RUSSIAN oil firm Lukoil said on Thursday a decision by Norway’s Aker Energy to postpone the submission of a development plan for its Pecan oilfield off Ghana over sanctions concerns had no lawful grounds.
Aker Energy, controlled by Aker ASA, owns 50 percent of the deepwater block off Ghana where the Pecan field is located, while Lukoil holds 38 percent, Ghana National Petroleum Corp. has 10 percent, and Fueltrade 2 percent.
‘There are no lawful grounds for such references related to the sanctions restrictions for the project,’ Lukoil said in a statement reported by Reuters. ‘The company and its management are not subject to any sanctions, therefore there are no obstacles in this respect for the joint development of the oilfield.’
Aker ASA Chief Executive Oeyvind Eriksen told a call with analysts on Wednesday that the partners would not submit a development plan to Ghanaian authorities ‘until the challenges have been resolved.’
Russia sent troops into Ukraine on February 24 in what it calls ‘a special military operation,’ prompting unprecedented Western sanctions on Moscow.
Vagit Alekperov, a former Soviet deputy oil minister, resigned as president of Lukoil in April. A source familiar with the matter said at the time that Alekperov had decided to leave after he was sanctioned in order to safeguard the company’s operations.