Energy company OQ SAOC plans to reduce its reliance on Oman’s strained finances by selling assets, issuing bonds and refinancing debt to fund a $7.9 billion spending plan over the next five years.

Camp with retired oil pumps with Marmul, Oman Photographer: Bildagentur-online/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

State-owned OQ will shift focus from reinvesting in the company to achieving funding self-sufficiency, according to a bond prospectus seen by Bloomberg News. OQ is tapping the international bond market for the first time in an issuance aimed at raising at least $500 million.

Oman’s government, which has pumped $8.6 billion into the company, is looking to shore up its finances after lockdowns and falling oil prices battered the economy last year. Its budget deficit climbed to about 17% of gross domestic product, according to the International Monetary Fund.

The government is not expected to inject any more equity into OQ, according to the prospectus. OQ’s operating losses totaled 1.58 billion riyals ($4.1 billion) in 2020, largely due to a 1.34 billion riyal impairment charge which the company attributed to the impact of the pandemic and low oil prices.

Major impairment losses were registered at two of its biggest companies: a refinery business previously known as Oman Oil Refineries and Petroleum Industries Co. SAOC, or Orpic, and OQ’s upstream unit, formerly known as Oman Oil Co. Exploration & Production LLC.