Kenya needs trillion a year to fund projects

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Kenya requires about Sh1 trillion a year to create a 21st-century transportation, water, and communications as well as electricity infrastructure system according to a new global report that calls on policymakers to help “close the investment gap.”
The G20’s Global Infrastructure Outlook Report released Tuesday — covering infrastructure investment needs globally for 50 countries and seven sectors — said $206 billion (about Sh21.4 trillion) is required to cater to the country’s infrastructure needs for the next 23 years.
READ: Mega project financing in Africa still a major challenge, report
It urges Kenya to increase its spending on infrastructure by 41 per cent in order to meet its needs by 2040 and achieve the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
Kenya’s population is expected to increase by 35 million people by 2040 coupled with economic growth of 5.5 per cent, the study said.
Consequently, the report says, more than $310 billion (about Sh32 trillion) will be needed if Kenya is to achieve the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) for universal household access to drinking water and electricity by 2030 — including a fourfold increase in electricity investment.
“Outlook is a comprehensive and detailed analysis of infrastructure investment need. It gives the new country and sector spending data that governments and funding organisations have been calling for,” said Global Infrastructure Hub CEO Chris Heathcote.
East African states estimate ongoing mega infrastructure projects to require about Sh60 trillion ($60.671 billion).
READ: Govt launches Sh200 billion industrial zone in Eldoret
ALSO READ: Italian firm wins Sh40bn Konza city roads, sewerage contract
In Kenya, mega projects whose implementation is in various stages include construction of the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport’s second runway, Isiolo Airport, Lamu port and Nairobi-Kisumu standard gauge railway.
The report was produced after year-long research G20’s Global Infrastructure Hub (GI Hub) in partnership with Oxford Economics.


Kenya Needs
10bn$ a year to achieve vision 2030 in 2040


Currently we only spend 6.7bn$ annually on infrastructure meaning we might achieve our vision in 2054

But also Kenya has oil 1bn - 2bn barrels

Assuming oil prices remain Stable through 2032 and we produce 500,000 barrels a day it will take us 12yrs to deplete 2bn barrels earning between 9bn$ and 17 bn$ a year .....Uganda and South Sudan have 2.6bn barrels and 5.8bn barrels just sleeping how i wish kenya could find that kind of oil lying down ....we would be making close to 30bn$ yearly



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Ati Kenya ina 2 bln barrels...[emoji23] fool stop dreaming u have around 600 mln barrels of non recoverable oil a reason Tullow is leaving Kenya.

It's funny how Kenya underestimates Uganda's huge oil reserves currently over 6.5 bln barrels that r huge to an extent support over US$3.5 bln pipeline project just b'se u lost the deal. I call that wivu wa kike

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Really dont have time ya kuanza kubishana na ww kila siku either u grow up ama tulengane tu .....am way beyond ur silly games

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Sawa ....FO my mentions basi

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Easy my friend...[emoji85] [emoji115] this might interests u n remove ur stupidity on the subject

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Tullow oil project in drought-hit part of Kenya suspended

Published on 30/06/2017, 12:21pm

Energy minister announces hold on Canadian-British firm’s plan to export oil from the unstable, drought-ravaged region of Turkana

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Villagers search for water in Turkana, Kenya - where experts say oil discovery risks exacerbate the effects of poverty and climate change-driven drought. (Photo: Africa Progress Panel)

By Daniel Wesangula in Nairobi

Kenya’s energy minister on Thursday announced the suspension of the East African nation’s plan to pump crude oil in a drought-ravaged northern province by British-Canadian firm Tullow Oil.

Speaking at a press conference in the country’s capital Nairobi, the country’s energy minister Charles Keter said the Early Oil Pilot Scheme, that had been slated to start this month, had been moved to September pending approval of an energy bill.

“After consultation with stakeholders in the county, we will do it by the end of the year,” Keter told journalists on Thursday.

The Early Oil Pilot Scheme is a government project that was meant to kickstart the exploitation and marketing of Kenya’s oil at small scale to test the market. It was expected to run for two years from mid-2017.

The energy bill is currently before Kenya’s Senate, which has been disbanded in preparation for the general elections slated for the 8th of August, meaning that any legislation can only be passed after a new Senate is constituted after the elections.

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When passed, the new law will give guidance on how the revenue from the oil proceeds will be shared between the county and the national government.

Last year, Kenya’s president Uhuru Kenyatta had directed Tullow Oil to expedite oil exploration in the country’s arid and often volatile region.

At the time, Tullow chief operating officer Paul McDade said his company had made good progress and would be ready to start oil exportation in June 2017 at an initial 2,000 barrels per day from five existing wells and that the oil company had already stored more than 70,000 barrels of oil in Lokichar, an outpost in Turkana ahead of the early export plan.

Kenya’s oil fields are in the country’s remote northern region of Turkana. The area was badly affected by this year’s drought, which gave rise to conflict between neighbouring communities over pasture and water. More recently, raids and counter raids between the Turkana and the Pokot, two of the dominant tribes in the region has led to the loss of lives and destruction of property.

Observers have raised concerns that an oil boom in the unstable region could exacerbate tensions.

Apart from the sporadic insecurity in the area, announcement of the commercial production of crude in the region pitted Kenya’s central government against Turkana’s local leadership over the revenue share from the proceeds of petrol.

President Kenyatta and Turkana governor Josphat Nanok have on at least one occasion had verbal exchanges over revenue sharing proposals.

Nanok, and most Turkana leaders, are pushing for at least 10% of oil revenues to be withheld by the county while the national government is pushing for a 5% ceiling.

The postponement of exploration might vindicate some of Kenya’s neighbours who pulled out of a multi-country oil infrastructure project that would have seen the creation of pipelines and road networks between Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania and South Sudan.

Just last month, Uganda officially pulled out of the ambitious Eastern Africa project citing insecurity and instead opted to piggy back on Tanzania’s already under construction pipeline to transport its own crude out of its wells.

Construction of Kenya’s oil infrastructure network of roads and a pipeline that would move the crude to the port city of Mombasa some 900 kilometres south of the oil fields has been halted by the contractors over security concerns.

But at Thursday’s press conference, the energy minister dismissed insecurity as a factor for its decision to suspend oil production.

“Insecurity has nothing to do with what Tullow Oil has been doing in Turkana… insecurity happens everywhere. There have been incidences of insecurity in the area even before drilling started,” he said.

Kenya’s oil discovery in 2012 was hailed as a ‘major breakthrough’ by the then president Mwai Kibaki who said the county’s economic programs, which had and continue to be supported by trade, tourism and agriculture would be significantly boosted by oil revenues.

[emoji767] 2016 Climate Home. All rights reserved.

Tullow oil project in drought-hit part of Kenya suspended | Climate Home - climate change news

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w Kenya could be digging itself into the 'oil curse'

By Vincent Achuka and Macharia Kamau | Saturday, Jul 1st 2017 at 19:03

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How Kenya could be digging itself into the 'oil curse'

The decision by the Government to cancel for the second time the Early Oil Pilot Scheme (EOPS) on Thursday has left in its wake questions on whether Kenya's discovery of crude is turning out to be the curse of black gold.

While Energy Cabinet Secretary Charles Keter put up a brave face blaming the last minute decision to pull the plug on lack of regulatory framework just hours before the massively publicized deadline, underneath were signs of brewing trouble.

Just a day before the postponement on Thursday a letter from Tullow Oil threatening to pull out of the scheme due to insecurity that had been sent to the Government was leaked to The Standard.

But during the press conference on Thursday the British explorers played by the Government’s narrative that the sudden decision to pull out of the early oil plan was as a result of a delay in the passing of the Petroleum and Energy Bill.

“The country is in good shape from an oil and gas perspective and it gives us lessons which is exactly why the early oil scheme was mooted,” said Tullow Oil Kenya Country Managing Director Martin Mbogo.

ALSO READ: Kenyans to wait longer to see export first oil export from Turkana

Below the surface, however, is a simmering wrangle between the State and the County Government of Turkana whose tell-tale signs began in March when President Uhuru Kenyatta publicly clashed with Governor Josephat Nanok.

“Someone can dare stand here and accuse Uhuru of wanting someone’s oil revenue, I rebuke you, you devil,” the President said in Lodwar.

And three weeks ago one company upgrading the road to Lodwar suspended works after three of their employees were attacked. Tullow has also protested that its employees cannot access its oil fields which have been invaded by ‘unknown people.’

Meanwhile, Turkana leadership has vowed no single barrel of oil will leave the fields unless their grievances are settled. “The reason given by the President about the percentage that Turkana (County) Government cannot absorb the funds is a big joke. It is actually a slap on our faces. The Jubilee leadership is not one that has the people’s interest at heart,” vowed County Executive in charge of Pastoral Economy and Fisheries, Lynus Nakiporo.

“The Turkana people want 30 per cent of the oil revenue. That is 10 per cent to the community and 20 per cent to the county government. If President Uhuru Kenyatta does not sign it, all oil operations will be suspended.”

The bone of contention? How to share the expected petro dollars. Turkana leadership has been pushing for a 10 percent of the revenue to go to the community while the government is pushing for 5 percent.

So far Tullow has discovered 750 million barrels of oil. Saturday, a barrel of crude oil was trading at $52 (Sh5,391). This means Kenya has $39 billion (Sh4.043 trillion) worth of oil in its belly. This could soar to $52 billion (Sh5.391 trillion) at the end of the year according to projections which show the crude find will hit a billion barrels.

ALSO READ: Government delays crude oil production and export

This means that the 10 percent the Turkana leadership wants to go to the community translates to Sh520 billion or 50 times what the arid country receives per year from the national government.

And with a consensus not forthcoming, the national government has opted to push it through Parliament instead of discussing with the community, a move it insists is in accordance with the law.

“If you see in terms of benefit to Turkana the amount of money which has gone there is a lot of money. The people supplying food and working there are from Turkana and at the end of the day the project benefits them first,” Keter said. “And right it’s a political season anybody can say anything. That is why we are saying to avoid all these issues we rather hold on for another two to three months for the Bill which is before Parliament so that nobody can say the government is arm twisting the local communities.”

While it looks like a small dispute between levels of government, similar scripts have played out across Africa where resource rich countries have struggled to harness their full potential in what is now commonly referred to ‘the curse of Africa’

In Equatorial Guinea, which produces over 300,000 barrels of oil per day, three quarters of its residents are living below the poverty line. At the Niger Delta, chaos, armed gangs and kidnappings targeting oil companies and people who work for them has become the order of the day.

And the Democratic Republic of Congo which could be the world’s most mineral rich country has also witnessed the bloodiest conflict since the Second World War. The guns are yet to fall silent and more than five million people have died so far.

Yet, while Kenya has been racing to become an oil producer in five short years since discovering the black gold in 2012, observers say a lot of tell-tale signs of trouble have been showing up and being swept under the carpet as fast.

ALSO READ: Oil export plan in limbo as Tullow threatens to pull out of Turkana oil fields

Despite the admission by the Ministry of Energy that the Early Oil Pilot Scheme would be a loss making venture and one that would entail a logistical nightmare of moving crude by road from Turkana to Mombasa, the State still pushed on.

The Kenya Civil Society Platform on Oil and Gas (KCSPOG) last year published a report, which said the early oil programme would incur losses of more than Sh4 billion. Among the factors that it had considered then included the low price of oil in the international market, the logistics of moving the cargo over long distance and the low volumes of oil produced during the pilot at 2,000 barrels a day.

“Part of the loss will come in the form of heavy investment needed to develop the infrastructure to transport and store the waxy crude for shipment overseas,” it said in October last year. “The total volume of oil produced and exported will be about 900,000 barrels at a combined capital and operation cost of around $63 million (Sh6.3 billion) in two years. At $46 per barrel, the revenue will be $34 million (Sh3.4 billion), which is a loss of $29 million (Sh2.9 billion).”

But at stake were bragging rights on who among Kenya and Uganda would be the first one to export oil. Uganda discovered oil in 2010 but has never exported a single barrel.

So high are the stakes that there was a brief diplomatic tiff between Kenya and Tanzania that led to the confiscation of passports belonging to Kenyan Energy Ministry officials including Keter at the Tanga Port in March last year.

Yet, despite the determination to evacuate oil from Turkana to Mombasa before Ugandan crude hits the international market, the Government only realised this week that it is important to wait till the Petroleum Bill gets passed by Parliament.

Observers note that there is little truth to this and in fact other factors have been at play that include the politics of the day, the state of security in Turkana and West Pokot as well as the general preparedness among the actors.

Charles Wanguhu coordinator Kenya Civil Society Platform on Oil and Gas (KCSPOG) says while the Bill will be essential in governing oil exploration and production in the country when it becomes an Act, it had little to do with the suspension of the early oil programme.

ALSO READ: Tullow strikes more oil in Turkana basin after drilling lull

“The pilot could have proceeded as it was a pilot and not the commercial production, which would be difficult to oversee without a comprehensive legal framework, especially when it came to the issue of revenue sharing,” Wanguhu says. “The Cabinet Secretary needs to be honest. It is very unlikely that the suspension of the pilot program was due to the delayed passing of the Petroleum Bill.”

The Ministry of Energy has downplayed the challenges and saying the pilot would start before end of this year, with expectations that it could happen as early as September. “We will do it before the end of the year and run the programme until the pipeline is done. We are ready, the construction of the road (between Lokichar and Kitale) is ongoing and the joint venture partners have awarded contracts for transportation and other activities,” said Keter.

The Bill, which delves into different aspects of the upstream sector, had been debated and passed by Parliament but the President declined to assent and instead referred it back to the House with a recommendation to reduce the revenues that would be due to the Community once production starts.

MPs from Turkana had managed to convince Parliament to push the community revenue to 10 percent before it was rejected by the President.

However, it is still unclear who will hold the revenue on behalf of the community with some quarters pushing for the national government to have that responsibility. Others want the county to be given the privilege and the third group is pushing for the establishment of a trust fund in what is turning out to be a battle of interests.

Both the Government and Tullow are also still cagey on divulging the financial details of the contracts signed between them raising more questions on the whole process. “The constitution mandates us, it is not a secret they (contracts) are not classified. When the time comes we will say what is in there not only for Tullow but all the exploration companies in Kenya,” says Keter.

KCSPOG says it would be a miscalculation launching the project at an election year. “The pilot scheme should be stopped now that the Ministry of Energy has seen the risks associated with it, especially the political and security risks, and the fact that it will not give much information that is not already known,” says Wanguhu.

“Instead the Ministry and the joint venture partners should focus on full field development,” he says. In its operational update released on Thursday, Tullow stayed clear of all the controversies facing the oil exploration process and instead dwelled on the developments it has made.

“In parallel to the upstream development work, the Joint Venture Partners and the Government of Kenya continue to progress commercial and finance studies for the proposed export pipeline, and preparations are under way for the Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA),” it said.

How Kenya could be digging itself into the 'oil curse'

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Tullow in Kenya duster, farms down in Suriname

Anglo-Irish independent's latest well in Lokichar basin comes up dry, while it also reduces stake in Suriname block

Tullow Oil has come up dry at its latest exploration well in Kenya, where an early production scheme is now not seen happening until the end of this year.

The Anglo-Irish independent, which ran up a loss in the first half, said the Etiir-1 wildcat west of the Greater Etom structure was unsuccessful.

The well, which was spud in June, targeted a large, shallow, structural closure, but "no material reservoir development or shows (were) encountered," Tullow said.

The London-listed company will

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Tullow in Kenya duster, farms down in Suriname

Anglo-Irish independent's latest well in Lokichar basin comes up dry, while it also reduces stake in Suriname block

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Tullow in Kenya duster, farms down in Suriname

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