EACOP vs Lamu pipeline

EACOP vs Lamu pipeline

South Sudan's oil production plummets due to Covid-19, floods​



FRIDAY FEBRUARY 04 2022​

Oil well in South Sudan.

A worker walks by an oil well at the Toma South oil field to Heglig, in Ruweng State, South Sudan on August 25, 2018. PHOTO | FILE | REUTERS

Summary

  • South Sudan earned $1.4 billion in gross oil revenues of which $1.1 billion went to direct transfers and $148 million were paid to neighbouring Sudan as cost for processing, transportation and transit fees.
  • The east African Nation is projected to collect $135 million in non-oil revenues in this fiscal year, an increase of 31.1 percent from the $103 million collected in 2020/21 fiscal year.


xhua

By XINHUA
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South Sudan's oil production has reduced from the previous 170,000 barrels a day to the current 156,000 bpd amid negative impacts of Covid-19 pandemic and heavy flooding since 2020, an official said Wednesday.

While tabling the 2021/22 fiscal budget before the transitional national legislative assembly, Agak Achuil Lual, minister of Finance and Economic Planning, said the projected reduction in oil production is due to depletion of some oil wells as well as effects of floods.

South Sudan earned $1.4 billion in gross oil revenues of which $1.1 billion went to direct transfers and $148 million were paid to neighbouring Sudan as cost for processing, transportation and transit fees.

The east African Nation is projected to collect $135 million in non-oil revenues in this fiscal year, an increase of 31.1 percent from the $103 million collected in 2020/21 fiscal year.

“The projected increase in non-oil revenues is on account of the tax administration reforms that we are implementing at the national revenue authority, which include digitisation of tax collections, broadening the tax base and the proposal to fully deploy national revenue authority staff in all the non-oil revenue collecting institutions,” said Mr Lual.

South Sudan, the world's youngest republic which depends 95 percent on oil revenues, is struggling to recover from years of conflict.

 

Tanzania disburses $80m for EA oil deal shareholding​

SATURDAY FEBRUARY 05 2022​



Pipeline pic

Summary

  • According to the shareholder agreement, TPDC and Uganda National Oil Company both have holdings of 15 percent each, while China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) holds eight percent and France’s TotalEnergies has 62 percent.


Alex pic

By Alex Nelson Malanga
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Dar es Salaam. Tanzania has already disbursed some $80 million (about Sh184 billion) as a part of its commitment in financing the East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP), The Citizen has learnt.

The director general of the Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC), Mr James Mataragio, said the parastatal oil company would have to pay a total of $308 million (about Sh708.4 billion) in the construction period covering the next three years.

The project cost, he said,which is estimated at $3.5 billion (about Sh8.1 trillion), would be financed through 40 percent equity from the four shareholders, while 60 percent will come from international lenders’ loans.

According to the shareholder agreement, TPDC and Uganda National Oil Company both have holdings of 15 percent each, while China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) holds eight percent and France’s TotalEnergies has 62 percent.

Dr Mataragio said they paid their first cash call for the 1,445km project immediately after the announcement of the Final Investment Decision (FID) for the vast regional oil pipeline in Kampala on Tuesday this week.

“We will have to pay for the 15 percent stake in the equity fund,” Dr Mataragio revealed to The Citizen yesterday.

He added: “We will be paying a cash call every month until the completion of the project. The amount to be paid every month will be determined by the size of activities in a given month.”

The FID for EACOP was announced at a ceremony in Kampala by the heads of France’s TotalEnergies and the China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC).

Dr Mataragio said the announcement of the FID made a crucial step towards the implementation of the project which is expected to generate over 10,000 jobs.

“With the announcement of FID, we are ready to start physical activities because EACOP can now announce the award of tenders to supply raw materials to feed the project,” he hinted.

Dr Mataragio further explained that at first, the announcement of tender awards was put on hold because the company to take care of the matter had not yet been formed.

Now, he said, the company dubbed EACOP was formed along with the management and board of directors.

The company whose headquarters are in the UK, have branches in Tanzania and Uganda.

“We need to prepare for the opportunities brought along with the EACOP so that we don’t just sit back and observe others enjoying it,” noted Dr Mataragio.

Tanzania Private Sector Foundation (TPSF) executive director Francis Nanai told The Citizen that local companies had what it takes to tap the opportunities on their way.

However, for that to happen, he urged local enterprises to form joint ventures for them to thrive.

“We need joint ventures if we are to have strong financial muscles enough to offer equipment in the construction period,” recommended Mr Nanai.

Adding: “We need a competent labor force and technology for local firms to deliver products and services that meet international standards.”

TPSF applauded local content regulations, which have paved the way for Tanzanians to participate in 12 projects.

Among the ring-fenced sub-projects are transportation, supply of food and drinks, hotel lodging and catering, office supplies, land surveying, lifting equipment, locally available building materials, civil personnel, communication services and waste management.

 
Hongera zenu waTZ. Kama waKenya it's only natural tungetaka huu mradi upitie kwetu lakini you can't always have it all.

Hata hivyo, ikumbukwe kuwa KE pia tuna mradi wetu wa Lamu pipeline, ambayo itakuwa heated na kuwa buried underground. Itakuwa 6bln USD cheaper than EACOP na inatarajiwa SSD ataunganishwa ili asitegemee Sudan kaskazini pekee. I think by now it's past time ya kujipiga kifua kuhusu EACOP kupitia TZ badala ya KE. The focus should be on how to implement both EACOP na LAMU pipelines.
Umepotea sana kijana.
 
Hongera zenu waTZ. Kama waKenya it's only natural tungetaka huu mradi upitie kwetu lakini you can't always have it all.

Hata hivyo, ikumbukwe kuwa KE pia tuna mradi wetu wa Lamu pipeline, ambayo itakuwa heated na kuwa buried underground. Itakuwa 6bln USD cheaper than EACOP na inatarajiwa SSD ataunganishwa ili asitegemee Sudan kaskazini pekee. I think by now it's past time ya kujipiga kifua kuhusu EACOP kupitia TZ badala ya KE. The focus should be on how to implement both EACOP na LAMU pipelines.
Pia kwenye EACOP inawekwa na reverse pipeline
 
Pia kwenye EACOP inawekwa na reverse pipeline
roho inamuuma maana anajua Lamu pipeline haiendi kupata finance backup halafu Museveni tayari anaiwinda South Sudan!
 

EA tensions are a notch down, so here come the petrodollars​



SATURDAY FEBRUARY 05 2022​

Total Energies

Total Energies CEO Patrick Pouyanné 9second left) and Rwandan President Paul Kagame (second right) with other officials at Urugwiro Village in Kigali, Rwanda, on January 30, 2022. PHOTO | COURTESY

Summary

  • Next door in Rwanda, TotalEnergies inked a memorandum of understanding to increase investment in renewable energy and electric mobility in the country.
  • The picture of TotalEnergies that was on display in the week was a polygamous multinational, dabbling in old-school fossil fuel, hybrids, and clean energy.
  • Uganda, for its part, at the end of November last year, sent its troops into the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo to chase down IS-linked Uganda militant group Allied Democratic Forces (ADF), blamed for a series of suicide bomb attacks in the capital Kampala.


Charles-Obbo new

By Charles Onyango-Obbo
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It was a very busy few days for French oil and gas giant TotalEnergies on the eastern flank of Africa. In Kampala, it signed a deal for the long-awaited Final Investment Decision (FID) for the 1,443km Uganda-Tanzania crude oil pipeline to the Tanzanian port of Tanga, and Kingfisher and Tilenga oil projects in the Lake Albert region.

There was also something about developing renewable energy.

Next door in Rwanda, TotalEnergies inked a memorandum of understanding to increase investment in renewable energy and electric mobility in the country. Among other things, it will see more electric charging stations installed in Kigali to service the region’s largest fleet of electric motorcycles and cars.

Then, in Maputo, it announced it would resume work on its natural gas project in Mozambique this year. The $20 billion gas liquification plant near Palma on the northeast coast of Mozambique's Cabo Delgado Province is the largest foreign investment in Africa. The site was inactive for over a year being repeatedly attacked by militants linked to the Islamic State (IS) group.

The picture of TotalEnergies that was on display in the week was a polygamous multinational, dabbling in old-school fossil fuel, hybrids, and clean energy. It also was a masterclass of capitalism on the march. In East Africa, at least, no gas and oil major is splashing out like TotalEnergies.

You are certain to see more of its new stations than any belonging to its global rivals. Not too long ago, I drove into a lonely and sleepy corner of Uganda. When I turned a corner, there it was; a brand new TotalEnergies petrol station. A few months later, the rutted road running in front of it had been tarmacked.

The week’s activities also revealed a bigger global and regional geopolitical play. A month ago, the European Commission outraged some environmental fundamentalists when it proposed plans to label some gas and nuclear power as green. TotalEnergies’ stock of natural gas investments in Mozambique probably gained a premium with that.

It is also only able to move forward again with the natural gas in Cabo Delgado, thanks to Kigali, which last August dispatched its military to the region to help a hapless Maputo government beat back the rebels and retake control of the province.

Uganda, for its part, at the end of November last year, sent its troops into the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo to chase down IS-linked Uganda militant group Allied Democratic Forces (ADF), blamed for a series of suicide bomb attacks in the capital Kampala.

The bonus pay-off, however, was likely to remove the threat of the ADF from the shadow of the oilfield in the Lake Albert region, allowing TotalEnergies to write a cheque with less worry.

Rwanda and Uganda also marked a thawing in icy relations, with the announcement of the opening of the Gatuna/Katuna border, the busiest crossing between the two countries, bringing the uncertainty and risk profile surrounding their three-year stand-off a few notches down.

One observer noted that days later it was announced that the twice-postponed Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) would be held in Kigali in June.

And, so, everyone went home happy.

That is Realpolitik 101.

Charles Onyango-Obbo is a journalist, writer, and curator of the “Wall of Great Africans”. - Twitter@cobbo3



MY TAKE
This hypocrite Obbo was for Kenya only to shamelessly conceed that EACOP is a Uganda Tanzania affair poor him! Poor him after hundreds of opinions against Tanzania now he came to understand who calls the shots in the region!
 

Total takeover? French oil major firms up plans for region’s energy​



MONDAY FEBRUARY 07 2022​

TotalEnergies Uganda General Manager Philippe Groueix and Uganda's Energy Minister Ruth Nankabirwa.

TotalEnergies Uganda General Manager Philippe Groueix exchanges a document with Uganda's Energy Minister Ruth Nankabirwa (centre) in Kampala when the two signed an agreement for an oil project. PHOTO | UGANDA PRESIDENCY PRESS OFFICE

Summary

  • The progress in the Ugandan projects has given the French oil giant the credence it needs in efforts to firm up plans to increase its footprint on the continent’s energy sector.
  • TotalEnergies is creating a commercial juggernaut in Africa that will see it invest billions of dollars in the next five years.
  • The company with operations in at least 14 African countries is looking to invest over $10 billion in East Africa’s energy sector, promising thousands of jobs and major investment opportunities for local contractors.


General Image

By JULIUS BARIGABA
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Uganda this week moved a step closer to joining the league of oil producers after global oil majors TotalEnergies and China’s CNOOC signed the final investment decision with the government in Kampala.

The long-awaited move, delayed by a myriad of hurdles, including tax disputes, security, operational and funding challenges and opposition from climate activists, has paved the way for investments towards first oil in 2025.

The progress in the Ugandan projects has given the French oil giant the credence it needs in efforts to firm up plans to increase its footprint on the continent’s energy sector.

Analysts say TotalEnergies is poised to become a major player in the exploration and exploitation of fossil fuels in East and Southern Africa after recently announcing that it was resuming development of natural gas fields in northern Mozambique, which was disrupted by militant insurgency.

But calm has since returned after Rwandan military and Southern African Development Community forces routed ISIS-affiliated insurgents from the troubled Cabo Delgado Province.

Total deals​

Incidentally, two days before the Kampala deal on February 1 TotalEnergies CEO Patrick Pouyanne had visited Rwanda, where he announced upcoming energy joint projects with the Kagame administration.

TotalEnergies is creating a commercial juggernaut in Africa that will see it invest billions of dollars in the next five years. The company with operations in at least 14 African countries is looking to invest over $10 billion in East Africa’s energy sector, promising thousands of jobs and major investment opportunities for local contractors.

“Today, we commit to invest $10 billion in the Tilenga and Kingfisher projects and the 1,443km (East African crude oil) pipeline,” said TotalEnergies chairman and CEO Patrick Pouyanne. “In the name of the joint venture partners and on behalf of TotalEnergies, I announce Final Investment Decision for the Lake Albert Development Project.”

The upstream joint venture partners are TotalEnergies with a 56.67 percent stake, CNOOC (28.33 percent) and state-owned Uganda National Oil Company (15 percent).

The oil will be transported through the $5 billion East African Crude Oil Pipeline (Eacop) in which TotalEnergies is a major Eacop shareholder, with a 62 percent stake, while Unoc and the Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC) hold 15 percent each, and CNOOC 8 percent.

The Uganda project was delayed for long due to missed timelines blamed on long drawn-out negotiations between the investors and government over tax disputes and the economics of a refinery versus pipeline.

“FID is the D-Day but, in fact, it is the departure day for our teams to work hard to deliver the projects,” said Mr Pouyanne, adding that from the moment of signing, the project had entered the construction phase and cannot afford to lose another day.

The FID for Lake Albert oil projects signals the growing footprint of TotalEnergies in the oil, gas and energy sectors in Africa, amid various challenges raging from security to bureaucracy.

Last year, the company abandoned its $20 billion natural gas project in Mozambique after an attack by an insurgent group linked to the Islamic States while the project in Uganda has been attacked by environmentalists, prompting some banks to abandon its financing.

After a meeting with Mozambique President Filipe Nyusi a week ago, Mr Pouyanné said the firm was planning to start operations anytime.

“My goal is for the project to restart in 2022. We are ready.”

Mr Pouyanné signed an agreement with Mozambican authorities to train 2,500 young people from Cabo Delgado, with a view to creating jobs from the investments underway.

At the same time, TotalEnergies signed a renewable energy deal with Rwanda, taking its presence on the continent to 14 countries, where the company is keen to deploy its multienergy strategy.

African presence​

With presence in Uganda, Rwanda, Kenya, Egypt, South Africa, Mozambique, Nigeria, Angola, Namibia, the Congos, Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire and Senegal, Africa represents 30 percent of TotalEnergies oil and gas production, and 30 percent of its investments.

In an interview with The African Report late last year, TotalEnergies President for Exploration and Production Nicolas Terraz said that in 2020 and early 2021, the company decided to finish the projects that had been launched.

“In Angola, we remain the leading operator, and have initiated Zinia Phase 2, a short-cycle project connected to the Pazflor FPSO floating production unit. In Nigeria, we are continuing with the Ikike project and participating in Nigeria LNG’s seventh liquefaction train. We are more selective in terms of exploration, as our overall budget has been reduced from $1.5 billion in 2019 to $800 million in 2021. In Africa, as of this year, we have three major exploration wells: Angola (Block 48), Côte d’Ivoire (Barracuda field) and Namibia (Venus block). We also plan to explore Block Marine 20, in the Republic of Congo, in the near future.

“In South Africa, where we have made significant offshore gas discoveries in the Brulpadda field [in the southern part of the country], we are currently in discussions with the authorities about marketing gas to meet demand in the Mossel Bay area [between Port Elizabeth and Cape Town], where the state-owned PetroSA liquefaction plant is located.”

TotalEnergies is also involved in solar projects in South Africa, Egypt and Kenya.

In Uganda, besides the Tilenga, Kingfisher and Eacop, which the joint venture partners are investing in, there is a separate private consortium-led $4 billion investment in the 60,000 barrels of oil per day oil refinery at Kabaale.

Rebrand masterstroke​

There are also other private sector ventures in infrastructure such as hotels and other facilities to support the oil projects, pushing the total oil-related investments to around $20 billion over the next three to five years, according to Energy Minister Ruth Nankabirwa.

The rebrand from Total to TotalEnergies and its strategy to invest in and roll out renewable energy projects is music to Africans’ ears, especially Uganda President Yoweri Museveni.

“I am happy to hear that Total is no longer about oil but energy in totality, so that we were not using wind for winnowing, or using the sun to dry things but to produce electricity. Now you understand us,” he said during the FID signing in Kampala.

In Kigali, TotalEnergies signed an agreement with the Rwanda Development Board, which will see more electric charging stations installed in the city.

“This agreement illustrates TotalEnergies’ commitment to deploying its multienergy strategy in Africa, particularly in Rwanda, a country with a booming economy,” Mr Pouyanné said at the event witnessed by President Paul Kagame.

The agreement comes as Rwanda looks to increase investment in the energy sector, including electric mobility, with electric cars and motorcycles becoming popular in Kigali.

The agreement with TotalEnergies includes distributing and supplying energy products like cooking gas, developing power storage solutions and natural solutions for carbon storage, and training programmes on new energies and energy transition.

The company will also work with the private sector to improve local investment in clean energy.

“Partnerships with our private sector companies in Rwanda and beyond is timely for a country that puts the environment at the heart of its development strategies. Additionally, the skills transfer in critical areas such as renewable energies and energy transition will undoubtedly contribute to the development of local expertise in the energy sector,” said Clare Akamanzi, CEO of the Rwanda Development Board.

Ernest Rubondo, executive director of the Petroleum Authority of Uganda (PAU) said that this year alone, the total spend during the construction phase will cap at $3 billion, a good portion of which will go to Ugandan companies and other service providers.

“This is a journey Uganda started early, compared to other countries that start talking about national content 10 years or so into production,” Rubondo said, citing a number of companies that have already been subcontracted to offer various services.

Energy value chain​

Tanzanian Vice-President Dr Philip Mpango, who represented President Samia Suluhu Hassan in the FID signing, said his country is looking forward to the start of the pipeline, whose construction will account for a 60 percent increase in foreign direct investment to 2025, when the first oil is expected.

Dr Mpango said the pipeline construction will see project cargo of 5,500 tonnes of equipment shipped into Tanzania, with clearing and transportation of the materials to build the pipeline all expected to drive the region’s growth, which had slowed to 2.2 percent due to the Covid-19, compared with an average of 6.7 percent before the pandemic.

According to James Mataragio, managing director of TPDC, the Eacop will build a strong alliance between Uganda and Tanzania, and place the two countries strategically on the energy map and value chain.

“The pipeline gives our countries a position in the global energy discourse,” Mr Mataragio said.

Uganda discovered 6.5 billion barrels of commercially viable resources oil — of which 1.4 billion is recoverable — and 500,000 cubic metres of gas in 2006 in Lake Albert area on the western rift, which separates it from Democratic Republic of Congo.

But the country has progressed slowly towards first oil, setting a number of timelines and missing several targets for FID, which was initially set for 2014, two years after TotalEnergies and Cnooc entered Uganda’s oil sector via a 33 percent purchase each, of Tullow assets.

Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Energy Irene Batebe said that first oil has been pushed back countless times, but explained that this was partly to put in place the requisite oil legislation and other requirements.

“Uganda’s journey has been steady and measured to make sure that by the time Uganda comes to FID, it is adequately prepared with the legal and infrastructure requirements,” she said.

But industry analysts fault the country’s strategy, mostly pushed by President Museveni to commercialise its oil by refining it locally, as well as driving a hard bargain on tax issues creating disputes between the government and oil companies, for delaying oil production.

Suspended negotiations​

In September 2019, Total suspended negotiations on the crude export pipeline following the collapse of Tullow Oil’s farmdown of its stake in Lake Albert oilfields to the French giant, over a dispute in the fiscal treatment of the transaction. It took new efforts, patience and long discussions between the company’s top officials and President Museveni to get the negotiations going again, eventually leading to Tullow’s approval of assets sale.

“I remember for long the night of November 2019, when we remained alone [with the President], and reached agreement that FID will take place,” said Mr Pouyanne.

Responding to criticism over the anticipated impact on the environment the investors say the Albertine projects are premised on low cost and low emissions.

For instance, the cost of finding oil in Uganda is about $1 per barrel compared with the global average of $5, while the cost of producing oil for Tilenga is $11 per barrel — below most countries.

President Museveni scoffed at non-governmental organisations that are opposed to the projects. The activists have targeted the TotalEnergies-led projects saying they lack full disclosure of their environmental and social impact.

Part of Tilenga project is located in Murchison Falls National Park, but TotalEnergies says it will limit its footprint to less than one percent of the area, while the pipeline traverses other wildlife conservation parks, lakes, rivers and will displace over 12,000 families along its route.

Additional reporting by Arnaldo Vieira and Ange Iliza

 
Jamaa wako wa Lamu pipeline!





TBT
Keter's bravado



Biased media coverage in Kenya



Passport confiscated



Uganda's decision on the pipeline route



CC: Tony254
 

EA tensions are a notch down, so here come the petrodollars​



SATURDAY FEBRUARY 05 2022​

Total Energies

Total Energies CEO Patrick Pouyanné 9second left) and Rwandan President Paul Kagame (second right) with other officials at Urugwiro Village in Kigali, Rwanda, on January 30, 2022. PHOTO | COURTESY

Summary

  • Next door in Rwanda, TotalEnergies inked a memorandum of understanding to increase investment in renewable energy and electric mobility in the country.
  • The picture of TotalEnergies that was on display in the week was a polygamous multinational, dabbling in old-school fossil fuel, hybrids, and clean energy.
  • Uganda, for its part, at the end of November last year, sent its troops into the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo to chase down IS-linked Uganda militant group Allied Democratic Forces (ADF), blamed for a series of suicide bomb attacks in the capital Kampala.


Charles-Obbo new

By Charles Onyango-Obbo
More by this Author

It was a very busy few days for French oil and gas giant TotalEnergies on the eastern flank of Africa. In Kampala, it signed a deal for the long-awaited Final Investment Decision (FID) for the 1,443km Uganda-Tanzania crude oil pipeline to the Tanzanian port of Tanga, and Kingfisher and Tilenga oil projects in the Lake Albert region.

There was also something about developing renewable energy.

Next door in Rwanda, TotalEnergies inked a memorandum of understanding to increase investment in renewable energy and electric mobility in the country. Among other things, it will see more electric charging stations installed in Kigali to service the region’s largest fleet of electric motorcycles and cars.

Then, in Maputo, it announced it would resume work on its natural gas project in Mozambique this year. The $20 billion gas liquification plant near Palma on the northeast coast of Mozambique's Cabo Delgado Province is the largest foreign investment in Africa. The site was inactive for over a year being repeatedly attacked by militants linked to the Islamic State (IS) group.

The picture of TotalEnergies that was on display in the week was a polygamous multinational, dabbling in old-school fossil fuel, hybrids, and clean energy. It also was a masterclass of capitalism on the march. In East Africa, at least, no gas and oil major is splashing out like TotalEnergies.

You are certain to see more of its new stations than any belonging to its global rivals. Not too long ago, I drove into a lonely and sleepy corner of Uganda. When I turned a corner, there it was; a brand new TotalEnergies petrol station. A few months later, the rutted road running in front of it had been tarmacked.

The week’s activities also revealed a bigger global and regional geopolitical play. A month ago, the European Commission outraged some environmental fundamentalists when it proposed plans to label some gas and nuclear power as green. TotalEnergies’ stock of natural gas investments in Mozambique probably gained a premium with that.

It is also only able to move forward again with the natural gas in Cabo Delgado, thanks to Kigali, which last August dispatched its military to the region to help a hapless Maputo government beat back the rebels and retake control of the province.

Uganda, for its part, at the end of November last year, sent its troops into the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo to chase down IS-linked Uganda militant group Allied Democratic Forces (ADF), blamed for a series of suicide bomb attacks in the capital Kampala.

The bonus pay-off, however, was likely to remove the threat of the ADF from the shadow of the oilfield in the Lake Albert region, allowing TotalEnergies to write a cheque with less worry.

Rwanda and Uganda also marked a thawing in icy relations, with the announcement of the opening of the Gatuna/Katuna border, the busiest crossing between the two countries, bringing the uncertainty and risk profile surrounding their three-year stand-off a few notches down.

One observer noted that days later it was announced that the twice-postponed Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) would be held in Kigali in June.

And, so, everyone went home happy.

That is Realpolitik 101.

Charles Onyango-Obbo is a journalist, writer, and curator of the “Wall of Great Africans”. - Twitter@cobbo3



MY TAKE
This hypocrite Obbo was for Kenya only to shamelessly conceed that EACOP is a Uganda Tanzania affair poor him! Poor him after hundreds of opinions against Tanzania now he came to understand who calls the shots in the region!
Wewe huwa hujui chochote kumbe? Charles Onyango Obbo ni Mganda. Jina Onyango lisikuchanganye ukafikiri kwamba yeye ni Mjaluo. Pia Uganda kuna watu wenye majina kama hayo. Huwa saa zingine nachoka kukuelimisha kila wakati. Fuata hii link.
 
Wewe huwa hujui chochote kumbe? Charles Onyango Obbo ni Mganda. Jina Onyango lisikuchanganye ukafikiri kwamba yeye ni Mjaluo. Pia Uganda kuna watu wenye majina kama hayo. Huwa saa zingine nachoka kukuelimisha kila wakati. Fuata hii link.
Wapi nimesema Mkenya? BTW my take explains itself! I know He is anti Museveni and they don't see eye to eye with Museveni!
 

EA Crude Oil Pipeline enters fundraiser phase​



WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 09 2022​

Oil pipeline.

An oil pipeline. The East African Crude Oil Pipeline (Eacop) is a key infrastructure project that will transport Uganda’s oil to export markets. PHOTO | FILE

Summary

  • The 1,443km pipeline will cost $5 billion – a jump from the original cost of $3.5 billion due to the increase in prices of key inputs such as steel, cost of shipping as well as the cost of loans.
  • Eacop is to be financed 60-40 percent split between debt and equity; this means its shareholders will raise $2 billion between them while the remainder is raised through loans.
  • Environmentalists in Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Europe and the United States, have criticised the project and petitioned targeted banks not to finance the pipeline, saying it is harmful to the sensitive biodiversity of the Albertine region.


General Image

By JULIUS BARIGABA
More by this Author

After announcing the final investment decision, the shareholders of the East African Crude Oil Pipeline (Eacop) now turn to looking for money to conclude the deal for financing of the project, which is expected mid this year.

The Eacop is a key infrastructure project that will transport Uganda’s oil to export markets, hence a major component in the commercialisation of the Lake Albert oil resources.

The 1,443km pipeline from Hoima in Uganda to the Indian Ocean port of Tanga in Tanzania, will cost $5 billion – a jump from the original cost of $3.5 billion due to the increase in prices of key inputs such as steel, cost of shipping as well as the cost of loans.

“Fully loaded, we are looking at a cost of $5 billion,” says John Bosco Habumugisha, the General Manager, National Pipeline Company.

According to Proscovia Nabbanja, the Chief Executive Officer of State-owned Uganda National Oil Company (Unoc), the shareholders are expecting financing offers from a number of Export Credit Agencies (ECAs) from Europe and China.

“The financial closure is not yet achieved, we are hoping to reach it latest mid this year,” she told journalists during a press conference after the FID announcement on February 1.

It is not clear at this stage if the ECAs will offer direct lending or act as intermediaries for the loans, but industry sources indicate that once European, American and Australian banks walked away from Eacop, China was “the only realistic option”.

Eacop is to be financed 60-40 percent split between debt and equity; this means its shareholders will raise $2 billion between them while the remainder is raised through loans from banks and other international lenders.

TotalEnergies.

TotalEnergies is the major shareholder of East African Crude Oil Pipeline (Eacop), a key infrastructure project that will transport Uganda’s oil to export markets. PHOTO | FILE

Eacop shareholders are TotalEnergies (62 percent), Unoc (15 percent), Tanzania Petroleum Development Company or TPDC (15 percent) and China National Offshore Oil Corporation or Cnooc (8 percent).

Environmentalists in Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Europe and the United States, have criticised the project and petitioned targeted banks not to finance the pipeline, saying it is harmful to the sensitive biodiversity of the Albertine region and other natural resources along the route.

When completed in 2025, Eacop will be is the world’s longest heated pipeline, and activists say it will generate 34 million tonnes of carbon dioxide and compromises climate goals.




MY TAKE
Bitter kunyan media at it, with negativity!
 
08 Feb

Activists call out Standard Bank for mulling over east Africa oil pipeline​

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Lameez Omarjee
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The 1 443km pipeline will transport Uganda's crude oil to the Tanga port in Tanzania.

The 1 443km pipeline will transport Uganda's crude oil to the Tanga port in Tanzania.
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  • Standard Bank has been singled out for still considering financing the East African Crude Oil Pipeline project.
  • Standard Bank says its participation is subject to findings of environmental and social due diligence assessments.
  • The project is a collaboration between Total and China National Offshore Oil Corporation, and will export oil from Uganda to Tanzania.


Of South Africa's five major banks, Standard Bank has been singled out by critics for considering funding an oil pipeline project in East Africa.

The project known as the East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) is a collaboration between French energy company TotalEnergies, the China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) as well as the Uganda National Oil Company (UNOC) and Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC).

It spans 1 443km and will be used to transport crude oil from Uganda to Tanzania for export.
However, an alliance of activists known as #StopEACOP has warned that the pipeline would displace communities and have a severe impact on climate and wildlife. The alliance is made up of organisations such as human rights and environmental lawyers Natural Justice, environmental activists 350Africa.org and activist shareholder group JustShare.

According to #StopEACOP, a $2.5 billion (~R38 billion) loan is being sought from the world's largest commercial banks to support the project.

On its website #StopEACOP indicates that Standard Bank is among key players arranging finance for the project.

In response to questions from Fin24 about its involvement in the EACOP, Standard Bank said its participation in the funding of the project "remains subject to the findings of environmental and social due diligence assessments," as well as it meeting the Equator Principles requirements. The Equator Principles are the financial industry benchmark for assessing and managing Environmental and Social (E&S) risks in projects.

Standard Bank explained that the Equator Principles Project Finance deals are subject to due diligence assessments that inform decision-making and cover various areas such as legal, technical, security, market as well as environment and social risks.

"Financial advisors, including Standard Bank, and potential lenders retained the services of an independent E&S advisor. As part of this process, the advisors have visited the project area and will issue a full due diligence report in the coming months, at which time potential lenders will make a decision on the way forward," the bank said.

Furthermore, the bank's involvement is subject to a "full assessment" of the EACOP sponsors' climate change strategies and targets.

Standard Bank said it is committed to "maximising opportunities" for sustainable and inclusive growth, while managing the risks posed by climate change. The bank will publish its climate change targets at the end of the first quarter.

Robyn Hugo, director of climate engagement at JustShare highlighted that Standard Bank's current fossil fuel financing policy does not include "ambitious financing exclusions".

"A credible assessment that is truly aligned with the Paris goals, would exclude the provision of finance to this highly-destructive project," said Hugo.

Other banks which have been identified as actively supporting the project include Japan's Sumitomo Mitsui Bank and the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China.

Absa, Investec, Nedbank and FirstRand are among those listed by #StopEACOP as not supporting the EACOP.

Absa told Fin24 it would not be commenting on the matter, while Nedbank confirmed it "has no involvement" in the EACOP project. Nedbank's new energy policy, aims to over exit fossil fuels over time, while scaling up renewable energy financing.

FirstRand confirmed it is not financing the EACOP. It referred Fin24 to its policy on energy and fossil fuels financing, which indicates that it will not finance the development, construction or expansion of oil and gas that would be high cost and high carbon intensity and would be incompatible with Paris Accord obligations. The policy also includes a list of other exclusions such as shale oil and shale gas fracking in water-scarce areas, and developments in sensitive polar regions.

Investec also indicated it is not funding the pipeline and currently has not intention to.

According to a press release from Total Energies, the project forms part of the greater Lake Albert Development Project which requires an investment of $10 billion (about R154 billion).

The EACOP website indicates that crude oil produced in Uganda will be partly refined in the country to supply the local market and the rest will be exported to the international market via the pipeline, in which TotalEnergies has the biggest share (62%).

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The crude oil will be partly refined and used in U

The crude oil will be partly refined and used in Uganda's local market, while the rest will be exported internationally via the pipeline. (Map: EACOP)
Suppliedeacop.com


According to BankTrack, an international tracking organisation which aims to stop banks from financing harmful activities, the EACOP will result in the world's longest heated pipeline. It added that the pipeline poses a risk of poisoning freshwater sources as it runs alongside Lake Victoria, which in turn sources the Nile between Uganda and Tanzania.

The project would extract 200 000 barrels per day and produce 34 million tons of carbon emissions each year, adding to the climate crisis.

 

The EACOP Project-Environment or Development?


Godfrey Ivudria
9th February 2022
Niranjan.jpg

The construction of the East Africa Crude Oil Pipeline has attracted intense criticism alleging that it will hamper the natural ecosystem and may degrade the ecological balance of nature at these locations.

If we see a few similar projects in the near past, this perception may change and we may arrive at a new narrative: Sustainable Development and nature conservation are not competitive, rather they are complimentary and many similar projects including Cairn India Pipeline are a standing example, Gujarat the most industrialized state of India is also home to the most enchanting forest the GIR forest, last home of Asiatic lions.

Oil Exploration and Processing projects capture very less geographical area, hence do not interfere much with the natural ecosystem but oil pipelines are often dramatically accused of affecting the ecosystem as a whole due to its widespread geographical presence. Let us analyze by a glimpse of a similar project executed in India in recent past.

It was a cloudy day in Jamnagar, Gujarat India when I packed my stuff to head to a remote location on the crude oil pipeline. While my technicians arranged the tools and, in the car, I grabbed the seat right behind the driver.

After Travelling about 30 KMs, we stopped before a bridge where a team of Security officers and Land Liaison Officer were waiting to receive us.

The security officer briefed us about the orientation of the Pipeline pointing to various natural landmarks where it passes, then we started to walk along the pipeline.

Today’s activity was an exceptional and a rare technological feat. One of the heating cable circuits of the “World’s Longest Electric Heated Crude Oil Pipeline” had suffered a fault and had to be repaired.

The precise location of the fault was determined previously by connecting it to special equipment at its terminal point at nearest AGI.

Now we were to reach the designated point, excavate the location for verification, further the cable will be repaired before it is put back to normal operation.

Cairn India’s 684 Km long Crude oil pipeline will continue to hold the feat of the longest heated pipeline until a similar project EACOP takes shape in Uganda and Tanzania.

As we walked the farmlands that border forest protected area’s fence, suddenly, a duo of jackals was spotted racing to hunt a rabbit ahead of us. The animals were pretty fit and grabbed their prey with quite an ease.

One of the security guards who was a local ascertained their age to be 4-5 Years. This means that they were born roughly at the time the pipeline construction activity was at its pinnacle, at a time when several construction machines were rumbling round the clock to dig a trench and weld the pieces of pipes to its present form, undoubtedly, the rural and the forest ecosystems got disturbed at that time.

Thanks to the enigmatic task of restoration that was undertaken by the Cairn Project Team. The top fertile black soil layer was removed and kept separately and was filled back in the same fashion as it was before.

The team even attempted to relocate some trees with their roots and layer of soil intact although not many such attempts were successful.

But the toilsome attempts carried out to rearrange nature back to its normal were beyond doubt inspiring, thought-provoking, and above all rewarding.

This was possible due to the meticulous planning, and untiring hard work on the ground in form of implementation.

My today’s visit has sealed the impression that nature has an eternal force to restore itself back to equilibrium if it is disrupted briefly well within its fragile limits.

The EACOP Project is similar to Cairn India Pipeline but it seems to be far more complex firstly due to more length secondly it’s a difficult and challenging terrain to work on.

The route consists of more wilderness and less farmlands unlike the latter. It also has to cross a lot of Waterbodies like the Lake Victoria basin and a few others.

At many locations, the pipeline will pass through terrains that are home to a few unique protected and endangered species.

The rich biological diversity of this portion of the African Continent is a gift of nature to the entire mankind.

Such projects are planned with a sense of responsibility to restore the ecosystem back to normal.
Such projects are not be motivated by a short-term profit statement, rather an open-minded and far-sighted approach that emphasizes restoring the natural integrity and stability yields better results, Accordingly, EACOP Team has envisioned the Pipeline construction with a net positive Biological Impact.

The local communities, Nature Conservationists, other organizations with common interests must focus on helping the EACOP Team complete the Project as per schedule.

Unnecessary hindering the project at key locations will delay the project thereby stretching the limit within which nature can restore itself.

Often such rich wildlife conservation programs suffer heavily due to lack of funds, a quick construction of a pipeline will thereby ensure bare minimum impact on wildlife after restoration and the enormous cash inflow will ensure adequate funding of critical conservation programs, thereby making it a win win situation for all.

In a nutshell, people and organization who are willing to protect the environment must enhance the pipeline construction so that it can be laid at the earliest and returned back to its users.

A few years after the completion of construction, farmers will continue to till their land, fishermen will carry on with their daily schedule, once again massive herds of Wildebeest will be racing their way to the never-ending journey of life “The Great Migrations”, while with predators like Lions will lay ambush to create an opportunity to hunt down their prey.

The Hyenas will be searching to steal flesh from other predators and the Elephants will as usual walk elegantly unperturbed by smaller fellow beings, so the cycle of life shall gather the same pace and will continue endlessly without any creature realizing that the oil is flowing stealthily and silently beneath them.

Niranjan Singh Rathore
Ex-Senior Engineer Elect. Cairn India (Vedanta)

 
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