South Sudan is in negotiation with Uganda and Tanzania to use Hoima-Tanga pipeline after DRC Congo

South Sudan is in negotiation with Uganda and Tanzania to use Hoima-Tanga pipeline after DRC Congo

Where r Kenyan brothers in here? Wacha wasaini EPA sisi tunabaki na deal kubwakubwa hata EAC ikivunjika bomba litabaki 😛
 
Geza,
Jamaa zetu hawa hata wakikaa kimya sisi tuendelee kuleta habari, maana habari ni habari tu iwe nzuri au mbaya ni habari tu. JamiiForums ni kisima cha kuchota habari kama zinavyoendelea kutolewa na vyanzo mbalimbali ili jamii ipate ufahamu wa kinachoendelea katika nchi ya Kenya.
 
I saw this coming.

We should set up a link with TAZAMA, all the way to Zambia, Zimbabwe, Malawi and Congo.
 
Huhuhuhu Tanzania inakua tamuuuuu

Projects Projects Projects new every minute am tired now of multi trillion Projects yeeeeeeh!!
 
Mk254 na wengine wa keyii mbona kimya? Sisi tumeanza ujenzi wa Bomba. Je, Bomba lenu linamwaga mafuta tayari?
 
Miaka 5 ijayu
Kuna midomo ya watafuta sifa itapotea kabisa
 
Mkuu hii ni ukweli ? if possible please provide a link!

South Sudan Seeking Troops After Rejecting UN Peacekeepers

640px-UN_battalion_Bastille_Day_2008_n2.jpg

South Sudan is “shopping around” for troops from African nations after rejecting a UN proposal to deploy 4,000 additional peacekeeper troops, according to reports.

Kenyan publication, The East African, says Juba is attempting to source troops from Egypt and Tanzania. This comes after South Sudan rejected a proposal from the United Nations Security Council to deploy extra UN peacekeeper troops in the country.

South Sudan seeking troops from ‘neutral’ countries
According to the report, South Sudan is seeking troops from countries with neutral leaders. Egypt and Tanzania are said to be the first two African nations Juba has approached. While the UN’s peacekeeping force would be made up of troops from neighboring countries, including Ethiopia and Tanzania.

South Sudan’s refusal to accept UN troops doesn’t necessarily rule them out of being deployed, but it does make the next move difficult for the organization. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon was supposed to report on the deployment of troops by September 15.
However, South Sudanese deputy ambassador to Kenya Jimmy Deng says the world cannot force peacekeeper troops upon the country.

“The forces that are coming and the type of weapons they are going to carry must come from Igad [Inter-Governmental Authority on Development]. We must have an exit strategy and the UN is not going to decide for us because there are a lot of countries that are willing to deploy,” he said.

South Sudan facing arms embargo
The UN had previously warned it would place an arms embargo on South Sudan if the country continued to reject its proposal for deploying peacekeeper troops. However, this also came with the deadline of September 15, which has already passed. An arms embargo is still a genuine possibility and one of few moves the UN can realistically take.

Meanwhile, South Sudan’s leaders have been accused once again of leeching the country and profiteering from its war in a new report by the Sentry.

South Sudan Seeking Troops After Rejecting UN Peacekeepers - East Africa Monitor
 
Mkuu hii ni ukweli ? if possible please provide a link!
Juba shopping for troops, rejects UN’s
  • The EastAfrican has learned that Juba is seeking troops from Egypt and Tanzania, whom the leaders believe will be neutral as compared with frontline states like Ethiopia and Kenya that were supposed to provide the regional protection force.
  • South Sudan is facing an arms embargo and targeted sanctions, especially after the Sentry Report revealed that the top leadership of the youngest country in Africa have been looting it since the signing of the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement in Nairobi.
  • The challenge now is that countries that would provide the troops are unwilling to risk the lives of their soldiers in a direct confrontation with South Sudanese troops.
South Sudan is shopping around for troops from African countries to deploy in Juba, after rejecting those recommended by the United Nations Security Council.

The EastAfrican has learned that Juba is seeking troops from Egypt and Tanzania, whom the leaders believe will be neutral as compared with frontline states like Ethiopia and Kenya that were supposed to provide the regional protection force.

But the Salva Kiir administration is running out of time as UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon was supposed to report to the Security Council about its commitment on the deployment of additional 4,000 troops by September 15.

Sources from the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (Igad) told The EastAfrican that Mr Ban is awaiting a report from the former president of Botswana, Festus Mogae, who is in charge of the Joint Monitoring and Evaluation Commission (JMEC), which is supposed to implement the August 2015 agreement.

South Sudanese deputy ambassador to Kenya Jimmy Deng, however, said that the chiefs-of staff-from the Igad states are working on the modalities of deployment, adding that the world cannot just impose foreign forces on South Sudan without proper consultations.

“The forces that are coming and the type of weapons they are going to carry must come from Igad. We must have an exit strategy and the UN is not going to decide for us because there are a lot of countries that are willing to deploy,” said Mr Deng.

South Sudan is facing an arms embargo and targeted sanctions, especially after the Sentry Report revealed that the top leadership of the youngest country in Africa have been looting it since the signing of the 2005 Comprehensive Peace Agreement in Nairobi.

The report says that colossal amounts of money are stashed away in Kenyan and Ugandan banks while the same personalities own luxurious properties in the three countries.

The challenge now is that countries that would provide the troops are unwilling to risk the lives of their soldiers in a direct confrontation with South Sudanese troops.

The same Igad counties are supposed to be in the forefront of imposing an arms embargo.

Kenya, Rwanda and Ethiopia were supposed to provide the regional protection force, which according to the UN Security Council Resolution was supposed to act as a buffer between the forces of President Kiir and those of ousted vice-president Dr Riek Machar, and to secure humanitarian supply lines and key installations.

“The government consented to the deployment of the regional protection force, but we need to hear now how the talks are going, about the actual, concrete deployment of that force,” said the US ambassador to the UN Samantha Power.

Juba shopping for troops, rejects UN’s
 
Geza Ulole Teh teh teh teh teh

Wamesusa maana hii Habari inaonesha jinsi SS walivyoichoka Kenya.
 
Add black gold to DRC’s list of natural riches

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By Tim Cashion - Thursday, June 23, 2016


While the Democratic Republic of the Congo has long been known for its wide array of minerals and other natural resources, oil and gas have not been included in that long list. This is beginning to change and the DRC could join the growing club of major sub-Saharan oil producers, currently headed by Nigeria and Angola.

With most of Angola’s oil being extracted from the seabed of the Atlantic south and north (offshore the Angolan enclave of Cabinda) of the DRC’s short, 23-mile coastline, as well as neighbor Republic of Congo getting significant quantities of oil from its Atlantic seabed, it was long believed that the DRC should also have offshore oil.

And indeed it does have oil, but only small quantities have been found so far. Exploration started in the early 1960s, and continued into the 1970s and 1980s. Forty-one wells were sunk. Of these, eventually five produced oil and one produced gas.

Chevron found oil in 1973, and this oil has been pumped since 1976. Gas is not exploited. The current operator of these offshore-extraction activities is Anglo-French independent producer Perenco, which said in 2015 it produced 22,500 barrels per day from the DRC’s offshore wells.

“All the produced crude is stored on board the Kalamu floating terminal, which can store up to 1 million barrels of oil,” Perenco states on its website.

But as with the DRC’s west coast logic of finding oil and gas in an area of the ocean belonging to country A if it is surrounded by oil-and gas-producing wells in countries B and C, significant finds by Uganda, on its side of Lake Albert, have spurred theDRC to explore for hydrocarbons on its eastern frontier.

Three companies — London-based Tullow Oil Plc, Total SA of France, and China National Offshore Oil Corp. — have drilled over 100 wells on the Ugandan side of Lake Albert, and the Ugandan government has estimated its oil reserves at 6.5 billion barrels.

Uganda recently announced that it planned to begin production in 2018 and that it would build a $4 billion, 800-mile pipeline to the Tanzanian port of Tanga to export its crude. This will be the first oil pipeline in East Africa.

Some of the Ugandan crude will also be used to supply a 60,000 bpd refinery to be built at Hoima, not far from the lake.

DRC side of Lake Albert, exploration has also turned up positive results. In August 2014, Oil of DRCongo, a company controlled by Israeli billionaire Dan Gertler, announced that it had found some 3 billion barrels of oil at the lake.

To put the Oil of DRCongo find into perspective, the size of the reserves it discovered are equivalent to those in Britain and South Sudan. The company said exploitation of these resources could add 25 percent to the DRC’s gross domestic product.

In June 2015, the DRC Parliament in Kinshasa adopted a hydrocarbons code to help bring law and order to the industry, which has been largely unregulated in the DRC to date, fostering corruption.

In a more controversial development, in 2007 the Congolese ministry of hydrocarbons awarded two oil concessions that straddle the borders of DRC’s storied Virunga National Park, the first such park established in Africa and which is home to gorillas, other apes and a wide range of species, some of which are rare.

French major Total SA gave up its concession, but SOCO International, a British oil company, did seismic studies that confirmed the presence of oil reserves under the park. Widespread international opposition to developing wells in the area have prevented any movement so far, but Kinshasa has said it will consider granting exploitation rights if UNESCO indicates that this World Heritage Site will not be negatively impacted by the oil industry.

It is not clear how the DRC will get its oil to market, given the lack of any pipeline or of good roads or railway lines to carry such freight. And given DRC’s uneasy relations with Uganda, it is not likely that Kinshasa would want to depend on the Ugandan pipeline to Tanga, even if Kampala did offer that option.

Also, at the moment the DRC does not have a working refinery, having closed the only one in the country, SOCIR, in 1998. However, the new availability of locally produced oil might well spur construction of one, as it has in Uganda.


Copyright © 2016 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.

Add black gold to DRC’s list of natural riches
 
Tanzania, Congo to hold joint search for oil and gas in Lake Tanganyika

  • The discovery of oil in Lake Albert, which is located in the Great Rift Valley as Lake Tanganyika, and Beach Petroleum’s announcement in 2012 that initial seismic surveys had indicated the potential of 200 million barrels of oil, raised hopes that massive oil deposits could be discovered in the area.
Tanzania and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) Tuesday signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to pave the way for joint oil and gas exploration in Lake Tanganyika.

The MoU was signed by the Congolese Petroleum and Gas minister Ngoyi Mukena and Tanzania’s Energy and Minerals minister Prof Sospeter Muhongo at State House in Dar es Salaam. President John Magufuli and his DR Congo counterpart Joseph Kabila witnessed the signing.

“We have already discovered oil in the western parts of Lake Albert, and there’s a great possibility that there’s also oil in Lake Tanganyika, therefore, joint exploration is the way to go for mutual benefits,” said President Kabila.

The discovery of oil in Lake Albert, which is located in the Great Rift Valley as Lake Tanganyika, and Beach Petroleum’s announcement in 2012 that initial seismic surveys had indicated the potential of 200 million barrels of oil, raised hopes that massive oil deposits could be discovered in the area.

President Magufuli said through such pacts African countries can tap and make use of their economic potentials.

President Kabila is in Tanzania for a three-day state visit. He held private talks with his host on Tuesday morning on trade, infrastructure development, defence and energy.

Tanzania, Congo to hold joint search for oil and gas in Lake Tanganyika

nomasana, sam999, NairobiWalker, hbuyosh, msemakweli, simplemind, Kimweri, Bulldog, MK254, Kafrican, Ngongo, Ab_Titchaz, mtanganyika mpya, JokaKuu, Ngongo, Askari Kanzu, Dhuks, Yule-Msee, waltham, mombasite gabriel, Juakali1980, Boda254, mwaswast, MwendaOmo, Iconoclastes, oneflash, Kambalanick, 1 Africa, saadeque, burukenge, nyangau mkenya, Teen-Upperhill Nairobi, kadoda11
 
Du ingoma inogile. Soon the country will be the hub of pipe lines in central and east Africa.
 
Tanzania, Congo Sign Deal for Joint Oil Exploration in Lake Tanganyika

Fumbuka Ng'wanakilala


DAR ES SALAAM, Oct 4 (Reuters) - Tanzania and the Democratic Republic of the Congo signed a memorandum of understanding on Tuesday for joint exploration and development of hydrocarbons in Lake Tanganyika.

The lake, which straddles the border between Tanzania, Democratic Republic of Congo, Burundi and Zambia, is the world's second largest by volume and second deepest, according to officials.

"We have signed a memorandum of understanding to exchange experiences in exploration and exploitation of petroleum in Lake Tanganyika," Congolese President Joseph Kabila told a news conference in Dar es Salaam after talks with Tanzanian President John Magufuli.

"We believe that there is petroleum in Lake Tanganyika."

Kabila, who arrived in Tanzania late on Monday for a three-day state visit, said the two countries had agreed to pursue joint oil and gas exploration activities in the lake.

"We have also discussed mutual cooperation in the proposed crude oil pipeline project to be constructed from Uganda to Tanzania. Uganda is expected to start producing oil soon and Congo will also in the next few years begin its own oil production," Kabila said.

Land-locked Uganda announced in April it would build a pipeline for its oil through Tanzania rather than Kenya, which had wanted to secure the export route.

Kabila said Congo wanted to use the same pipeline to export its future oil production from Lake Albert.

France's Total, one of the oil firms developing Uganda's fields, is taking part in the construction of the crude oil pipeline along with Britain's Tullow Oil and China's CNOOC.

Tanzanian officials said they expected construction of the pipeline to be completed in 2020 at an estimated cost of $3.5 billion.

Tanzania in 2011 awarded oil and gas exploration rights for the northern side of Lake Tanganyika to a subsidiary of Total.

Interest in East Africa as a new hydrocarbon region has been heating up in recent years after major discoveries of oil in Uganda and natural gas in Tanzania and Mozambique.

Tanzania announced in February it had discovered an additional 2.17 trillion cubic feet (tcf) of possible natural gas deposits in an onshore field, raising its total estimated recoverable natural gas reserves to more than 57 tcf.

East Africa's second-biggest economy is yet to make commercial discoveries of oil.

(Reporting by Fumbuka Ng'wanakilala; Editing by George Obulutsa and Mark Potter)

Tanzania, Congo Sign Deal for Joint Oil Exploration in Lake Tanganyika
 
Du ingoma inogile..
Soon the country will be the hub of pipe lines in central and east Africa.
Mchezo hautaki hasira huu! Kenya needs to do the same with Somalia i.e. sign joint offshore exploration agreements! 😛

nomasana, sam999, NairobiWalker, hbuyosh, msemakweli, simplemind, Kimweri, Bulldog, MK254, Kafrican, Ngongo, Ab_Titchaz, mtanganyika mpya, JokaKuu, Ngongo, Askari Kanzu, Dhuks, Yule-Msee, waltham, mombasite gabriel, Juakali1980, Boda254, mwaswast, MwendaOmo, Iconoclastes, oneflash, Kambalanick, 1 Africa, saadeque, burukenge, nyangau mkenya, Teen-Upperhill Nairobi, kadoda11
 
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