BEIJING, Dec 14 (Reuters) - China's CNOOC Ltd
has sold its U.S. subsidiary, together with its
upstream oil and gas assets in the Gulf of Mexico, to British
chemicals group INEOS, according to a CNOOC statement issued on
Saturday.
The Chinese oil and gas major said CNOOC Energy Holdings
U.S.A. entered into a sales agreement with a subsidiary of INEOS
relating to CNOOC's upstream oil and gas assets in the U.S. part
of the Gulf of Mexico.
The deal primarily includes non-operator interests in oil
and gas projects such as the Appomattox and Stampede fields.
INEOS paid just under $2 billion for the assets, according
to a person with direct knowledge of the matter who was not
authorised to speak to media. CNOOC and INEOS did not
immediately respond to requests for comment.
The firm aims to optimise its global asset portfolio and
will work with INEOS towards a smooth transition, CNOOC
International Chairman Liu Yongjie said in the statement.
CNOOC has been sounding out potential buyers of its
interests in U.S. oil and gas fields since 2022.
Reuters had reported earlier CNOOC was considering an exit
from operations in Britain, Canada and the United States over
concerns those assets could become subject to Western sanctions
because China had not condemned Russia's invasion of Ukraine.