Prosecutor says Gulf of Guinea oil deals are seriously flawed
State prosecutors in Sao Tome and Principe have found offshore oil prospecting deals the Gulf of Guinea island nation
made in June were "seriously flawed" at the country's expense.
"The procedure used to select the companies to receive awards was seriously flawed and did not meet the minimum
international standards for a licensing round," attorney general Adelino Amado Pereira said.
Since September, his office had been investigating alleged irregularities in the distribution of five offshore blocks
jointly owned by the archipelago and by Nigeria, Africa's largest oil producer, on a 40-60 % basis under a treaty
signed in 2001. A US-registered Nigerian-funded company, ERHC Energy, was then reported to be the main beneficiary,
with shares in each block ranging from 15 to 65 %.
The blocks were allocated in June for a total of $ 283 mm (EUR 238 mm).
Investigators found the award of contracts had "worked to the financial detriment of Sao Tome and Principe" and had
also been of benefit to "many unqualified firms". The findings had been sent with "recommendations" concerning future
oil exploration tenders to President Fradique de Menezes, the prime minister and the speaker of parliament.
In November, de Menezes told he was being investigated as part of a probe into alleged corruption, and said an
unnamed US academic expert was helping the team.
Huge oil deposits have been detected in the waters off Sao Tome, off the southern coast of West Africa, since 1995
which have stirred international interest but so far the tiny archipelago of less 200,000 people and has yet to feel
the results of an expected oil boom.
Some studies suggest the islands, which gained independence from Portugal in 1975, sit on between 6 and 11 bn barrels
of crude oil.
