Tunaomba iwe hivyo, ili hii pesa tuwanunulie chakula, $3.5B inatosha mahindi ya miaka 5 Kenya yote hadi Ikulu[emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23]
Katika hesabu kama hizi, hupaswi kutumia percentage, inabidi utumie absolute number, kwasababu 70% ya Kenya ni sawa na 50% ya Tanzania in absolute namba, lengo ni kujua idadi kamiliSwali unafaa kujiuliza, inakuaje nyinyi mlioshiba mnashindwa na Kenya ya njaa kwa school enrolment rate.
Inakuaje watoto maskini wa Kenya wenye njaa wanawashinda hata wanafunzi wa tajiri wa Tanzania... Kama priority ya Tz ni watu wale washibe alafu wakae vijiweni kupiga udaku basi mme achieve
View attachment 683686
Huyo jamaa usimchukulie serious sana, hata wenzake wanamfahamu, hayupo sawasawa kichwani.umewaona wishful thinkers. eti Hoima - Tanga ni white elephant project. wanatuombea mabaya. hawajui hili bomba ni game changer. pipeline line zoote za East and central (kutia ndani lokichar) zitapita Tanzania.
Kama hujala unanjaa hilo sio tatizo langu, hasira zako za kuwa jobless, kunyanyapaliwa kwa sababu ya ukabila, na kuishi kwenye slums za Kibera, mimi hainihusu, ukiona Kenya maisha yamekushinda, unaweza kwenda South Sudan au Somalia, acha kuniletea hasira za njaa.Niulize mtu kichwa maji swali? Nenda kasome economics uelewe GDP ni nini kabla ucomment ujinga na kujiaibisha.
Hamna picha kama kawaida ni domo domo tu.Picha ya nini tena unataka wewe mwehu?
Wewe ulishaona picha ya njaa ilivyo?[emoji1] [emoji1] [emoji1] [emoji1] [emoji1]Hamna picha kama kawaida ni domo domo tu.
Ile barabara yenu 1500Km?Muda simrefu utabeba makopo. Umebakiza akili yakuvuka barabara tu.
Hahahahahahaha white elephant inakutoa povu.Wewe ulishaona picha ya njaa ilivyo?[emoji1] [emoji1] [emoji1] [emoji1] [emoji1]
Eti "Tanzania inatoa elimu ya bure toka primary hadi high school". Sasa ikiwa poor kids from Kenya perform better than rich kids from Tanzania, na ikiwa kenya iko na higher school enrolment than tanzania ya free everything mpaka high school, then unaringa nini na hio "free" school... Maybe its not so free after all, the cost comes in other ways I.e the intellectual dwaf-ness of the final productSasa wewe mbona unazunguka?, mimi nimekuambia kwamba, ni taifa la wendawazimu pekee ambao watakimbilia kushughulikia elimu kwanza wakati watu wake wanakufa kwa njaa, ninyi mnashughulika na elimu na flyovers wakati watu wanakufa njaa, stupid nation.
Kuhusu Elimu, Tanzania ni nchi pekee katika EA ambayo inatoa elimu bure toka primary schools hadi high school, pamoja na kwamba ina population kubwa zaidi, kwa ufupi tunaweza kusema,
1)Tanzania inajitosheleza kwa chakula, na kulisha nchi za Afrika
2)Tanzania inatoa elimu bure toka primary hadi high school
[emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23]
Habari ndiyo hiyo, Tanzania imeanza kutoa elimu bure kuanzia Primary hadi high schools mara tu Magufuli alipoingia madarakani, tafuta data za mwaka 2017 uone jinsi school enrolment ilivyoongezeka, kumbuka 70% ya Kenya ni sawa na 50% ya Tanzania in absolute number, Tanzania enrols many pupils than Kenya.Eti "Tanzania inatoa elimu ya bure toka primary hadi high school" ikiwa poor kids from Kenya perform better than rich kids from Tanzania, na ikiwa kenya iko na higher school enrolment than tanzania ya free everything mpaka high school, then unaringa nini na hio "free" school
Huyo jamaa usimchukulie serious sana, hata wenzake wanamfahamu, hayupo sawasawa kichwani.
A good analysis...let the time tell
Will Total's entry into Kenya Kill Hoima-Tanga Line?
Alternative Route Map: Which will it be?
The French- Oil Major, Total SPA, has finally been allowed to buy the 25 percent stake held by Maersk Oil exploration international in Lokichar oil fields in Kenya.
But to get the government’s nod, Total Spa had to “commit itself to the export of Kenyan oil through the Lokichar -Lamu oil Pipeline only.” That is a major retreat from Total’s position stated last August that it will lobby Kenya to evacuate her oil through the Tanzanian Port of Tanga.
Total SPA, remember, engineered Uganda’s change of mind to evacuate its oil through Tanzania. The shift, which tossed out of the window an earlier MOU between Kenya and Uganda to evacuate their crude through Lamu Port, soured diplomatic ties between Kenya and Tanzania.
The shift also caused a fall-out between Tullow Oil and Total SPA which ended with Total elbowing Tullow out of Hoima oil fields in Uganda. Given these circumstances in Kenya, Total was entering into an already toxic market.
It had to tread carefully in Kenya. Apart from the toxic relationship it had created, Kenya’s Oil Pipeline is an integral part of the Lamu Port- Ethiopia- South Sudan development corridor, LAPSSET. On that score alone Kenya would brook no compromises. Further, it had firm agreements in place. One, the Kenya government had already entered into a Joint venture agreement with the previous set of Oil explorers, which included, Tullow Oil, Africa Oil, and Maersk to build the oil Pipeline to the proposed Lamu Port.
Two, the JD had already contracted the feasibility study that involves the Front End Engineering Design-FEED. Three, Kenya’s contract with the explorers includes a clause that allows Kenya to acquire a 33 percent stake in the Oilfield once found to be commercially viable. In pursuit of this clause, Kenya is preparing to float the Kenya National Oil Corporation’s stake in Nairobi and London stock Exchanges to raise US$1 billion to buy the stake next year.
That means that Total SPA’s 25 percent stake will be diluted further to about 14 percent, leaving Tullow oil, which owns 50 percent stake and National Oil Corporation as the majority stakeholders. The purchase by Kenya National Oil Corporation makes it difficult for Total Spa to use its financial muscle to bulldoze its will.
Total’s sensitivity on the toxicity of the Kenyan market was demonstrated by the fact that, the CEO, Patrick Pouyanne, whose comments last August was deemed reckless, kept out of the meetings that won Kenya’s nod. Instead, they send Momar Nguer, the President for marketing and services to secure the agreement. Momar Nguer was for a long time the MD of Total oil Kenya.
Where does Total’s “commitment” to Lokichar- Lamu Pipeline leave the proposed Hoima-Tanga Pipeline? Hanging in the balance, analysts say. In Kenya, Total will share the cost of building the US2.1 billion pipeline with its partners in a deal that is already firmed. At the most, she will cough US$500 million.
In contrast, the company was to foot Lion’s share of the bill, if not all of it- a whopping US$3.5 billion- of the Hoima-Tanga Pipeline. Will Total SPA choose to cut its losses and turn to the original Hoima-Lokichar- Lamu route? Hoima in Uganda is 500 Km from Lokichar in Turkana county, Kenya.
To export Kenya’s Oil through Tanga would have meant building a 500Km pipeline westwards to Hoima from Lokichar basin, and abandoning the 880Km Lokichar-Lamu section. Following the same Logic, Uganda’s oil could also be exported from Hoima to Lamu and abandon the Hoima- Tanga section. Uganda, it must be noted, is only interested in exporting her oil at the least cost. Could a price-war between Tanzania and Kenya ensue? And can Tanzania win on this score? Tanzanian offered to charge Uganda US$12.20 per barrel transported through her territory. Can Kenya offer a better deal? That remains to be seen.
Despite assurances that the Hoima-Tanga Pipeline will not be affected by Total’s entry into the Kenya Oil sector, that sounds hollow. It looks like payback time for Tanzania. And Total engineered the second round of trouble for the Pipeline!
The deal itself was a misnomer. Total Oil has no interest in Tanzania at all having found no oil for its Licenses. The shift to the Tanzanian route so angered Tullow Oil, the firm that discovered oil in Uganda back in 2006, that she sold her stake to Total Spa. But the sale is not a done deal since Total has yet to pay the full US$900 million tag.
Will Tullow buy back its stake in Uganda? Perhaps. Times have changed. Tullow is no longer fighting for survival. Rising Oil prices have made it possible for her to borrow. So far she has secured a US$2.25 billion war chest to fund further exploration.
Two, Tullow will stake a claim on 50 percent of the US$ 1 billion Kenya will pay for a piece of the pie in Lokichar Oilfields. And even if they share equally at 33 percent, Tullow’s war chest will still be enough to power her way back into Uganda. If she does, say analysts, she will force a return to the original plan to evacuate Hoima-Oil through Lokichar in Kenya to Lamu port.
The prospects for the Hoima-Tanga pipeline no longer look bright. A cloud is building on the horizon, which could condemn it. A school of thought has it that Total can still salvage the Hoima- Tanga Pipeline by completing the Kenya deal, the shop for a buyer of its stake and stick with Hoima Oil Fields where she is a majority stakeholder
An Oil Pipeline under construction
. Whether that works remains to be seen.
In the meantime, the Kenya-Tanzania diplomatic relations will continue to be frosty. If there is a second change of heart which favours Kenya, the relations could get worse.
Tanzania has lost once before to Kenya on a mega-infrastructure project, the SGR project. Despite her spirited efforts to lobby Uganda away from Northern Corridor to Central Corridor, business dictats overruled the political dalliance. Technical evaluation of the proposal to shift Uganda’s SGR to Central Corridor through the Dar-Salaam Port found it unviable.
Will another technical evaluation find the Hoima- Tanga Pipeline also unviable? We cross our fingers. Should that happen, it will be President Magufuli’s lowest moment.
Posted by Musyoka wa Kyendo at 08:19
He he bongolala kitu mnashindwa kuelewa ni you've no oil hence of no importance to total.... Total anaeza amaua kuchange mind yake in a sec......let's watch how things unfoldwhen an entire country is in a day time wishful dreaming. ahaaa haaa haaa.
Pole Musyoka.
So Musyoka wa Kyendo has more knowledge than me on oil n gas...!A good analysis...only time will tell
Will Total's entry into Kenya Kill Hoima-Tanga Line?
Alternative Route Map: Which will it be?
The French- Oil Major, Total SPA, has finally been allowed to buy the 25 percent stake held by Maersk Oil exploration international in Lokichar oil fields in Kenya.
But to get the government’s nod, Total Spa had to “commit itself to the export of Kenyan oil through the Lokichar -Lamu oil Pipeline only.” That is a major retreat from Total’s position stated last August that it will lobby Kenya to evacuate her oil through the Tanzanian Port of Tanga.
Total SPA, remember, engineered Uganda’s change of mind to evacuate its oil through Tanzania. The shift, which tossed out of the window an earlier MOU between Kenya and Uganda to evacuate their crude through Lamu Port, soured diplomatic ties between Kenya and Tanzania.
The shift also caused a fall-out between Tullow Oil and Total SPA which ended with Total elbowing Tullow out of Hoima oil fields in Uganda. Given these circumstances in Kenya, Total was entering into an already toxic market.
It had to tread carefully in Kenya. Apart from the toxic relationship it had created, Kenya’s Oil Pipeline is an integral part of the Lamu Port- Ethiopia- South Sudan development corridor, LAPSSET. On that score alone Kenya would brook no compromises. Further, it had firm agreements in place. One, the Kenya government had already entered into a Joint venture agreement with the previous set of Oil explorers, which included, Tullow Oil, Africa Oil, and Maersk to build the oil Pipeline to the proposed Lamu Port.
Two, the JD had already contracted the feasibility study that involves the Front End Engineering Design-FEED. Three, Kenya’s contract with the explorers includes a clause that allows Kenya to acquire a 33 percent stake in the Oilfield once found to be commercially viable. In pursuit of this clause, Kenya is preparing to float the Kenya National Oil Corporation’s stake in Nairobi and London stock Exchanges to raise US$1 billion to buy the stake next year.
That means that Total SPA’s 25 percent stake will be diluted further to about 14 percent, leaving Tullow oil, which owns 50 percent stake and National Oil Corporation as the majority stakeholders. The purchase by Kenya National Oil Corporation makes it difficult for Total Spa to use its financial muscle to bulldoze its will.
Total’s sensitivity on the toxicity of the Kenyan market was demonstrated by the fact that, the CEO, Patrick Pouyanne, whose comments last August was deemed reckless, kept out of the meetings that won Kenya’s nod. Instead, they send Momar Nguer, the President for marketing and services to secure the agreement. Momar Nguer was for a long time the MD of Total oil Kenya.
Where does Total’s “commitment” to Lokichar- Lamu Pipeline leave the proposed Hoima-Tanga Pipeline? Hanging in the balance, analysts say. In Kenya, Total will share the cost of building the US2.1 billion pipeline with its partners in a deal that is already firmed. At the most, she will cough US$500 million.
In contrast, the company was to foot Lion’s share of the bill, if not all of it- a whopping US$3.5 billion- of the Hoima-Tanga Pipeline. Will Total SPA choose to cut its losses and turn to the original Hoima-Lokichar- Lamu route? Hoima in Uganda is 500 Km from Lokichar in Turkana county, Kenya.
To export Kenya’s Oil through Tanga would have meant building a 500Km pipeline westwards to Hoima from Lokichar basin, and abandoning the 880Km Lokichar-Lamu section. Following the same Logic, Uganda’s oil could also be exported from Hoima to Lamu and abandon the Hoima- Tanga section. Uganda, it must be noted, is only interested in exporting her oil at the least cost. Could a price-war between Tanzania and Kenya ensue? And can Tanzania win on this score? Tanzanian offered to charge Uganda US$12.20 per barrel transported through her territory. Can Kenya offer a better deal? That remains to be seen.
Despite assurances that the Hoima-Tanga Pipeline will not be affected by Total’s entry into the Kenya Oil sector, that sounds hollow. It looks like payback time for Tanzania. And Total engineered the second round of trouble for the Pipeline!
The deal itself was a misnomer. Total Oil has no interest in Tanzania at all having found no oil for its Licenses. The shift to the Tanzanian route so angered Tullow Oil, the firm that discovered oil in Uganda back in 2006, that she sold her stake to Total Spa. But the sale is not a done deal since Total has yet to pay the full US$900 million tag.
Will Tullow buy back its stake in Uganda? Perhaps. Times have changed. Tullow is no longer fighting for survival. Rising Oil prices have made it possible for her to borrow. So far she has secured a US$2.25 billion war chest to fund further exploration.
Two, Tullow will stake a claim on 50 percent of the US$ 1 billion Kenya will pay for a piece of the pie in Lokichar Oilfields. And even if they share equally at 33 percent, Tullow’s war chest will still be enough to power her way back into Uganda. If she does, say analysts, she will force a return to the original plan to evacuate Hoima-Oil through Lokichar in Kenya to Lamu port.
The prospects for the Hoima-Tanga pipeline no longer look bright. A cloud is building on the horizon, which could condemn it. A school of thought has it that Total can still salvage the Hoima- Tanga Pipeline by completing the Kenya deal, the shop for a buyer of its stake and stick with Hoima Oil Fields where she is a majority stakeholder
An Oil Pipeline under construction
. Whether that works remains to be seen.
In the meantime, the Kenya-Tanzania diplomatic relations will continue to be frosty. If there is a second change of heart which favours Kenya, the relations could get worse.
Tanzania has lost once before to Kenya on a mega-infrastructure project, the SGR project. Despite her spirited efforts to lobby Uganda away from Northern Corridor to Central Corridor, business dictats overruled the political dalliance. Technical evaluation of the proposal to shift Uganda’s SGR to Central Corridor through the Dar-Salaam Port found it unviable.
Will another technical evaluation find the Hoima- Tanga Pipeline also unviable? We cross our fingers. Should that happen, it will be President Magufuli’s lowest moment.
Posted by Musyoka wa Kyendo at 08:19
hehehe,umeanza mapovuuu..na bado mchezo ndoo unaanza😀So Musyoka wa Kyendo has more knowledge than me on oil n gas...!
Kama hujala unanjaa hilo sio tatizo langu, hasira zako za kuwa jobless, kunyanyapaliwa kwa sababu ya ukabila, na kuishi kwenye slums za Kibera, mimi hainihusu, ukiona Kenya maisha yamekushinda, unaweza kwenda South Sudan au Somalia, acha kuniletea hasira za njaa.