Repsol to pay Venezuela $ 207 mm for share in oil field
Spain's Repsol-YPF will pay Venezuela $ 207 mm to exploit an oil field that straddles the western states of Zulia and
Trujillo.
Repsol took a minority share of the Barua-Motatan oil field, which encompasses 432 sq km (167 sq miles), after
lawmakers voted to transfer that area to Petroquiriquire, a joint venture between Repsol and the Venezuelan Oil
Corporation, or CVP, a unit of Venezuelan state oil company PdVSA.
According to preliminary studies, production in that field could initially amount to 40,000 bpd, the president of the
National Assembly's Energy and Mines Commission, Angel Rodriguez, said. The National Assembly, which previously said
it would authorize the transaction, said it had approved the transfer of that area to the Spanish company, which can
use $ 173.5 mm in credit from CVP to cover part of the total.
That credit was issued in 2006 when Repsol agreed to convert its existing operating contracts into minority-stake
joint ventures with PdVSA.
Petroquiriquire was formedin 2006 as a 60-40 joint venture between PdVSA and Repsol-YPF to operate the Menegrande
field, located in the western state of Zulia, and the Quiriquire field, in the eastern state of Monagas.
The company produces 24,900 barrels of crude per day and 34 mm cf of natural gas, although "in the near future that
could be almost doubled," Rodriguez said.
"At first the idea was to create a (new) joint venture to exploit (Barua-Motatan), but the decision was made to give
it to an already established company in the interest of economic feasibility and to take advantage of existing
synergies," the lawmaker added.
In addition, because Petroquiriquire is partially state-owned, the government maintains control over the activities
carried out in that zone," Rodriguez said.
