Egypt Signs 12 Deals for Gas, Oil Exploration in Mediterranean, Red Sea

A gas field in Egypt. (Reuters)
A gas field in Egypt. (Reuters)
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Egypt Signs 12 Deals for Gas, Oil Exploration in Mediterranean, Red Sea

A gas field in Egypt. (Reuters)
A gas field in Egypt. (Reuters)

Egypt has signed nine new agreements, valued at more than $1 billion, with six local and international companies for exploration of oil and natural gas, announced Ministry of Petroleum and Mineral Resources.

The ministry said in a press statement that the companies will drill 17 wells in the eastern and western Mediterranean Sea and regional water of the Red Sea.

The nine deals were concluded with Exxon Mobil Corporation, Chevron Corporation, South Valley Egyptian Petroleum Holding Company, and Total along with its partners: Kuwait Foreign Petroleum Exploration Company (KUFPEC), Shell, and Tharwa.

Egypt's Minister of Petroleum Tarek al-Molla announced that the nine deals are part of 12 new agreements that the ministry has concluded since March 2020 for drilling 23 wells, nine of them offshore the Mediterranean and three in the Red Sea.

The remaining agreements will be completed during the coming period.

Molla explained that the ministry’s new strategy to promote investment opportunities helped attract new international investments in oil and gas exploration and conclude new partnerships with giant and major companies in the global petroleum industry.



Saudi PIF Completes $7 bln Inaugural Murabaha Credit Facility

The Public Investment Fund (PIF) logo
The Public Investment Fund (PIF) logo
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Saudi PIF Completes $7 bln Inaugural Murabaha Credit Facility

The Public Investment Fund (PIF) logo
The Public Investment Fund (PIF) logo

Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund (PIF) completed on Monday a $7 billion inaugural murabaha credit facility.
In a statement, PIF said the credit facility is supported by a syndicate of 20 international and regional financial institutions.
PIF head of the Global Capital Finance Division and head of Investment Strategy and Economic Insights Division Fahad AlSaif said: “This inaugural murabaha credit facility demonstrates the flexibility and depth of PIF’s financing strategy and use of diversified funding sources, as we continue to drive transformative investments, globally and in Saudi Arabia”, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Monday.
This financing complements PIF’s successful sukuk issuances over the past two years, the statement added. It also underpins PIF’s strong financial position, as well as its best-practice approach to debt financing.
PIF is rated Aa3 by Moody’s with stable outlook and A+ by Fitch with stable outlook. PIF has four main sources of funding: capital injections from government, government asset transfers, retained earnings from investments, and loans and debt instruments.