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Natural Gas May 21, 2026 01:40:50 AM

QatarEnergy buys stakes in Uruguay offshore blocks from Shell subsidiary

Carolina
Curiel
OilMonster Author
The Qatari energy giant's South American exploration expansion also strengthens its strategic alliance with Shell, one of ​its key partners in energy projects within Qatar and elsewhere.
QatarEnergy buys stakes in Uruguay offshore blocks from Shell subsidiary

SEATTLE (Oil Monster): QatarEnergy has acquired interests in three offshore exploration blocks in Uruguay from a subsidiary of Shell, marking its first ​entry into the South American country's upstream energy sector, the ‌state-owned company said on Wednesday without disclosing financial details.

The Qatari energy giant's South American exploration expansion also strengthens its strategic alliance with Shell, one of ​its key partners in energy projects within Qatar and elsewhere.

The ​company, the world's largest single LNG producer before the ⁠U.S.-Israeli war on Iran forced production halts and resulted in damage ​to some facilities, has been building up an upstream portfolio over ​several years, including interests in Brazil, Cyprus, Egypt and elsewhere.

Under the agreements, QatarEnergy took 30% stakes in block OFF-2 and block OFF-7, where Shell is the ​operator and holds 70% and 40% respectively. QatarEnergy also acquired ​an 18% interest in block OFF-4.

APA Corporation operates block OFF-4, in which it holds ‌a ⁠50% stake and Shell holds 32%. In block OFF-7, Chevron holds the remaining 30% interest, QatarEnergy said.

"We are pleased to strengthen our relations with our strategic partner Shell through these agreements, which mark ​our first entry ​into Uruguay’s ⁠upstream sector," QatarEnergy CEO Saad Sherida Al-Kaabi said in the statement.

The three blocks are located off Uruguay’s ​Atlantic coast in water depths ranging from 40 to ​4,000 ⁠metres. They cover areas of between 11,155 and 18,227 sq km, the company said.

No commercial oil and gas discoveries have yet been struck ⁠in Uruguay, ​but companies hope to replicate the ​massive recent discoveries made in Namibia, on the direct opposite side of the Atlantic, ​because of their shared geological history.

Courtesy: www.reuters.com


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