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GLNG AFRICA GLNG
 SA completes due diligence on investment in Renergen project
 SOUTH AFRICA
SOUTH Africa’s state-owned Central Energy Fund (CEF) has completed due diligence on its ZAR1bn ($61.5mn) plan to acquire a stake in emerging integrated energy producer Renergen’s Virginia gas project, Mining Weekly reports.
In a SENS statement issued on August 10, Renergen said that CEF intended to buy 10% of equity in the Virginia gas project, which targets several onshore natural gas fields in Free State.
This follows JSE-listed Renergen’s recent announcement that the project, which will pro- vide feedstock for a plant that will produce both liquid helium and LNG, was in its final commis- sioning phase.
In the SENS statement, Renergen’s CEO Ste- fano Marani said CEF’s successful conclusion of due diligence “signifies the strategic nature of the Virginia gas project and further marks another significant step forward in closing out the capital required for Phase 2 operations at Virginia.”
Commenting on CEF’s involvement in the project, Marani added that the fund would bring “a wealth of experience in upstream oil and gas exploration, midstream natural gas to liquids processing and large-scale pipeline operations andmaintenanceexperience.”
According to Marani, the deal will also help make a new and critical source of energy avail- able at a time when South Africa is suffering a significant energy crisis.
Acknowledging that the project had expe- rienced delays as a result of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, Marani said Renergen had no intention of rushing the process and introducing additional risks at this stage. He also stated that the company’s plant in Free State would produce its first liquid helium “in due course,” facilitating Renergen’s move from being a developer to a producer.
Renergen is developing the Welkom, Virginia and Theunissen fields in Free State. It was using gas from these fields to produce CNG but will be shifting to LNG with the commissioning of the first phase of its gas liquefaction plant. The company will deliver some Phase One LNG pro- duction to industrial consumers and some to a local subsidiary of TotalEnergies (France) for use as long-haul trucking fuel.
The LNG plant is then slated to bring its sec- ond stage on stream in early 2025. Phase Two will include a helium unit, as the Victoria fields contain unusually high volumes of helium. Sproule, an international energy consulting firm, estimates that these sites may hold as much as 9.74bn cubic metres (bcm) of helium, ormorethanthetotalprovenreservesofNorth America.™
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