While the reason for leaving none of the ESPO supplies for April to the Chinese firm was not immediately clear, Reuters’ sources suggest that there may have been changes to the terms of the oil supply deal between Rosneft and CEFC, which had expressed interest to buy a large stake in the Russian oil giant 3 years ago.
Qatar Investment Authority paid some US$4.2 billion (3.7 billion euro) for a 14.16 % stake in Rosneft, thus becoming the 3rd-largest single shareholder after the Kremlin and BP, the Russian company said in November 2018.
The deal with the sovereign wealth fund of Qatar was the final episode of a saga in which a little-known Chinese company until that point, CEFC China, said in September 2017 that it had agreed with a consortium of Glencore and Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) the terms of sale of the consortium’s 14.16 % stake in Rosneft.
The investigation and troubles of CEFC China Energy raised concerns over the agreement that it had signed to buy 14 % in Rosneft from Glencore and QIA.
Author: Tsvetana Paraskova




