egypt will complete payment this week of
$1.5bn of the $6.3bn it says it owes oil firms, a state executive said
on Monday, in line with a plan aimed at restoring confidence in an
economy hit by nearly three years of political turmoil.
“Today we are reimbursing $1bn to the
foreign partners and the rest during this week,” the chairman of
state-run Egyptian General Petroleum Corporation, Tarek El Molla, told Reuters by telephone.
Approval of the $1.5bn payment was
announced by the government on December 4. The government said the next
day it would repay a further $3bn in monthly installments until the end
of 2017, hoping this will encourage needed investment in the energy
sector.
Molla said $1.2bn of the initial tranche
is being paid in US dollars and the remaining $300m in Egyptian pounds,
as officials had indicated.
He said the government was working on a plan for full repayment of the $6.3bn it says it owes.
Molla had previously told Reuters that
“satisfying” foreign partners was essential to the government’s strategy
of encouraging foreign oil companies in the country to increase
exploration and production in exchange for a more rapid repayment of the
money it owes them.
Financial disclosures by firms including
BP, BG Group, Edison SpA, TransGlobe Energy, Eni and Dana Gas show Egypt
owed them more than $5.2bn at the end of 2012. Industry sources have
indicated the total sum owed is likely to be much higher.
Egypt has been delaying payments to firms
because political upheaval since the overthrow of President Hosni
Mubarak in 2011 has battered its economy, frightening away tourists and
investors, and cutting into tax revenues.
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