Tullow gets Sh1.1bn to waive Kenya oil royalties

Tullow Oil tanks at its Turkana field.  

Photo credit: File | Nation Media Group

Kenya’s Gulf Energy will pay Tullow Oil $9 million (Sh1.16 billion) for the British firm to give up rights to future royalties of $0.5 (Sh65) per barrel and repurchase of shares in the Turkana oil project.

Tullow states in new filings at the London Stock Exchange (LSE) that it has agreed to an additional payment of Sh1.16 billion in exchange for the rights that would have enabled it to bank future millions in royalties once the Kenyan crude oil project reaches full production.

After selling its Kenyan assets to Gulf for at least $120 million (Sh15.6 billion) in three staggered payments, the British firm was entitled to royalty payments and had the right to a 30 percent participation in potential future development phases at no additional cost.

Ceding these rights means that the company will make a clean break from the Turkana project, where it first discovered oil in 2012.

“This transaction is another important step in our strategy to deliver value from our portfolio and strengthen the balance sheet. By accelerating the receipt of $9 million from the sale of the shares in Tullow Kenya B.V., we are securing near-term cash proceeds and simplifying our portfolio,” said Ian Perks, the chief executive officer of Tullow.

The Kenyan oilfields have not been brought into full production, as any export route would require building hundreds of miles of a heated pipeline to the coast.

The British firm has already received the first two tranches of the staggered payment. The first payment was made on September 25, 2025, and the second one on March 9, 2026.

The second tranche was due either upon the approval of a field development plan (FDP) for the project. The FDP was approved in February after it was ratified by the Ministry of Energy and Parliament.

An FDP outlines how an oil company intends to develop a petroleum field and manage the impact on the environment and society. It also gives forecasts for production and costs.

The third and final $40 million tranche will be paid in quarterly instalments of $2 million (Sh258.7 million) starting in September 2028, provided that the price of Brent crude oil averaged $65 per barrel in the preceding quarter.

Should the aggregate amount of the tranche not have been cleared by June 2033, the balance will be settled in a bullet payment regardless of the prevailing price of oil.

Securing the upfront payment in exchange for future royalties removes uncertainty over cash flows for Tullow, given that the project has faced long delays and is subject to the volatility of the oil market.

Tullow discovered commercially viable oil in the Lokichar basin in 2012 and had aimed to start commercial production in 2020. The target would later be revised as the company struggled to find a deep-pocketed strategic investor to derisk the project, before the eventual sale to Gulf.

It also failed to get approval for its field development plans for the project, partly due to the difficulty in securing a strategic investor after the exit of its joint venture partners TotalEnergies and Africa Oil in 2023.

The pair, who held a 25 percent stake each in the project, said that they left the project due to “differing internal strategic reasons”, leaving Tullow as the sole owner.

Before selling its stake to Gulf, Tullow had cumulatively written off more than Sh140 billion in recoverable assets from the Kenyan project, underlining the delays in moving into commercial production and securing a strategic investment.

After securing the stake, Gulf is now hoping to commence commercial oil production by the end of this year on Turkana oil blocks T6 and T7.

The company’s FDP shows that 600,000 barrels of oil will be extracted and exported per month—or 20,000 barrels per day— in the first phase of the project running from 2026 to 2032. The second phase, from 2032, will see production increase to 50,000 barrels a day or 1.5 million per month.

Gulf has already secured an onshore oil rig for $15 million (Sh1.9 billion) from Great Wall Drilling Company in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) on a long-term lease for the Turkana project.

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