US anti-bribery investigators are targeting a former Halliburton subsidiary over its work on a key Royal Dutch Shell project in Nigeria, widening a corruption probe into the country’s troubled oil industry.
The US investigation into Halliburton’s Nigerian operations – covering a period when it was headed by Dick Cheney, US vice-president – has uncovered evidence of bribery and is now looking at a range of payments made in a number of countries over the past 20 years, according to the company.
The developments highlight the problems the investigation is creating for Halliburton and the western multinationals it has worked for in a nation whose oil industry is plagued by production disruptions.
The US authorities say they have evidence that an agent used by Halliburton’s former KBR subsidiary made payments to Nigerian officials in connection with the Shell project, according to a filing made by Halliburton to the US Securities and Exchange Commission at the end of last month. Halliburton and KBR have suspended the agent and another agent who had worked for KBR on “several current projects and on numerous older projects going back to the early 1980s”, the filing says.
Shell said it was aware of the Halliburton filing and was “looking into the matter”.
Ann Pickard, regional executive vice-president for Shell in Africa, told the FT it was the company’s policy to co-operate with requests for information from government investigators, although she had no knowledge of any possible inquiry relating to the EA project.
The EA oil and gas field began operations in 2002 using a giant production and storage vessel known as the Sea Eagle, whose 170,000 barrel-a-day capacity is vital to Shell.
The US investigation relating to the EA field is an offshoot of criminal and civil probes into allegations that KBR and its partners in a consortium known as TSKJ agreed to pay more than $170m of bribes to win billions of dollars of construction work on a giant Nigerian gas liquefaction plant also operated by Shell.
According to notes compiled by a TSKJ agent – divulged to investigators by Halliburton and detailed in next week’s issue of Africa Confidential magazine – members of the consortium discussed the allocation of money for “culture” and debated the merits of making “secret” and “open” payments to agents.
Halliburton declined to comment.