FALLING world oil prices will not cause a major delay to plans to begin oil production in northwest Kenya, says Africa Oil Corporation’s chief executive Keith Hill. The biggest hurdle is finalising construction plans for a crude oil pipeline.
Africa Oil and its partners aim to announce a final investment decision for production in early 2017. ‘The current oil price has indeed put pressure on the project, but we do not believe this low price is sustainable. We do not see a major delay to the project as a result of the oil price, our biggest issue is getting the pipeline finalised,’ Hill told Reuters on January 21.
The pipeline will run from land-locked Uganda across northwest Kenya to a planned port in Lamu, on Kenya’s Indian Ocean coastline. Kenya and Uganda agreed to the route in August but they are still working out details, including financing. Uganda has an estimated 6.5bn barrels of crude oil reserves.
Companies active in Uganda include France’s Total, Britain’s Tullow Oil and China’s CNOOC. Africa Oil and partner Tullow Oil first struck oil in Lokichar in northwest Kenya in 2012. The recoverable reserves are an estimated 600 million barrels of crude, which would feed into the pipeline from Uganda when it is built.
Africa Oil and Tullow were 50-50 partners in blocks 10 BB and 13T where the discoveries were made. Africa Oil has since sold a 25 percent stake in those blocks to A.P. Moller-Maersk. Hill said the Africa Oil was still actively exploring despite the low oil price.
Trending
- IMF: Sub-Saharan Africa faces debt challenges despite decline
- IMF warns: Sub-Saharan Africa’s income gap widens
- Angola’s mineral renaissance: beyond oil and diamonds
- NamPower targets 80% energy self-sufficiency by 2028
- WHO prequalifies new cholera vaccine amid global outbreaks
- BNP Paribas faces Sudan genocide lawsuit in US
- Chad threatens US military presence, Russia influence looms
- Nigeria slips, Egypt falls: Africa’s economic shift