BP, Eni keen to develop Iraq’s Majnoon oilfield

General Views Of Snam Rete Gas SpA's Italgas Depot And ENI SpA Headquarters...A logo sits on top of ENI SpA's headquarters in Rome, Italy, on Friday, Jan. 20, 2012. The Italian government plans to force Eni SpA, the country's biggest oil company, to sell its 5.9 billion euro ($7.6 billion) stake in natural-gas distribution network Snam Rete Gas SpA to boost competition. Photographer: Alessia Pierdomenico/Bloomberg

BAGHDAD / Reuters

BP and Eni are among companies that have expressed an interest
in developing the giant Majnoon oilfield which Royal Dutch Shell plans to leave next year, Iraqi oil officials said.
Shell has agreed to exit the Majnoon field in southern Iraq and hand over its operation to the state-run Basra Oil Co. by the end of June 2018, according to two Iraqi oil officials.
“BP and Italy’s Eni have approached the oil ministry last month to show interest in developing Majnoon after Shell exits
the field,” an oil official close
to Majnoon operations said. BP and Eni were not immediately available to comment.
Two other oil officials confirmed BP and Eni’s interest in Majnoon and said the oil ministry had not yet started talks with either company. BP is developing Rumaila, Iraq’s biggest oilfield, in the south. The field currently produces around 1.45 million barrels per day (bpd).
Eni operates the 4-billion-barrel Zubair oilfield in the south, wh-
ich currently produces around 430,000 bpd.
Iraqi Oil Minister Jabar al-Luaibi said on October 9 that Chevron and Total were among the companies that had expressed an interest in developing Majnoon.
Iraq is developing the Majnoon field itself until it can find a foreign partner. “The oil minister Luaibi will directly supervise the operations in Majnoon after Shell le-
aves to make sure operations will not be disrupted,” said another Iraqi oil official.

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