East African crude oil pipeline (EACOP) Project Starts January

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Construction of the Uganda-Tanzania crude oil export pipeline is planned to start in January next year, Uganda's Energy minister Irene Muloni has said.

Ms Muloni, who led a Ugandan team that held closed door discussions with the Tanzanian delegation in Hoima Town on Tuesday, told the media that the two countries had agreed to fast-track the project which will cover 1,443 kilometres.

The construction of the pipeline, meant to export the Ugandan crude oil to the international market, is planned to be finalised by 2020.

Oil explorers have discovered more than 6.5 billion barrels of crude oil reserves from about 40 per cent of the Albertine basin in western Uganda. Uganda's new round of oil exploration licensing may see the country increasing its petroleum reserves, if the surveys prove positive.

"Every activity in respect to the project will be done in a fast tracking mode. We have agreed to meet in Tanga (Tanzania) in October this year to launch the front-end-engineering-design for the project," Ms Muloni told the press at Miika Eco Resort and Hotel, where the meeting was held.

She added that feasibility studies estimate the project to cost $3.55 billion. Land acquisition assessments, surveys, environmental and social impact studies will be conducted before construction starts.

She said a pipeline company will be set up and Uganda, Tanzania and other interested East African states will have shares in it.

"The pipeline is very attractive and viable. Securing financing will be explored in much detail. Contacts are being made to potential funders," Ms Muloni said.

Uganda and Tanzania political leaders and technocrats agreed to name the pipeline project reflecting the East African Community and the second ministerial meeting endorsed, "East African crude oil pipeline (EACOP)".

According to Ms Muloni, the meeting also endorsed the use of the colours of the East African community flag in the newly-created logo for the project since it is regional and it is open to other countries in the region to join.

"The ministerial meeting agreed to develop a project schedule and work modalities to expedite necessary approvals including; land access, environmental and social aspects, routing, project agreements and other activities requiring national or local government consents," a joint communiqué signed by Ms Muloni and her Tanzanian counterpart, Prof Sospeter Muhongo, reads in part.

Prof Muhongo said he had instructions from the Tanzanian President to ensure that the project is achieved in the shortest possible time.

"As we partner with Uganda in this project, we wish to assure our Ugandan brothers and sisters that we have the experience in pipeline construction. All our activities will be done in accelerated speed to achieve the project by 2020," Prof Muhongo said.

He cited the 1,710-kilometre Tanzama crude pipeline between Tanzania and Zambia and Mtwara-Dar es Salaam gas pipeline covering 560.56 Kilometres as some of the projects that the Tanzanians constructed. He said 95 per cent of the pipeline in the Tanzanian territory will be close to tarmacked roads and a railway line which will make it easier to mobilise materials during construction.

Out of the 1,443 kilometres of the pipeline, more than 1,100 will be on the Tanzanian side.

"Our side is not very steep and densely populated. The route is favorable for speedy construction," Prof Muhongo said.

He said it is the wish of the Tanzanians to use the pipeline to also export its huge gas resources to East African states. Since land in Tanzania is owned by the state, Prof Muhongo added, completing processes of land acquisition will be much faster.

Source: Allafrica
 
January tena, mliapa kwamba mtaanza Agosti, leo hii mnasogesha hadi January. Natumai hapatakuwepo na zile ngonjera za Waswahili kama mnavyofanya bandari la Bagamoyo.

Tanzania, Uganda $4 Billion Oil-Pipeline Timetable Slips
Companies behind project cite government progress in preparing for start of construction

BN-OO160_uganpi_J_20160620102252.jpg
ENLARGE
An undated handout photograph of a Tulllow Oil exploration site in Bulisa district northwest of the Ugandan capital Kampala. PHOTO:REUTERS
By
KATIE RIORDAN
June 20, 2016 10:55 a.m. ET
1 COMMENTS

LONDON—The Ugandan and Tanzanian governments are trying to fast-track a $4 billion oil pipeline that would connect landlocked Uganda to foreign markets even though construction won’t start in August as they originally indicated.

The companies behind what could be East Africa’s first major oil pipeline believe the August start-date that Tanzanian officials gave last March for work on the 900-mile pipeline through Tanzania is unrealistic.

But the governments have made more progress in preparing the way for construction to start on the project that would transport Ugandan crude to the Tanzanian port of Tanga on the Indian Ocean, industry officials said.

Tanzanian and Ugandan government officials weren’t immediately reachable for comment.

French oil giant Total SA, the UK-based Tullow Oil and Chinese state-owned oil companyCnooc Ltd. are the three firms developing Uganda’s oil fields and all three companies are expected to invest in the Ugandan pipeline which will have an estimated capacity of 200,000 barrels a day.

For now, there is no definitive start date for construction in the absence of an official development plan, Total and Tullow officials said. Cnooc couldn't be reached for comment.

With no official development plan in place, it is certain that the construction phase is still several months away.

The overall aim is to keep Uganda on track with the goal of exporting its first crude reserves by 2020. Analysts and developers now say a 36-month timeline is the best- case scenario with work starting as soon as possible. If this was to go ahead as planned construction would be completed in mid-2019 allowing several months for testing and commissioning before the infrastructure became fully operational.

Advertisement
“Bear in mind in this industry, the project development is always long,” Damien Steffan, a Total spokesperson, said in an email. “On average, it takes 10 to 15 years between the moment when you make a discovery and the moment of first-oil.”

Uganda now ranks as the fourth-largest reserve for crude oil in sub-Saharan Africa with the discovery of 6.5 billion barrels of oil since 2006, of which 1.2 and 1.7 billion are recoverable, according to the International Monetary Fund.

Uganda’s break-even price per barrel is estimated to be $60, according to Paul Bagabo, a Uganda-based consultant for the nonprofit organization Natural Resource Governance Institute. That is below current global crude prices, around $50 a barrel.

Mr. Bagabo said the relatively high cost of production in Uganda raises concerns that investors may be tempted to back out of infrastructure development if global prices fail to recover further.

To protect itself from any external oil price shocks, create jobs and provide domestic consumers with products such as gasoline and diesel, Uganda also plans to build a 60,000 b/barrels a day oil refinery in tandem with the pipeline.

“With the refinery we can opt to export while [the pipeline] completes,” Mr. Bagabo said. “The refinery is critical for Uganda’s specific interest and the interests of economic development.”

The Ugandan government is in the final stages of acquiring land for the refinery which will be constructed and operated by the Russian state-owned firm, RT Global Resources, in the country’s west near the town of Kabale, he said.

The Ugandan government officially announced its pipeline partnership with Tanzania in late April. This backtracked on a previous understanding with the Kenyan government that Uganda would jointly develop a pipeline that would run through Kenya.

The Tanzanian route, which a commissioned study said was cheaper and safer from attacks from militant groups like al-Shabaab, was also billed as a way to hasten the project.

Total and Tullow were initially at odds over the selected route. Tullow, which also has interests in Kenya’s oil fields, supported a Kenyan pathway for the pipeline. In contrast, Total, the biggest stakeholder in Uganda’s oil fields, is said to have lobbied hard for an alternative.



Write to Katie Riordan at Katie.Riordan@wsj.com

Tanzania, Uganda $4 Billion Oil-Pipeline Timetable Slips
 
January tena, mliapa kwamba mtaanza Agosti, leo hii mnasogesha hadi January. Natumai hapatakuwepo na zile ngonjera za Waswahili kama mnavyofanya bandari la Bagamoyo.

Tanzania, Uganda $4 Billion Oil-Pipeline Timetable Slips
Companies behind project cite government progress in preparing for start of construction

BN-OO160_uganpi_J_20160620102252.jpg
ENLARGE
An undated handout photograph of a Tulllow Oil exploration site in Bulisa district northwest of the Ugandan capital Kampala. PHOTO:REUTERS
By
KATIE RIORDAN
June 20, 2016 10:55 a.m. ET
1 COMMENTS

LONDON—The Ugandan and Tanzanian governments are trying to fast-track a $4 billion oil pipeline that would connect landlocked Uganda to foreign markets even though construction won’t start in August as they originally indicated.

The companies behind what could be East Africa’s first major oil pipeline believe the August start-date that Tanzanian officials gave last March for work on the 900-mile pipeline through Tanzania is unrealistic.

But the governments have made more progress in preparing the way for construction to start on the project that would transport Ugandan crude to the Tanzanian port of Tanga on the Indian Ocean, industry officials said.

Tanzanian and Ugandan government officials weren’t immediately reachable for comment.

French oil giant Total SA, the UK-based Tullow Oil and Chinese state-owned oil companyCnooc Ltd. are the three firms developing Uganda’s oil fields and all three companies are expected to invest in the Ugandan pipeline which will have an estimated capacity of 200,000 barrels a day.

For now, there is no definitive start date for construction in the absence of an official development plan, Total and Tullow officials said. Cnooc couldn't be reached for comment.

With no official development plan in place, it is certain that the construction phase is still several months away.

The overall aim is to keep Uganda on track with the goal of exporting its first crude reserves by 2020. Analysts and developers now say a 36-month timeline is the best- case scenario with work starting as soon as possible. If this was to go ahead as planned construction would be completed in mid-2019 allowing several months for testing and commissioning before the infrastructure became fully operational.

Advertisement
“Bear in mind in this industry, the project development is always long,” Damien Steffan, a Total spokesperson, said in an email. “On average, it takes 10 to 15 years between the moment when you make a discovery and the moment of first-oil.”

Uganda now ranks as the fourth-largest reserve for crude oil in sub-Saharan Africa with the discovery of 6.5 billion barrels of oil since 2006, of which 1.2 and 1.7 billion are recoverable, according to the International Monetary Fund.

Uganda’s break-even price per barrel is estimated to be $60, according to Paul Bagabo, a Uganda-based consultant for the nonprofit organization Natural Resource Governance Institute. That is below current global crude prices, around $50 a barrel.

Mr. Bagabo said the relatively high cost of production in Uganda raises concerns that investors may be tempted to back out of infrastructure development if global prices fail to recover further.

To protect itself from any external oil price shocks, create jobs and provide domestic consumers with products such as gasoline and diesel, Uganda also plans to build a 60,000 b/barrels a day oil refinery in tandem with the pipeline.

“With the refinery we can opt to export while [the pipeline] completes,” Mr. Bagabo said. “The refinery is critical for Uganda’s specific interest and the interests of economic development.”

The Ugandan government is in the final stages of acquiring land for the refinery which will be constructed and operated by the Russian state-owned firm, RT Global Resources, in the country’s west near the town of Kabale, he said.

The Ugandan government officially announced its pipeline partnership with Tanzania in late April. This backtracked on a previous understanding with the Kenyan government that Uganda would jointly develop a pipeline that would run through Kenya.

The Tanzanian route, which a commissioned study said was cheaper and safer from attacks from militant groups like al-Shabaab, was also billed as a way to hasten the project.

Total and Tullow were initially at odds over the selected route. Tullow, which also has interests in Kenya’s oil fields, supported a Kenyan pathway for the pipeline. In contrast, Total, the biggest stakeholder in Uganda’s oil fields, is said to have lobbied hard for an alternative.



Write to Katie Riordan at Katie.Riordan@wsj.com

Tanzania, Uganda $4 Billion Oil-Pipeline Timetable Slips


Sisi kwa upande wetu tuko tayari, ila upande wa Uganda ndiyo inabidi labda wajipange, lkn kwa upande wetu tunasubiri tu tumeshatayarisha kila kitu bandarini Tanga, sehemu ya kupita bomba hivyo we are ready yaani kama Bunduki tumeshaweka magazini na tunasubiri kufwatua tu, sasa kama Uganda hawako tayari hilo liko nje ya uwezo wetu!

Na siyo hapo tu hata the largest fertilizer complex in Afrika inajengwa huko Lindi Kusini mwa nchi yetu pia tuko tayari kila kitu, kuanzia mahali mpaka fidia za viwanja watu washalipwa tuwasubiri Wajerumani tu waje, wanawekeza 1- 3 bilion USD , hii ni the largest German investment ever in Afrika dadadeki!

HAPA KAZI TU!
 
Sisi kwa upande wetu tuko tayari, ila upande wa Uganda ndiyo inabidi labda wajipange, lkn kwa upande wetu tunasubiri tu tumeshatayarisha kila kitu bandarini Tanga, sehemu ya kupita bomba hivyo we are ready yaani kama Bunduki tumeshaweka magazini na tunasubiri kufwatua tu, sasa kama Uganda hawako tayari hilo liko nje ya uwezo wetu!

Na siyo hapo tu hata the largest fertilizer complex in Afrika inajengwa huko Lindi Kusini mwa nchi yetu pia tuko tayari kila kitu, kuanzia mahali mpka fidia za za viwanja watu washalipwa tuwasubiri Wajerumani tu waje, wanawekeza 1- 3 bilion USD , hii ni the largest ever German investment in Afrika dadadeki!

HAPA KAZI TU!

Sasa mnakaa hapo eti mnasubiri Waganda, mambo mengine mnafaa kuwa aggressive. Niliona Mganda hakutenga hata shilingi moja kwenye makadirio ya bajeti kwa ajili ya bomba la Hoima-Tanga, kisa anategemea ufadhili binafsi.
 
Sasa mnakaa hapo eti mnasubiri Waganda, mambo mengine mnafaa kuwa aggressive. Niliona Mganda hakutenga hata shilingi moja kwenye makadirio ya bajeti kwa ajili ya bomba la Hoima-Tanga, kisa anategemea ufadhili binafsi.


Sasa ulitaka tufanye nini? Kwa ni hili Bomba ni Mali yetu? Siis ni transit land tu na pmj na Bandari sasa kwa upande wetu tumeshafanya home work yetu upande wa Uganda bado wana mambo yao pia hivyo huwezi kuilamu TZ hapo kwa maana sisi tuko ready to go ...
 
Barbarosa hiyo fertilizer plant ni $3bln na si $1-3bln! Kenya haijawahi pata investment kubwa namna hii toka uhuru!
 
Sasa mnakaa hapo eti mnasubiri Waganda, mambo mengine mnafaa kuwa aggressive. Niliona Mganda hakutenga hata shilingi moja kwenye makadirio ya bajeti kwa ajili ya bomba la Hoima-Tanga, kisa anategemea ufadhili binafsi.
Aggressiveness tulisha apply tulipowanyan'ganya tonge mdomoni..

Hivi lile la kwenu mnalijenga lini vile? Au mnangojea mgundue mafuta zaidi? Huku sisi tuna Helium kama ulikuwa huna habari...
 
January tena, mliapa kwamba mtaanza Agosti, leo hii mnasogesha hadi January. Natumai hapatakuwepo na zile ngonjera za Waswahili kama mnavyofanya bandari la Bagamoyo.

Tanzania, Uganda $4 Billion Oil-Pipeline Timetable Slips
Companies behind project cite government progress in preparing for start of construction

BN-OO160_uganpi_J_20160620102252.jpg
ENLARGE
An undated handout photograph of a Tulllow Oil exploration site in Bulisa district northwest of the Ugandan capital Kampala. PHOTO:REUTERS
By
KATIE RIORDAN
June 20, 2016 10:55 a.m. ET
1 COMMENTS

LONDON—The Ugandan and Tanzanian governments are trying to fast-track a $4 billion oil pipeline that would connect landlocked Uganda to foreign markets even though construction won’t start in August as they originally indicated.

The companies behind what could be East Africa’s first major oil pipeline believe the August start-date that Tanzanian officials gave last March for work on the 900-mile pipeline through Tanzania is unrealistic.

But the governments have made more progress in preparing the way for construction to start on the project that would transport Ugandan crude to the Tanzanian port of Tanga on the Indian Ocean, industry officials said.

Tanzanian and Ugandan government officials weren’t immediately reachable for comment.

French oil giant Total SA, the UK-based Tullow Oil and Chinese state-owned oil companyCnooc Ltd. are the three firms developing Uganda’s oil fields and all three companies are expected to invest in the Ugandan pipeline which will have an estimated capacity of 200,000 barrels a day.

For now, there is no definitive start date for construction in the absence of an official development plan, Total and Tullow officials said. Cnooc couldn't be reached for comment.

With no official development plan in place, it is certain that the construction phase is still several months away.

The overall aim is to keep Uganda on track with the goal of exporting its first crude reserves by 2020. Analysts and developers now say a 36-month timeline is the best- case scenario with work starting as soon as possible. If this was to go ahead as planned construction would be completed in mid-2019 allowing several months for testing and commissioning before the infrastructure became fully operational.

Advertisement
“Bear in mind in this industry, the project development is always long,” Damien Steffan, a Total spokesperson, said in an email. “On average, it takes 10 to 15 years between the moment when you make a discovery and the moment of first-oil.”

Uganda now ranks as the fourth-largest reserve for crude oil in sub-Saharan Africa with the discovery of 6.5 billion barrels of oil since 2006, of which 1.2 and 1.7 billion are recoverable, according to the International Monetary Fund.

Uganda’s break-even price per barrel is estimated to be $60, according to Paul Bagabo, a Uganda-based consultant for the nonprofit organization Natural Resource Governance Institute. That is below current global crude prices, around $50 a barrel.

Mr. Bagabo said the relatively high cost of production in Uganda raises concerns that investors may be tempted to back out of infrastructure development if global prices fail to recover further.

To protect itself from any external oil price shocks, create jobs and provide domestic consumers with products such as gasoline and diesel, Uganda also plans to build a 60,000 b/barrels a day oil refinery in tandem with the pipeline.

“With the refinery we can opt to export while [the pipeline] completes,” Mr. Bagabo said. “The refinery is critical for Uganda’s specific interest and the interests of economic development.”

The Ugandan government is in the final stages of acquiring land for the refinery which will be constructed and operated by the Russian state-owned firm, RT Global Resources, in the country’s west near the town of Kabale, he said.

The Ugandan government officially announced its pipeline partnership with Tanzania in late April. This backtracked on a previous understanding with the Kenyan government that Uganda would jointly develop a pipeline that would run through Kenya.

The Tanzanian route, which a commissioned study said was cheaper and safer from attacks from militant groups like al-Shabaab, was also billed as a way to hasten the project.

Total and Tullow were initially at odds over the selected route. Tullow, which also has interests in Kenya’s oil fields, supported a Kenyan pathway for the pipeline. In contrast, Total, the biggest stakeholder in Uganda’s oil fields, is said to have lobbied hard for an alternative.



Write to Katie Riordan at Katie.Riordan@wsj.com

Tanzania, Uganda $4 Billion Oil-Pipeline Timetable Slips

Umefurahi ehh?
 
Uganda-Tanga oil pipeline stakeholders mull holding company

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Parties in the scheme include the governments of Tanzania and Uganda as well as Total E&P of France, Tullow Oil of the United Kingdom and China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC).

The Managing Director of the Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC), Dr James Mataragio, told the ‘Daily News’ at the ongoing 40th Dar es Salaam International Trade Fair (DITF) that the company will be known as Pipeline Company (PIPECO).

According to the TPDC boss, PIPECO will be charged with seeking funds, procuring goods and services and operating the oil pipeline.

“In essence the project has already started but physical work will kick-off after final investment decision is reached by mid next year,” he explained.

He added; “The envisaged company will have to seek 60 per cent of the funds to implement the project while the involved stakeholders will foot the remaining 40 per cent.”

Tanzania will charge Uganda 12.5 US dollars for a barrel of oil while the former has also been invited to own 8 per cent shares in an oil refinery to be set up in Hoima to refine oil for countries in the East African region.

Asked whether Tanzania had plans to set up a refinery in Tanga, Mr Mataragio said the country is not considering setting up the facility at the moment as doing so will render the refinery in Uganda redundant.

“Uganda plans to construct the processing plant to refine oil for the East African market and thus setting up a similar facility in Tanzania is not feasible at the moment. We may consider the plant in the future,” Dr Mataragio stated.

He pointed as well that the Kabale-Tanga pipeline was among flagship projects being undertaken by the TPDC. Uganda chose the Tanzanian route for the oil pipeline in April, this year, amid stiff competition from Kenya, which also wanted it to be routed to yet to be constructed Lamu Port in North-Eastern Kenya.

The pipeline through Tanzania will be of benefit not only to Uganda and Tanzania but other countries in the region such as Kenya, South Sudan, Rwanda, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

The envisaged 24-inch conduit to cover 1,403 kilometres from Kabale to Tanga is expected to convey 200,000 barrels of crude oil per day for exports. It is expected to create 15,000 jobs during its execution after which upon completion it will employ between 1,000 and 2,000 people.

It will pass through Kagera, Geita, Shinyanga, Tabora and Singida to Tanga. Uganda has so far discovered 6.5 billion barrels of the precious liquid along the Lake Albert basin. The first finding was made by Hardman Resources in 2006 which was later acquired by Tullow Oil.

At present, three companies own 33.3 per cent each of the oil fields and they include Total E&P, Tullow Oil and CNOOC.

The companies also plan to construct an oil refinery to process 60,000 barrels per day to cater for demand of petroleum products in East Africa while between 200,000 and 600,000 barrels will be transported in crude form through the pipelines for exports outside the EAC.
http://dailynews.co.tz/index.php/ho...il-pipeline-stakeholders-mull-holding-company
 
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