India shuts down South Sudan oilfields, evacuates employees
India shuts down South Sudan oilfields, evacuates employees
All 11 executives working on 40,000 barrels per day Greater Nile Oil Project and Block 5A have arrived in India.

New Delhi: India on Monday evacuated all its oil employees from strife-torn South Sudan and shut down oilfields amid escalating violence in the world's youngest nation. All 11 executives working on 40,000 barrels per day Greater Nile Oil Project and Block 5A were airlifted, a top source with direct knowledge of the development said.

"The evacuation happened in two batches. All the officials have arrived in India safely," he said.

Before departure, the last job the Indian executives did was to shut down the oilfields yesterday.

ONGC Videsh Ltd, the overseas arm of state-owned Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC), had deputed 11 employees at Greater Nile Oil Project and Block 5A in Sudan. The company made all arrangements to evacuate its personnel as rebel forces loyal to deposed South Sudanese Vice President Riek Machar captured Unity state which housed most of the fields it was operating.

OVL owns 25 per cent stake in the Greater Nile Oil Project which produces about 40,000 barrels of oil per day and 24.125 per cent in Block 5A that produced 5,000 bpd. Other partners in the blocks - China's CNPC and Petronas of Malaysia too have decided to evacuate their officials from South Sudan, the source said.

Fighting in South Sudan, which broke out on December 15, has already claimed as many as 500 lives, including Indian soldiers working as United Nations peacekeepers. The source said rebels so far have not captured any of OVL's oil wells but as a precaution all of them were shut before officials left the country.

Rebel forces last week captured Bor, the capital of Jonglei state, and are said to have taken control of most of the country.

The US has evacuated its 380 officials and private citizens to Nairobi and other locations along with about 300 others.

South Sudan seceded from neighbouring Sudan in July 2011 and took three-quarters of the formerly united country's oil output. Landlocked South Sudan has sub-Saharan Africa's third-largest oil reserves after Nigeria and Angola.

The oil produced in OVL's fields and other projects in the country are exported through pipelines across neighbouring Sudan.

Greater Nile Oil Project (GNOP) comprises of Block 1, 2 & 4. While OVL has 25 per cent stake in the project, China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC) has 40 per cent, Petronas of Malaysia has 30 per cent and Sudapet of Sudan the remaining 5 per cent.

In Block 5A, OVL holds 24.125 per cent while Petronas has 67.875 per cent and Sudapet has 8 per cent.

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