foreign investment inflows fell to $3.9 billion (Ksh.503 billion) last year from $5.3 billion (Ksh.683.6 billion) in 2022, data from the National Bureau of Statistics showed.

That continued a downward trend that started five years ago when investors pumped in $24 billion (Ksh.3.9 trillion).

The oil assets Shell is selling are either producing below capacity or not producing at all, but would be boosted by investment.

The government says boosting oil production - which remains below 1.35 million barrels of oil per day (bpd) against a target of 2 million bpd - would help to ease dollar shortages.

The lack of foreign currency and plunge in the value of the naira has led multinational companies beyond oil, including Procter & Gamble, GSK Plc and Bayer AG, to either leave Nigeria or appoint third parties to distribute their products.

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Nigeria Bola Tinubu Shell

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