Mauritania and Woodside still need to reach contract agreements
Mauritanian leaders and Australia's Woodside Petroleum have still to reach agreement over contracts before an oil
production deal starts.
In 2004 Woodside agreed to invest A$ 8,370 mm ($ 600 mm) in developing Mauritania's Chinguetti oil project, off the
West African country's coast. The dispute concerns amendments to four offshore production-sharing contracts. The
deals were agreed by long-serving authoritarian leader Maaouiya Ould Taya, ousted by a military junta in 2005.
The controversial amendments cut the state's share in the oil revenue, lowered taxes and scrapped bank guarantees
that were in the initial contract, the country's leader Colonel Elly Ould Mohamed Vall said.
It is estimated the amendments could cost Mauritania up to $ 200m a year.
Col. Vall said Mauritania was determined to use the law to protect its interests. The amendments were signed by
former oil minister Zeidane Ould Hmeida in February 2004 and March 2005. But Mauritanian authorities say they were
signed "outside the legal framework of normal practice, to the great detriment of our country".
Mr Hmeida was arrested and charged in January for "serious crimes against the country's essential economic interests"
according to an official statement.
Mauritania will start oil production and oil exports soon, but the dispute is not expected to hit schedules.
"Woodside is convinced that these amendments are appropriate, valid, and binding upon both parties," the company
said. It said it would continue talking to the government. When the deal was signed in May 2004, Woodside hoped to
extract 75,000 barrels of oil a day from Chinguetti.
Chinguetti was discovered in 2001, and has proven and probable reserves of about 120 mm barrels of oil.
Woodside, which started life as a small exploration firm in the mid-1950s, has a 53.85 % controlling stake in the
project.
