Egypt oil, gas possible once subsidies ease
Companies including Citadel Capital SAE, Circle Oil PLC and Petroceltic International PLC expect President Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi to make good on promises to reduce subsidies of more than $20 billion a year and ease demands that producers sell fuel on the domestic market well below international prices, they said at a conference in London on June 27.
The changes would allow the government to cut the budget deficit and pay suppliers money owed for fuel, said Mohammad Shoeib, a managing director at Cairo-based Citadel. It’s a necessary first step if Egypt wants to lure back investors driven from the country by recent turmoil as it tries to both increase exports and meet surging domestic energy demand.
The government “should tackle the problem and not escape it,” Shoeib, whose company has about $10 billion invested, mostly in Egyptian energy projects, said in an interview. “It should happen very soon.”