Liberian lawmakers Wednesday voted to renegotiate production-sharing contracts with oil companies which they said violate the current petroleum law.
Liberian lawmakers Wednesday voted to renegotiate production-sharing
contracts with oil companies which they said violate the current petroleum law.
"All of the existing production-sharing contracts violate sections 3.3,
3.4 and 3.7 of the petroleum law," according to a statement read out in
parliament after a debate on the issue.
The sections require a 20% share of the contract to go to the National Oil
Company of
Liberia
, that
10% shares of each contract be made available at fair market value to
Liberians, and that 12%-18% of gross production be paid as tax to government.
"We need to renegotiate all of the 10 production-sharing contracts to
ensure that the interest of our country is protected," the house said in
the statement.
"None of these companies has complied with the 10%, the 12% or the 18%
requirement," parliament spokesman Isaac Red said.
Liberian Information Minister Lewis Brown told journalists that the government
had no problem with the renegotiation "but we have to explain this to
these companies we have signed contracts with and that will require time."
The West African nation is pinning its hopes on oil exploration, and U.S.-based
Anadarko Petroleum Corp. (APC) and energy giant Chevron Corp. (CVX) began
drilling off the coast in 2011.
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