
South Sudan has been barred by a London court from entering into new oil-backed prepayment deals until it settles outstanding obligations to commodities trading house BB Energy.
- A London court has barred South Sudan from entering new oil-backed prepayment deals until it settles debts owed to BB Energy.
- The legal dispute centers on South Sudan’s alleged failure to deliver oil under prepayment contracts for 2024 and 2025 valued at about $142 million.
- BB Energy claims that negotiated oil shipments were not honoured, prompting the ongoing legal battle in UK courts.
- The court order also warns third parties against facilitating new prepayment deals, with potential penalties for breaches.
The High Court decision stems from an ongoing dispute in which BB Energy accuses South Sudan of failing to deliver oil under prepayment agreements struck in 2024 and 2025.
In November last year, BB Energy said it would continue pursuing legal action against South Sudan over its alleged failure to deliver crude oil tied to prepayment agreements valued at about $142 million, covering deals spanning 2024 to 2025, unless the country promptly resumed scheduled deliveries and repayments.
The trader said the dispute arose after expected oil shipments under the financing arrangement were not fully honoured, despite earlier efforts to reach an amicable resolution with South Sudan’s Ministry of Petroleum.
According to court documents seen by Reuters, “there will be a further hearing on the ruling on June 5,” after the initial proceedings were held without defence representation.
Oil Finance Under Legal Restriction
Under the ruling, South Sudan is prohibited from accepting any new prepayments or entering arrangements that effectively function as advance oil financing until it clears its debts or the next hearing takes place. The order specifically covers cargoes of Dar Blend and Nile Blend crude oil.

The court further warned that any third party aware of the ruling who facilitates a breach could face contempt charges, including potential fines, asset seizure, or imprisonment.
BB Energy initiated legal action last year through London courts, alleging non-delivery of oil linked to prepayment contracts.
The trader previously allowed an injunction to lapse in November after what it described as efforts to resolve the dispute amicably with South Sudan’s Ministry of Petroleum.
Oil shipments remain central to dispute
The dispute intensified after BB Energy loaded its first cargo in February under the 2025 prepayment arrangement but reported receiving no further oil allocations since then.
A spokesperson for BB Energy, quoted by Reuters, said: “This Court Order is a positive and important step as it should help ensure that more crude cargoes remain available for the Republic of South Sudan to honour its commitments to BB Energy, rather than being allocated under further pre-payment arrangements with third parties.”
The ruling highlights the risks inherent in commodity pre-financing deals, where future oil production is pledged in exchange for upfront cash, often leaving governments exposed to legal and repayment pressures when deliveries falter.
As South Sudan returns to court in June, the outcome could further shape how international traders structure high-risk financing agreements with fragile resource-dependent economies.












