Saudi-backed Midad Energy has signed a term sheet to acquire Russia’s sanctioned Lukoil assets in a high-stakes contest against rivals including private equity Saudi-backed Midad Energy has signed a term sheet to acquire Russia’s sanctioned Lukoil assets in a high-stakes contest against rivals including private equity

Saudi-backed Midad signs deal for sanctioned Lukoil assets

2026/02/13 16:55
3 min read

Saudi-backed Midad Energy has signed a term sheet to acquire Russia’s sanctioned Lukoil assets in a high-stakes contest against rivals including private equity giant Carlyle Group.

The deal is contingent on US regulatory approval, according to three people familiar with the matter.

The move highlights continued efforts by the Russian energy giant to offload overseas holdings constrained by Western sanctions.

It underscores growing Middle Eastern interest in acquiring discounted global oil and refining assets, even as transactions remain subject to strict regulatory scrutiny and geopolitical risk.

The agreement, signed in late January, covers all of the targeted assets, the sources said. Midad agreed to place its all-cash offer in escrow while the companies seek the necessary regulatory clearances, including from the US Treasury, a structure designed to preserve the transaction while navigating sanctions restrictions.

“Midad is working to secure necessary regulatory compliance. The bid is viewed as a high-stakes move supported by strong political connections with Saudi,” said a source familiar with the deal.

Midad and Lukoil did not respond to a request for comment. The US Treasury did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

US authorities in recent months have issued a series of temporary general license extensions related to sanctioned Russian energy assets, allowing limited time for maintenance, wind-down activities and, in some cases, the exploration of potential divestment under strict conditions, people familiar with the process said.

The extensions are intended to prevent abrupt disruptions to energy markets while giving regulators oversight of any ownership changes.

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Any final transfer of Lukoil’s sanctioned assets would still require explicit US approval, and there is no guarantee Washington will authorize a sale, particularly given ongoing geopolitical tensions and the complex compliance reviews involved, the sources added.

The negotiations are unfolding against the backdrop of the ongoing Ukraine-Russia war, which President Donald Trump has struggled to bring to a close despite earlier promises of a swift end to the conflict, adding further uncertainty to the regulatory and geopolitical environment surrounding any potential transaction.

Midad had previously emerged as one of the leading contenders to buy Lukoil’s international portfolio, which spans oilfields, refineries and thousands of fuel stations worldwide and drew interest from a range of global investors, including a rival bid from private equity firm Carlyle, Reuters reported earlier.

Lukoil has been seeking to divest foreign operations hit by sweeping US sanctions, which have complicated efforts by Russian energy companies to sell overseas assets and forced buyers and sellers to use escrow and conditional-payment mechanisms while awaiting government sign-off.

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