Special thread: EACOP updates

EACOP and its moral fibre​

Saturday, July 09, 2022


Elison Karuhanga


By Elison Karuhanga
Columnist

What you need to know:​

The argument that EACOP will emit 34 million metric tonnes of CO2 is misleading; Uganda will produce 1.68 million metric tonnes from the whole oil project, not just EACOP
This week, some NGOs issued a “new” report built around allegations against the East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP). There is nothing new in this report, it echoes the same tired dooms day slogans.

The report followed an article in these pages that alleged that EACOP is immoral and needs to be stopped. There is nothing immoral about EACOP and here is why:
It has become the norm for some in the international NGO community to make wild and unverified claims about EACOP. While it is tempting to engage in an exchange of creative fiction, it is not necessary, facts will suffice. For example, it is a fact that EACOP is a heated buried pipeline.

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At certain points of this pipeline, heating stations will be above the ground and EACOP will be heated using solar power.
EACOP will be buried 6ft underground and covered with three to four layers of pipe. It will have fibre optic cables that help monitor heat, fluid flow and pipe pressure throughout the pipeline.
The argument that EACOP will emit 34 million metric tonnes of CO2 is misleading; Uganda will produce 1.68 million metric tonnes from the whole oil project, not just EACOP. This is almost a third of what we currently emit from deforestation.
The gas from the project will help provide alternatives for firewood and charcoal. One can only arrive at 34 million tonnes if it includes the emissions that will be created when the oil is utilised by consumers in the west.
This project is a rather modest project compared to the 9000 licences issued in America, the drilling in the Arctic and the 53 licenses in the North Sea issued by Norway or the coal plants fired up by Germany. Our modest project is aimed at fighting underdevelopment among some of the poorest people in the world.

It is claimed by these activists that 40 million people who rely on Lake Victoria will be denied water and their lives will be at risk. As a matter of fact, EACOP doesn’t pass through Lake Victoria.
It is buried 6ft deep under adjacent land and so the moral crusaders need not worry. Oil extraction in East Africa will not be the cause of Armageddon.
Another lie is that 200,000 people will be displaced by EACOP.
To put this in context, EACOP is a 1,443 km pipeline while the total road projects currently being undertaken in Uganda measure 1,900km. Where are the internally displaced people camps (IDPs) from road construction?
In Uganda, EACOP will be 296km long. That is only a few kilometres longer than the Kyenjojo-Kagadi-Hoima-Bulima-Masindi Road or the Olwiyo-Gulu-Acholi-Bur-Musingo road. Where are the hundreds of thousands of displaced people from those roads? The estimated number of people who will be affected are approximately 18,800 people. These are known as project affected persons (PAPs) and PAPs must be compensated, in accordance with the laws and international financial regulations. This compensation is being done in the most public and transparent fashion.
They claim EACOP passes through Murchison Falls National Park. It does not. However, there will be oil activity in the park, drilling in particular.
Out of Murchison’s 3,900 km sq, oil activities will be in less than 2 km sq representing 0.05 per cent of the park. Prior to the decision to drill in the park, studies were undertaken over many years; of the movement and patterns of all animals in the park including antelopes, elephants, giraffes, lions, frogs and even butterflies.

This was to ensure minimal impact of oil activities on the biodiversity of the park. All infrastructure in the park will be underground. The park has survived wars and will certainly endure oil activity.
EACOP is not an immoral project. It is not a project that seeks to displace people, destroy water for millions and kill animals. These claims are exaggerated or outright lies that have been given a lot of airtime. The lectures on the morality of EACOP are condescending and ignore the fact that any risks are mitigated not to mention outweighed by benefits that are needed by so many East Africans.
The writer is an advocate and partner at Kampala Associated Advocates
elisonk@kaa.co.ug
 

Thanks Elison for the article.
You have analysed each issue very clear. The problem of these whistleblowers (kenyans in particular), have big mouths but very small brains.
The other time they were claiming that the pipeline will cross the mighty Serengeti which is not true. They like to live in lies and misleading people.
 

EACOP, agriculture, lions and lies

Saturday, July 16, 2022

Elison Karuhanga
By Elison Karuhanga
Columnist

What you need to know:​

“It is saddening to read these claims which are made without even the most basic fact checks.”
Oil & Gas

This week, there was an article about EACOP (East African Crude Oil Pipeline) in the African Business Magazine, an influential magazine, under the heading ‘EACOP: Economic boon or environmental disaster’.
The theme was: notwithstanding any economic benefits, the project risks serious environmental and social disasters.

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The article carried a fictitious claim, “EACOP will cross 230 rivers and several forest reservations, displacing around 100,000 people from their land. Its path crosses some of the world’s most important elephant, and lion reserves.
In traversing the Lake Victoria basin, relied on by millions for drinking water and food production, the project risks a devastating oil spill, placing vital water resources at risk.”
Sadly, many anti-EACOP criticisms, like this one, are completely made up. For example, the claim that EACOP will “tear through 230 rivers” is completely fictitious.
In Uganda, EACOP will go through 10 districts, namely; Kikuube, Hoima, Kakumiro, Kyankwazi, Mubende, Gomba, Sembabule, Lwengo, Rakai, and Kyotera.
Ugandans know that most of these are water-stressed districts. It is also false that those districts have some of the world’s most “important lion and elephant reserves”. That is absolute fiction.
The same can be said on the Tanzanian side. There are no lion and elephant reserves and the pipeline certainly does not cross 230 rivers in Tanzania.
It took Uganda several years to select the pipeline route, and several studies to determine the route with the least impact on population and biodiversity.

Several studies were undertaken to refine the route even after the route was selected.
The anti-EACOP campaigners are trying to undo serious work with unserious soundbites that are manufactured and distributed on an industrial scale in the global press. It is also important to understand what the Lake Victoria basin includes.
Activists make it sound like there is no economic activity in this “basin”.
Kampala City, with a population of approximately 1.7 million people, is in the Lake Victoria basin. Jinja City is in the Lake Victoria basin.
The basin is full of all manner of economic activity and a buried pipeline won’t destroy our water sources.
It is saddening to read these claims about Uganda which are made without even the most basic fact checks.
I was recently hosted on an online forum with friends who oppose EACOP and one of their arguments was that the government of Uganda should focus on agriculture instead of oil.
However, agriculture too must be powered by energy; an agricultural revolution is only possible with available energy.
The United States of America and the Kingdom of Netherlands are some of the biggest food producers in the world, largely due to energy security. Refineries produce asphalt, which is used to pave roads thereby improving access to markets.
Refineries produce fertilizers which in turn improve yields.
Refineries produce diesel, which is used to power tractors and heavy machinery, for agro-processing. Opponents of our oil projects seem to prefer that we continue to import diesel and fertilizers, but a refinery in Uganda will significantly boost Uganda’s agricultural sector.

Oil and the agriculture sector are not competing ideas but rather complementary to one another.
EACOP provides a timely opportunity to finance the social and economic transformation of our society.
There may be reasons for Uganda not to produce oil and there may be arguments that advance those reasons, however, let us be frank, what is being advanced right now is propaganda, exaggerations, and lies.
If activists, especially those who double as politicians in Europe, are genuine in their cause, why do they resort to lies about Uganda and EACOP?
I believe it is because the truth is firmly in our corner.
The writer is an advocate and partner at Kampala Associated Advocates
elisonk@kaa.co.ug



 

Uganda at crossroads as oil boom looms

What you need to know:​

  • So, why do some anti-fossil fuel activists — local and international, continue to de-campaign Uganda’s oil project? Frederic Musisi writes.
The sunrise view over the expansive lush savannah plains of the Murchison Falls National Park is a great sight to behold. The resplendently picturesque view far over the towering feeding Nubian giraffes, is the epitome of natural beauty.

Droves of tourists from near and far come here for the idyllic breath-taking scenery. The park is the second most visited national park in the country, after Queen Elizabeth National Park.
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The park to the northwest, together with the Bugungu and Karuma Wildlife Reserves, respectively, constitute the Murchison Falls Conservation Area covering an expanse of 3, 893 square kilometres.
The park, according to the Wildlife Conservation Society, a wildlife and wild places NGO, is home to 144 mammal species, 566 bird species, 51 reptiles, 28 amphibians, and more than 758 known plant species.
It is inside the park that River Nile—adjoins the Lake Albert Nile, the stretch known as the Albert Nile—as its waters roars upstream. It is also inside the park that is situated the idyllic Murchison falls, where the government in 2019 teased plans to construct a 360megawatts hdyro-electric dam at the adjacent Uhuru falls, a move that elicited widespread criticism.
Yet again, conservation aficionados and anti-fossil fuel activists have in the last months, since February when government and the joint venture partners—French TotalEnergies, China’s Cnooc, UNOC, and TPDC—announced Final Investment Decision for the Uganda oil project, kicked up a storm over ongoing construction of oil infrastructure inside the national park.
The activists have mounted a campaign on two fronts; de-campaigning the proposed East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP), which will transport Uganda’s waxy crude oil to the Indian Ocean coastal port of Tanga en-route to the international market, by urging potential financiers to walk away, and continuously panning oil activities in MFNP which they say is adversative to conversation efforts.

Moreso, the poor image of the government internationally—bad governance, clientele patronage politics, human rights violations, among others, has poured more gasoline towards the campaign against the $10b (Shs37 trillion) oil—Lake Albert Development—project. At the turn of the new millennium the British magazine, The Economist, caused a stir when it ran a cover story describing Africa as “The hopeless Continent” illustrating among other ills war, famine and disease, and decades of civil strife.
Eleven years later, The Economist and American Times, separately run cover stories titled “Africa Rising” painting a picture of optimism and the continent as the world’s next economic powerhouse on account of among others natural resource discoveries, tourism, among others, and with some of the fasted growing economies.
Yet still, how European and American media majorly covers Africa remains a subject of discussion by media scholars. The current divisive climate change debate, that has pitted world governments and multinational corporations, has lent credence to the discourse.
“There are many narratives about Africa that are not correct and I think this (on oil) is one of them,” said Mr Ernest Rubondo, the executive director of the Petroleum Authority of Uganda (PAU), the oil sector regulator. “So, when you see these narratives that are not true, individually bear in mind they could as bad as this one about (Uganda’s) oil.”
A lot has been said and written about Uganda’s oil project since exploration and appraisal from around 2012 by the Anglo-Irish wildcatter, Tullow Oil, and Total EP [now TotalEnergies].

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But since February 1 when the Final Investment Decision (FID) for the Uganda oil project was announced, international media has been awash with articles depicting immense contribution of greenhouse emissions, pollution, human rights violations—some stories half-true or out of context. There have also been truths to some accounts, albeit depicting the country as on the path of self-destruction.
As TotalEnergies, which operates the Tilenga oil project part of which lies within the park, embarks on the development phase—construction of infrastructure to pump commercial oil by the second quarter of 2025—some ask what is the worst that could happen, and how far can oil co-exist with conservation.
Some pundits and researchers have painted a grim picture, warning of among others oil spills and drawing parallels to the beleaguered Niger Delta, and adverse interruption to the eco-system—flora and fauna, which will deal a blow to the tourism sector, the highest foreign exchange earner of $1.6b (Shs5.6 trillion) between 2018 and 2019 before Covid-19 upended life as we know it.
Carbon (Co2) emissions from both drilling and EACOP is another strand that has been added to the equation, on backdrop of the recently released Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPPC) report which detailed that climate crisis as unequivocally damning.
A group of 13 local NGOs in a statement on June 30 claimed that Uganda’s oil activities will produce over 34.3 million metric tonnes of carbon, equal to nine-coal fired power plants. The NGOs, however, did not detail how they arrived at their computation.

Since 2020, NGOs have been prodding international financing institutions to invoke their new fossil fuels financing policies that set out stringent conditions for lending to fossil fuel projects, including requiring TotalEnergies and government to commit to minimising or reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
Some NGOs, including Ugandan ones have, however, been nudging financial institutions not to fund the project.
Stakes
Between 2005 and 2015, according to the ministry of Water and Environment’s Climate Change Department, Uganda’s CO2 emissions increased from 53 metric tonnes to 90 metric tonnes, the upsurge attributed to agriculture, forestry, and land usage.
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Energy usage and production accounted for 10 percent of CO2, of which three quarters was attributed to the transport sector; heavily-polluted air spilled in the atmosphere from second-hand vehicle engines from Japan and China.
“Our energy per capital consumption is very low compared to other countries. The average consumption of oil per annum is 0.2 to a fifth of a barrel which is quite low,” Dr Joseph Kobusheshe, the director of environment, health, safety and security management at PAU, said.
He added: “Our emission of 10 percent attributed to energy sector is very low and as the country industrialises, you can imagine this will increase because we need to develop. Between 2005 and 2015, there was an increase of 37 metric tonnes even without oil activities.”
Dr Amis Mao, the executive director of the African Centre for Green Economy and don at the University of Cape Town, said these are complex issues.

“The issues have to be looked at from various point of views. Climate change is real and we are seeing extreme impacts because of co2 emissions in the atmosphere,” Dr Mao said.
“Developing countries are not responsible for the tragedy we are facing and so the developed world has to take responsibility especially in helping poor ones like Uganda to adapt. But developing countries also need to undertake growth and that is the only way their economies can respond to some of these challenges. So broadly speaking these issues are interlocked,” he added.
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The raging climate change debate has invigorated discussion on the Brandt line— the gap in financial wellbeing, between richer developed countries and poorer developing countries—commonly known as the North/South Divide.
Some pundits describe as unfair and bewildering the notion to completely halt new oil projects in the poorer south, in Africa and Latin America, for the sake of avoiding mistakes committed by north/developed countries during the 1960s to 1980s, which partly contributed to the current climate disaster manifested through rising water levels, erratic forest fires, erratic weather, and fast melting glacier.
Dr Kobusheshe said there has to be balance in terms of the global North cutting on their emissions as an allowance for the South to develop.
“There is no one size fits approach. You have people sitting somewhere and making all suggestion without looking at the specific needs of the developing world and what is applicable. Our biggest problem now is energy poverty; our challenges and opportunities revolved around land use, agriculture, and that is where we need to focus,” he said.

The IPCC sixth assessment report published in February warned that the world is set to reach the 1.5ºC level within the next two decades and said that only the most drastic cuts in carbon emissions from now would help prevent an environmental disaster.
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Dr Mao opined that the energy transition—moving away from fossils like oil, biomass and coal which available science shows yield significant greenhouse gas emissions than wind and solar power, hydropower, and nuclear energy—debate has to be context specific.
“With the current crisis in Europe most countries previously opposed to fossils have now gone back to exploitation of their fossil projects. In Africa what’s the medium and long term solution that we need to undertake?” he asked. “What worries me so much about Uganda, if you look at the precedents and studies have been done on the track record of countries that have had oil is not a positive story; not because of climate, but other issues; lack of capacity to monitor, governance issues, and corruption.”
Dr Kobusheshe said whilst the fears, concerns, and environmental risks raised—real and perceived—are valid, there is more than meets the eye to the opposition against Uganda’s oil project.
“This is the oil industry. There is a level of geo-politics, economic aggression cannot be ruled out.
But there is also a lack of disinformation and misinformation spreading around,” he opined.
Inside the park, a narrow dirt path veers at Pakuba junction, off the main Tangi-Packwach road, into the wilderness where it snakes to the Job-RI five, one of the 10 well-pads inside park, and part of the Tilenga oil project which covers three production licences and straddling Nwoya and Buliisa districts. The Tilenga project will produce about 230,000-barrel per day.
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Construction works to establish support infrastructure to extract oil are in overdrive inside an encircled camp site. Atop any of the large soil mounds one cannot miss the sight of especially antelopes, warthogs, and buffalos.
The list of rules includes no hooting, personal protective gear with high sensitive colours is forbidden; only grey camouflage is allowed, speed limit ranges between 10-20km per hour via the pathway to the camp, no overtaking, minimisation of light and noise, and car reversing is emphasised, tourists and animals have the right of way, and all offsite movements require guidance of a game ranger.
The order of hierarchy, TotalEnergies’ officials gamely emphasise, is environment, wildlife, tourism, and the oil project. So, what could possibly go wrong?
The company undertook the requisite Environmental, Social, and Impact Assessment (ESIA) studies for the project which was submitted to the National Environmental Management Authority (Nema) in June 2018, which was reviewed by the relevant government agencies, and followed by the mandatory public hearings to input comments from the public. This culminated in Nema issuing a certificate of clearance in April 2019.
A section of NGOs insist that the environmental and social management plans are inadequate, and proper guidelines were not followed.
The Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA) compliance and monitoring warden in the park, Moses Dhabasadha, indicated that that the question of whether the oil project and tourism/conservation can exist has been overtaken by events.
“The key word is can they harmoniously co-exist?” he noted.
“We developed a toolkit we used during the last exploration and appraisal phase, and some tourists didn’t even know there were oil activities in the park which means somehow the two can co-exist.”
He added: “There is no conflict between the two, especially if there is flexibility between the actors on agreeing what needs to be done. Uganda has had oil for a while and we have had time to prepare for most of the things so we cannot say that anything caught us off-guard. So, for me it’s a matter of agreeing with flexibility.”
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The Tilenga ESIA report details, and officials say, that most of the infrastructure inside the park will be buried and the area wholly restored to its pristine state. For instance, there will be a network of some 180km of buried pipeline inside the park and crossing the River Nile en-route to Buliisa where a Central Processing Facility (CPF) is being constructed. A CPF is where crude oil is separated from other impurities like oil, sand and water before being fed into EACOP or planned refinery.
Carbon emission fears
There are lingering questions about Tilenga’s carbon legacy and how it fits for an operator who early last year changed name to TotalEnergies to capture the imagination of the transition to renewable energy. However, the company says its emissions will average around 13kgs of CO2 per barrel of oil produced, far below its average of 20kg per barrel.
For EACOP officials have teased plans to install solar panels as part of the energy mix to heat the duct. Since production is yet to start this issue will be bookmarked for later discussion, but Dr Joseph Kobusheshe defended that all aspects—from project design to proposed technology—have been carefully looked at to ensure minimal impact.Perhaps the biggest test to both the company and government is how best will the area defined for oil operations be conserved and rehabilitated. On June 8, TotalEnergies launched the Tilenga biodiversity programme, an initiative for protecting and conserving biodiversity in and around the Tilenga area project area and mainly encompassing four main pillars; reducing human pressures and strengthening the ecological resilience of the park, implementing conservation and restoration measures for forests and their connectivity, protecting and maintaining the connectivity of habitats in the savannah and in the proximity of the Bugungu natural reserve, and working with the host community to manage and restore wetlands along the southern bank of Lake Albert through community-based management initiatives.
The Nema executive director, Mr Barirega Akankwasah, speaking at the launch of the biodiversity programme remarked that “these efforts put into this kind of programme should prove to the world, particularly at this time when activists have portrayed Uganda’s petroleum development efforts in negative light in international media, in consideration of climate change, that Uganda is committed to sustainable development.”
TotalEnergies separately told this newspaper in an email that they are conscious of the fact that the biodiversity of the Murchison-Semliki landscape is unique and does not exist in the same quantity and composition anywhere else in Uganda.
“Targeting the same biodiversity when opportunities to achieve positive conservation outcomes exist is the recognized best approach.”


 

Questions linger on Murchison falls safety plan as oil activities kick off


Wednesday, July 20, 2022

A grader at the site of the Jobi-Rii 5 well pad inside Murchison Falls National Park. JR 5 is one the 10 planned well pads in the park. Photos/Frederic Musisi
By Frederic Musisi

What you need to know:​

  • The development phase — construction of the required infrastructure to pump the nearly 1.4 billion barrels of Uganda’s recoverable oil reserves — is in overdrive across the Tilenga and Kingfisher development projects, respectively, which straddle the districts of Nwoya, Buliisa, Hoima and Kikuube.
  • The race against time is on to start commercial oil production in the last quarter of 2025 amid an outpouring of queries about what could possibly go wrong and how best can oil co-exist with conservation, writes Frederic Musisi.
Inside the cloistered boardrooms of the Petroleum Authority of Uganda (PAU), the Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA), and the National Environment Management Authority (NEMA), debate is raging about the best conservation plan for the Murchison Falls National Park (MFNP) during and after the ongoing intensive machine-intensive development phase.
The Murchison, to the northeast, in whose precinct lies 10 well pads, is the largest and the second-most visited national park in the country, but is ecologically central for a number of globally and regionally threatened species.

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Discussions revolve around strategies; biodiversity net gain, and biodiversity offsetting. The latter is a broader mitigation plan of action for achieving “not net loss”—according to the Washington DC-based NGO, Forest Trends, the goal for a development activity in which the impacts on biodiversity it causes are balanced or outweighed by measures taken to avoid and minimise the impacts, to restore affected areas and finally to offset the residual impacts, so that no loss remain—following prior employment of avoidance and minimisation measures.

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The notable biodiversity offset in the country is the Kalagala offset that covers Kalagala and Itanda Nile bank and Namavundu central forest reserves, 40 kilometres north of Bujagali. The area was created to offset the large scale flooding into people’s homes and destroyed property as a result of construction of Bujagali dam.
Consequently, the World Bank—which backed the dam— and government signed an indemnity agreement for mitigating damages caused by the dam and categorically stated that the area set aside would not be flooded by another hydro-dam project. Except, it didn’t take long when the offset was impacted by construction of the 185MW Isimba dam upstream, triggering a boardroom war of words.
As such, in the case of Murchison Falls National Park, the French TotalEnergies EP and government would evaluate the extent of damage on land, flora and fauna, by the oil infrastructure, and gazette an area adjacent or elsewhere equivalent to what was affected for conservation purposes.
On the other hand, biodiversity net gain, supposes the goal of achieving a greater diversity of flora and fauna after a development activity has taken place than was present before. There are known tools such as the natural biodiversity metric to assess ‘biodiversity unit’ value of a site.

The plan
Inside sources told Daily Monitor that the French oil company is in favour of biodiversity net gain approach, not the offset ostensibly for cost cutting reasons, while PAU and other regulatory bodies insist on both. The discussions are winding.
Dr Joseph Kobushehe, the PAU director for environment, health, safety and security management, says discussions on the two conservation approaches are ongoing.
“The conversation on offset and net gain is one we have been having not just with TotalEnergies, but with other agencies such as UWA and NEMA. So there are four pillars here; wildlife, fisheries, wetlands, and forestry,” he says.
He adds: “Biodiversity offsets need to be understood that they stem from the fact that our first priority area is to avoid as much as possible. Where it is possible you minimise, restore and then have a stage where you can apply all mitigation measures available. For instance, if you are constructing a road you can avoid all sensitive areas by [re]routing the road appropriately, including reducing the width, having flyovers, etc, but in the end you get a road that reaches somewhere.”
While the ultimate goal of no net loss is aimed at boosting pressure between development and conservation by enabling economic gains to be achieved without attendant biodiversity losses, several studies indicate that biodiversity offsets represent a necessary component of a much broader mitigation strategy.
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In an email to our inquiries, TotalEnergies EP maintained that it is working with the relevant agencies to elaborate the measures required to address the impacts to biodiversity in accordance with the mitigation hierarchy (avoid, minimize, restore, and offset).
“The programme has been submitted and validated by NEMA. The Tilenga Biodiversity Program which was officially launched on 8th June 2022 is the start-up of the implementation phase,” the company said.
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Last month, the Uganda subsidiary of the French oil giant launched an ambitious biodiversity programme for protecting and conserving biodiversity in and around conservation areas.
In addition, the company added, “it is widely recognised that the biodiversity of the Murchison-Semliki landscape is unique and does not exist in the same quantity and composition anywhere else in Uganda. Targeting the same biodiversity when opportunities to achieve positive conservation outcomes exist is the recognised best approach.” In essence meaning that biodiversity offset is not an option, at least for now.

The site of Jobi-Rii 4 that is set to be excavated to install production infrastructure in the national park.
So what exactly is the best conservation approach?
The 2013 study done by Stockholm Environment Institute and others postulates that the relevance of biodiversity offsets to no net loss rests on several fundamental premises. First, offsets are rarely adequate for achieving no net loss of biodiversity alone. Second, some development effects may be too difficult or risky, or even impossible, to offset.
It is for this reason that conservationists remain opposed to oil activities in the park as it is risky business. For instance in the future likely event of a pipe burst or spillage of either oil or hazardous material into the park eco-system, how would such a loss to biodiversity be computed and compensated?

The UWA ESIA compliance manager, Mr Moses Dabasadha, separately told this newspaper that offset is to compensate for the ecological services that would be lost during operations while net gains is looking at how to make the environment better than before.
“Its common science that trees produce oxygen and at the same time suck out carbon dioxide. So when you cut a tree, you change the dynamics. If the tree was for medicinal purposes, the communities that were benefiting would be the losers. So how do you deal with this problem? You can either gazette another area and plant the same tree but bear in mind that by the time it grows to useful levels there are losses made. How do you compensate for that?” he says.
“For net gains, it is to TotalEnergies to decide on the best activities that can be undertaken to make the place better than they found it. Is it enough? Honestly, this is an ongoing discussion,” he adds.
Oil activities in the Murchison Falls National Park have had tongues wagging since 2012, but with the more machine intensive-development—engineering, procurement, and construction—phase on course, the stakes are higher.
For those in charge, the stakes couldn’t be much higher. TotalEnergies EP general manager Philippe Groueix says having to respond to every negative comment propagated has even made it more difficult.
“It takes a lot of time to answer all the questions to try to correct the image,” Mr Groueix affirms. “Because this is a flagship project we will continue balancing the voices,” he adds.
Inside the national park, Jobi-Rii (JR) five-well pad is nestled deep inside wild savannah— feeding grounds for carnivores and herbivores. Two days before a recent visit, workers on the site narrated that they were stunned when a lion grabbed a bolting Kob right inside the encircled campsite, sending gnawing chills among onlookers.
A well pad is a site of facilities and other infrastructure for oil and gas drilling. One or two or more oil wells can be plugged onto a single well pad.

Park activities
The JR 5, part of Exploration Area-1, east of Albert Nile, is one the 10 planned well pads inside the park.
To get here, a narrow dirt path veers at Pakuba junction, off Tangi-Packwach road, into the wilderness to the well pad working, cut off the greenery by an encircled camp site. Large mounds of loam soil are scattered all over the place, both inside and outside the camp.
The JR 5 well pad on which 16—production and injection—wells will be looped using a network of conductor pipes drilled together into the ground, alongside other oil fields, Ngiri, Gunya, Kigogole, Nsoga, and Kasamene, south of Lake Albert, form the Tilenga development project operated by TotalEnergies EP.
The project will produce about 230,000 barrels of oil per day to be fed into the proposed East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP), and the not-about-to materialise refinery project.
The cutting of the virgin earth over an undefined expanse at JR 5 and other proposed sites, has for long spells been subject of debate by anti-fossil fuel activists and conservations. The cutting, digging, and excavation of the Savannah means a dozen or so plant life is destroyed to pave way for oil activities.
“Across the park we will have the same kind of activity but the impact is 0.05, which is roughly 1 percent of the total landmass of the park,” said Mr Ken Opito, the officer responsible for safety and environment on site (RSES), in reference to the earth works at JR5.
“Essentially we have to adequately manage three things; the animals, the environment, and the eco-system,” he added. In late 2021 Portuguese MotaEngil won the tender for early civil works and site clearing, among others, after which the site will be handed over to China Petroleum & Chemical Corporation (Sinopec) to construct the well pad infrastructure.
Once the drilling and production infrastructure have been installed at JR5, both TotalEnergies EP and PAU officials maintain, most of the ground will be levelled and put back to how it was before.

Officials say only a small fraction of the area, which they did not define, will remain under direct use encircled in a camp while the rest of the infrastructure will be buried underground.
This rehabilitation, Mr Opito said, “is something I don’t have a visibility on right now” ostensibly given that the development phase is in early stages. “My main drive is to ensure we leave this place as pristine as we found it,” he added.
Chinese company Zhongyuan Petroleum Exploration Bureau (or ZPEB) Uganda Ltd was awarded the tender to design and construct the drilling rigs currently underway in China. The first rig is expected in the country by December. There will be three drilling rigs inside the park.
From JR5 and the other nine well pads inside the park, a network of pipelines will be laid [and buried] along the narrow corridor crossing the River Nile en route to the Central Processing Facility (CPF) in Buliisa
A CPF is where oil will be stored first for stabilisation and treatment before being fed into either the proposed refinery or pipeline.
After all infrastructure has been installed, TotalEnergies EP’s director for health, safety and environment Simon Bryne maintained that what will remain visible will be the well pads encircled in a small working site.
“Everything else will be buried and the ground rehabilitated, and the major activities will be at the CPF in the south [in Buliisa],”Mr Bryne said. “Once the construction phase is done, there won’t be many people there inside the park]; it will be a small team while everything else will be automated. We want to minimise footprint as much as we can. If you look at everything we are doing, from the designs of the well pads, their location, etc, everything has been chosen to have the least impact,” he added.
The country is taking a lot of flak for oil activities in the national park before even the first oil drops while elsewhere, in Europe, US and Middle East, oil companies have increased production—without hubbub— to plug the supply deficit occasioned by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine
The environmental risks and concerns—real and perceived—notwithstanding, and debate on the best conservation approach, only time will tell whether and oil and conversation can harmoniously co-exist.

What they say
Joseph Kobushehe, the PAU director for environment: “Biodiversity offsets need to be understood that they stem from the fact that our first priority area is to avoid as much as possible. Where it is possible you minimise, restore and then have a stage where you can apply all mitigation measures available.
Simon Bryne, TotalEnergies EP’s director for environment: “Once the construction phase is done, there won’t be many people there inside the park]; it will be a small team while everything else will be automated. We want to minimise footprint as much as we can.»

Monitor. Empower Uganda.​

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PRIME

Past, present and future of Uganda’s oil

Saturday, July 23, 2022

Elison Karuhanga
By Elison Karuhanga
Columnist

What you need to know:​

Opponents of this project have resolved not to let facts stand in the way of their argument



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Oil & Gas

This week, Boris Johnson spoke to the UK Parliament for the last time as Prime Minister. Mr Johnson, in his closing remarks, advised that people must, “Focus on the road ahead but always remember to check the rear view mirror.”
This, by any standard, is sound advice. In the past, this column has tried to focus on the road ahead with regard to the oil and gas industry. The purpose has been clear; to show that we have no other option outside of developing our resources. Those who are bitterly opposed to us developing these resources are not really interested in preserving the environment but rather in conserving poverty.
In a continent of more than one billion people, that uses less electricity than Spain, we don’t have energy to power our hospitals, to light our homes or to power our industries. We must correct the injustice of energy poverty, this is the mission of our generation.
There are people who are seemingly worried about whether Uganda has the technical know-how and managerial competence to manage the oil industry, and others who believe that we don’t have this skill. Well, let’s take a look in the rear view mirror, to look back on how Uganda has managed its oil resource so far.
The earliest reference to oil in Uganda was in reference to an oil seepage near Kibiro on the shores of Lake Albert in 1920, which was known to the indigenous people who lived in the area.
More than a century later, on February 2, 2022, the Final Investment Decision was announced. In a speech, President Museveni said he had been approached in 1986 by Shell BP who asked him to license the oil blocks to them. He discovered that there was no one in government who could negotiate with the oil companies and so, he put the discussions on hold and sent a number of senior officials to study all things oil in universities abroad.

He also issued policy direction for the sector on capacity building, data acquisition and promotion, and monitoring of compliance of license companies. When government representatives returned from their studies, Shell BP had lost interest in the project. Nonetheless, government continued to train and deploy a number of public officers who studied the data and understood the oil basin very well.
Uganda has also had its fair share of disputes with oil companies about capital gains tax, the need for a refinery and its size, and the content of production licenses. Serious work and tough negotiations have gone into this project. Currently, Total Energies and CNOOC are licensed to produce oil. These companies have the financial muscle and the technical expertise to deliver a world-class project. They have partnered with the state-owned Uganda National Oil Company (UNOC) to deliver our first barrel of oil.
This is against the tide of outlandish claims about EACOP. Claims that the route tears through 230 rivers, passes through Lake Victoria, pollutes the Lake Victoria basin or displaces 110,000 people that are simply false. The pipeline route is the result of careful study.
However, in some of these criticisms it is becoming clear that opponents of this project have resolved not to let facts stand in the way of their argument. It took Uganda almost four years to choose the pipeline route and almost four years to conduct an environmental assessment of the route which included open public consultations and excellent feedback and suggestions from local and international NGOs and conservationists.

This generation must focus on the road ahead and take a look in the rear view mirror, for only then can we understand our mission and fulfil it. There is no doubt that even before first oil, we have seen the benefits of skilled and well led public officials working to make this project beneficial to Ugandans.
And, at least for now, we have a group of people trying to meet this historical mission in both the public and private sector. As political philosopher Frantz Fanon once said, “Each generation must, out of relative obscurity, discover its mission, fulfil it, or betray it.”
The writer is an advocate and partner at Kampala Associated Advocates
elisonk@kaa.co.ug

 

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EACOP, agriculture, lions and lies​

Saturday, July 16, 2022

Elison Karuhanga
By Elison Karuhanga
Columnist

What you need to know:​

“It is saddening to read these claims which are made without even the most basic fact checks.”
Oil & Gas

This week, there was an article about EACOP (East African Crude Oil Pipeline) in the African Business Magazine, an influential magazine, under the heading ‘EACOP: Economic boon or environmental disaster’.
The theme was: notwithstanding any economic benefits, the project risks serious environmental and social disasters.

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The article carried a fictitious claim, “EACOP will cross 230 rivers and several forest reservations, displacing around 100,000 people from their land. Its path crosses some of the world’s most important elephant, and lion reserves.
In traversing the Lake Victoria basin, relied on by millions for drinking water and food production, the project risks a devastating oil spill, placing vital water resources at risk.”
Sadly, many anti-EACOP criticisms, like this one, are completely made up. For example, the claim that EACOP will “tear through 230 rivers” is completely fictitious.
In Uganda, EACOP will go through 10 districts, namely; Kikuube, Hoima, Kakumiro, Kyankwazi, Mubende, Gomba, Sembabule, Lwengo, Rakai, and Kyotera.
Ugandans know that most of these are water-stressed districts. It is also false that those districts have some of the world’s most “important lion and elephant reserves”. That is absolute fiction.
The same can be said on the Tanzanian side. There are no lion and elephant reserves and the pipeline certainly does not cross 230 rivers in Tanzania.
It took Uganda several years to select the pipeline route, and several studies to determine the route with the least impact on population and biodiversity.

Several studies were undertaken to refine the route even after the route was selected.
The anti-EACOP campaigners are trying to undo serious work with unserious soundbites that are manufactured and distributed on an industrial scale in the global press. It is also important to understand what the Lake Victoria basin includes.
Activists make it sound like there is no economic activity in this “basin”.
Kampala City, with a population of approximately 1.7 million people, is in the Lake Victoria basin. Jinja City is in the Lake Victoria basin.
The basin is full of all manner of economic activity and a buried pipeline won’t destroy our water sources.
It is saddening to read these claims about Uganda which are made without even the most basic fact checks.
I was recently hosted on an online forum with friends who oppose EACOP and one of their arguments was that the government of Uganda should focus on agriculture instead of oil.
However, agriculture too must be powered by energy; an agricultural revolution is only possible with available energy.
The United States of America and the Kingdom of Netherlands are some of the biggest food producers in the world, largely due to energy security. Refineries produce asphalt, which is used to pave roads thereby improving access to markets.
Refineries produce fertilizers which in turn improve yields.
Refineries produce diesel, which is used to power tractors and heavy machinery, for agro-processing. Opponents of our oil projects seem to prefer that we continue to import diesel and fertilizers, but a refinery in Uganda will significantly boost Uganda’s agricultural sector.

Oil and the agriculture sector are not competing ideas but rather complementary to one another.
EACOP provides a timely opportunity to finance the social and economic transformation of our society.
There may be reasons for Uganda not to produce oil and there may be arguments that advance those reasons, however, let us be frank, what is being advanced right now is propaganda, exaggerations, and lies.
If activists, especially those who double as politicians in Europe, are genuine in their cause, why do they resort to lies about Uganda and EACOP?
I believe it is because the truth is firmly in our corner.
The writer is an advocate and partner at Kampala Associated Advocates
elisonk@kaa.co.ug

 

Address risks before construction of EACOP​

Wednesday, July 27, 2022

Doreen Namara
By Guest Writer

What you need to know:​

  • The EACOP is a planned 1,443km pipeline that will be constructed from the Albertine Graben in Western Uganda to the port of Tanga in Tanzania.
On July 4, the media reported that the East African Crude oil Pipeline company (EACOP) had officially applied for the construction licence.

The EACOP is a planned 1,443km pipeline that will be constructed from the Albertine Graben in Western Uganda to the port of Tanga in Tanzania.
The EACOP project developers include TotalEnergies (62 per cent shareholding), the Ugandan and Tanzanian governments (15 per cent shareholding each) and China National Offshore Oil Corporation (8 per cent shareholding).

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At peak production, the pipeline will transport 216,000 barrels of crude oil per day from the Tilenga and Kingfisher oil fields in Uganda.
If constructed, the pipeline will be the longest electrically-heated crude oil pipeline in the world. Construction of the pipeline is expected to commence in 2023
The application of the licence is the requirement under the section 56(1) of the Petroleum Exploration, Development and Production Act 2013.
Section 57 of the same Act also mandates the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Development in consultation with the Petroleum Regulatory Authority to process the application for the licence in not later than 180 days after the receipt of the application.
This means that, if approved, the oil pipeline construction licence will be ready in December and construction of the pipeline can kick off.
However, it is prudent that government first addresses the social, economic, environmental, biodiversity and climate change risks before the approval of the construction licence.
On November 6, 2020, four civil society entities from Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania filed a case in court against some of the East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) project proponents.

The Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) also filed an application for a temporary injunction to stop the EACOP project from commencing or to maintain the status quo until the main application is heard and determined.
They argue that the project violates the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights as well as the African Convention on Conservation of Natural Resources.
The CSOs want the East African Court of Justice (EACJ) to grant a permanent injunction against the respondents/developers from constructing the pipeline in protected areas in Uganda and Tanzania.
They also want court to give an order that the developers compensate all the project-affected persons (PAPs) among others.
The EACOP project poses immense social, economic, environmental, biodiversity and climate change risks. These include social impacts. A total of 13,000 households have been affected by the EACOP project in Uganda and Tanzania. The households’ land is being compulsorily acquired for the project. Also, because of the over three-years’ delay in compensating the affected people and use of 2018 and 2019 cut-off dates to stop the families from using their land to grow perennial food and cash crops, the households have suffered reduced incomes, food scarcity, psychosocial distress, school drop-outs, and abuse of their cultural rights among others.
In the long-term, community and public expenditure on health, climate change crises and others could increase because of the EACOP. Further, air pollution, oil spills and others will worsen community health.

Important to note is that the EACOP is set to affect forests, national parks, game reserves, lakes, rivers, wetlands and others in Uganda and Tanzania. In 2017, the World Wildlife Fund noted that the EACOP will affect 2,000km2 of protected areas and will fragment habitats for elephants.
These protected areas are habitats for internationally-recognised endangered species. For instance, Bugoma forest hosts more than 600 chimpanzees while wetlands are important bird catchment areas.
All in all, as governments of Uganda and Tanzania review the application for the construction licence for the proposed East African Crude Oil Pipeline they should be keen about immense impacts posed by the pipeline.
Doreen Namara is the Programme Legal Assistant Africa Institute for Energy Governance (AFIEGO)
Namaradoreen71@gmail.com


 

Hope for Uganda’s oil as the G7 shift goal posts

Tuesday, August 02, 2022

Ramathan Ggoobi (2nd right), the permanent secretary in the Finance ministry, stands near oil drilling conductor pipes in the KingFisher oilfields during a tour of the oil facilities in the Albertine Graben in April 2022. Photo/ Paul Murungi


By Paul Murungi

What you need to know:​

  • Uganda is among the countries that have in the last six months faced scathing attacks from climate activists over her oil projects. But with the Russia-Ukraine war, energy security is still needed.
Uganda will get a head start for her oil projects, only if the Group of Seven (G7) countries maintain their new position aimed at increasing oil production.
The G7 countries consisting of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and United States of America called on energy-exporting countries to increase oil production at a summit held in Germany in June.

The G7’s shift in favour of fossil fuels follows years of de-campaign as the energy transition question gathers steam towards green energy solutions.
Uganda is among the countries that have in the last six months faced scathing attacks from climate activists over her oil projects.
The climate pressure is geared towards the construction of the 1,443 kilometre heated East African Crude Oil Pipeline Project (EACOP) running from Hoima district in Uganda to the Port of Tanga in Tanzania.
A new report assessing the oil pipeline and associated oil fields against internationally recognised environmental and human rights standards for financial institutions found “numerous violations, putting banks at risk if they sign on to support the project.”

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The assessment was undertaken by the Africa Institute for Energy Governance (AFIEGO) based in Uganda and Inclusive Development International (IDI).
It also includes BankTrack, an international tracking, campaigning and civil society support organisation targeting private sector commercial banks (‘banks’) and the activities they finance.
It suggests that the project is not in compliance with many of the criteria set forth in the Equator Principles and the Environmental and Social Performance Standards of the International Finance Corporation (IFC), two internationally recognised standards for responsible finance.
“The EACOP project developers have committed to adhere to the IFC Performance and other international standards. However, while implementing the EACOP and its associated upstream oil projects, the developers have come short in complying with the standards,” says Diana Nabiruma, AFIEGO’s senior communications officer as quoted in a press statement.
But even with such rallying cries from climate activists, the tide is shifting, the world still demands that more oil and gas is required for industries to run.


Mohammad Sanusi Barkindo, the outgoing Secretary General at Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) notes that it is unfortunate that the policy narrative in the run-up to and during at the UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) held last year in Glasgow, UK was heavily distorted against fossil fuels and divorced from the reality of the world’s energy needs.
Barkindo made the remarks contained in a statement published on the OPEC website while at the opening ceremony of the 21st edition of Nigeria Oil and Gas (NOG) Conference and Exhibition in early July.
He observed that developing countries were urged to turn their backs on their own hydrocarbon (fossil fuel) assets, even though their right to sovereignty over the use of these natural resources is carved in the Paris Agreement’s principle of equity in the context of sustainable development.
Barkindo noted that the pronouncements were misleading and yet, key stakeholders in the industry are currently participating in the intergovernmental arrangements and initiatives to develop, deploy and promote cutting-edge technologies to reduce emissions from the production.
The shift towards the need for fossil fuels to address the world’s energy needs saw Barkindo hail the new decision that was reached at the G7 leaders’ Summit in Germany.
“They [G7 group] took a step in the right direction by recognising the need for continued investment in fossil fuels to help meet the world’s energy needs,” he stated.
“Both the market and consumers deserve clear and consistent policies which recognise that oil is indispensable to global economic development and the world’s energy mix,” Sanusi said, noting that, “Our industry cannot afford to sleepwalk into another crisis.”


Ramathan Ggoobi (2nd right), the permanent secretary in the Finance ministry stands next oil drilling conductor pipes in the KingFisher oilfield area during a tour of the oil facilities in the Albertine Graben in April 2022.

One can call it a ‘perfect storm’ and another a ‘siege’ but for starters, Barkindo makes sense of the evolving geopolitical developments in Eastern Europe, the ongoing war in Ukraine, the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic and inflationary pressure.
All this happening across the globe have come together to cause significant volatility and uncertainty in the world of oil.
Even before the G7 summit, Kwasi Kwarteng, UK’s Secretary of State for Business and Energy, published a statement on April 30th announcing a launch of another licensing round to explore new oil blocks in the UK’s North Sea oil fields.
The North Sea, according to Mr Kwasi, had provided a stable domestic supply of oil and gas to the UK for the last 50 years, and remains a great national asset to insulate the UK from developing a dependency on Russian hydrocarbons.
He made it clear that the UK, “would not bend to the will of (climate) activists who naively want to extinguish (oil) production in the UK Continental Shelf – noting that, “doing so would put energy security and British jobs at risk.”
Looking further down the road, OPEC’s most recent World Oil Outlook report gives some perspective on what is yet to come.
Investments
OPEC shows the global oil sector will still need cumulative investments of $11.8 trillion in the upstream, midstream and downstream through to 2045 to meet expectations for significant growth in energy demand.
With regard to demand, there is only one direction, and that is up. In fact, OPEC projects that total primary energy demand will expand by a robust 28 percent in the period to 2045.
Oil is expected to retain the largest share of the energy mix, accounting for just over a 28 percent share in 2045, followed by gas at around 24 percent.

In other words, oil and gas together will continue to supply more than half of the world’s energy needs for many decades.
These hydrocarbons are especially vital to the energy mix in regions such as Africa, which will see massive population shifts and economic growth in the coming years. These developments increase the urgency of eradicating energy poverty.
Ali Sekatawa, director of legal and corporate affairs, at Petroleum Authority of Uganda, notes that the decision of COP26 required an energy transition up to 2050 with a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions.
However, the decision also acknowledged the world still needs petroleum to transition.
Sekatawa notes that the position of the G7, in his view exposes “their shallowness” after being hit with the reality with the Ukraine war that energy security is still needed ahead of the transition.
He observes that the G7 countries’ return to oil is being selfish, and it is “until they got energy scarcity when they decided to do a turnaround and yet Africa is still energy poor at 60 percent.”
“We were confident that whatever discussion is being made about the transition, it doesn’t affect the 1.4 billion barrels of oil that we can extract,” he notes.
On financing, Sekatawa says they remain confident with the genuine financiers who have been in conversation with the government.
Financing
It has been a matter of policy for some financial institutions in G7 countries to retract on financing obligations for the oil industry over climatic concerns.
It is early to predict as financing for oil and gas has been on a downward spiral. But a top government official in Uganda’s energy sector says there is more hope for financing to be unlocked from G7 countries as they return into fossil fuel production.

Most of the financing entities that are unable to participate in any fossil fuel project not specifically for the Ugandan one were driven by policy in their countries.
If those policies change, “we shall see more financing for oil projects,” the government official says. But he insists the financing entities must focus on whole industries that emit carbon, not simply oil and gas.
“We want to manage climate impact and have energy security for developed and developing countries to develop. So there has to be a meeting of minds between the different needs, whereas if G7 because of its strength says we are not doing this, financing entities from those countries will follow suit,” he notes.
He observes that there is development of minds towards oil between all the entities that make the world.
“We need to reach a level where we know developing countries are dealing with energy poverty. We need to structure the energy transition case with an allowance for the countries to develop, and deal with energy poverty,” he says.
 

EU envoy pushes for mature oil discourse​

Sunday, August 07, 2022

Head of EU Delegation Attilio Pacific (front left) with NUP president Robert Kyagulanyi, aka Bobi Wine (right), and other officials at the latter’s home in Magere, Wakiso District, last year. PHOTO | FILE

By Frederic Musisi

What you need to know:​


The outgoing head of European Union Delegation to Uganda, Attilio Pacifici, has described as “not constructive” calls by environmentalists and conservationists to halt Uganda’s oil (Lake Albert Development) project on account of greenhouse gas emissions.

Ambassador Pacifici told Sunday Monitor in a wide-ranging interview that the $10b (Shs36 trillion) oil project in mid-western Uganda offers the country immense opportunities.
“We are all in this country talking about the oil which some Europeans are worried...could cause environmental and social consequences, but this is what we have been doing for years! Europeans, Americans, Chinese have been extracting oil for years,” he said.

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Ambassador Pacifici instead recommended speaking with “truth and respect” in a bid to put “to the table tangible solutions to the issues.”
He added: “Uganda has the right to use the resources it has, but wouldn’t it be a proper approach to use the time window these resources have—say if it is 20 years—to put in motion a process which will lead Uganda to be a green energy producing country in the next 20 years?”
The country announced discovery of commercial oil volumes—now estimated at 6.5 billion barrels of oil, of which 1.4 billion barrels are recoverable—17 years ago.
The journey has been a labyrinth of ups and downs, including disappointments, protracted negotiations with the oil companies, fluctuating prices for the international Brent crude oil, and the now a massive campaign to phase out fossil fuels—oil and gas, biomass, and coal—which available science shows yield significant greenhouse gas emissions than renewable energies such as wind and solar power, hydropower, and nuclear energy.
Since April 2021 when Uganda and France’s TotalEnergies EP and China’s Cnooc signed off key agreements for the proposed East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP), a section of local and international NGOs and tree huggers have been nudging international banks not to finance the $3.55b (Shs13 trillion) project. The EACOP will transport Uganda’s waxy crude oil from Hoima to Tanga Port in Tanzania en route to the International market.

There are no clear timeframes for the transition from fossil fuels to clean energy, with different voices putting them anywhere between 20 and 40 years.
Ambassador Pacifici said Uganda should use the remaining time frame to leap into the future.
He said: “…in my view build a plan to enable the country to be a green country in 20 years’ time. In that way, you don’t miss anything out. This is the kind of mature conversation that we should have… the bad language and blame game doesn’t help. It takes engagement, vision, and policy.”
He added: “Remember there are few countries of the world that had telephone lines and the question at that point was: Will Africa ever have millions of kilometres of these copper cables connecting every place? At that time there was not even enough copper in the world, but then those devices; smart phones came into place and having a landline was longer needed.
Cable lines became obsolete technology and Africa jumped years and years of technology from need for landlines to cellular technology. So maybe the industrialisation of this country should skip the old fashioned industrial revolution where you employ heavy polluting machines to make mattresses, and other little things, but rather go straight to the future. It is quite possible.”
Ambassador Pacifici checks out of the country early next week. His successor, Mr Jan Sadek, previously Head of the EU Delegation to Botswana and SADC, is expected in the country shortly afterwards. Ambassador Sadex is a Swedish career diplomat with more than 25 years, out of which 14 were on tour in Africa.


 
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