Total’s major oil and gas projects in
Africa will not be stopped by the sudden fall in crude oil prices and
will help the French company meet its long-term production targets, a
top executive said on Tuesday.
Total has bet on a string of African
projects such as Egina in Nigeria, Kaombo in Angola and Moho in the
Republic of Congo to help it boost production to a target of 2.8 million
barrels of oil equivalent per day in 2017.
These are west African projects in deep
and ultra-deep water — an area where Total is a self-proclaimed
specialist but that require costly technologies.
“These projects have been engaged and we
certainly won’t stop them, which means thousands of jobs will be
preserved for projects up to a 2017-2018 horizon,” Guy Maurice, the head
of Total’s exploration and production branch in Africa told reporters
on the sidelines of a conference.
“All the big projects are in the
pipeline today. This will allow us to meet our production targets for
2017-2018 as planned,” he said.
He said the recent drop in oil prices —
which has seen Brent crude oil plunging by more than half since June —
will prompt the group to review certain projects in Africa, country by
country, but that no major project was at a stage that required a final
investment decision.
“What could come up tomorrow, in 2025 or
something, is not at a pre-sanction stage, it’s still very early in the
study phase, we’re not in a phase when we have to arbitrate between
doing it or not,” he said.
He said Total would work with partners —
subcontractors and producing countries — to help bring the cost of
projects down, on the model of what was achieved with the Kaombo project
in Angola, which was launched after a $4 billion reduction in costs
last year.
“Half of the reduction came from us, we
changed our requirements, a quarter from our suppliers, and a quarter
from the Angolan government, which has accepted a lower level of local
content,” he said, referring to producing countries’ increasing demands
for the use of often more costly local suppliers and untrained staff for
oil projects.
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