By JOINT REPORT The EastAfrican
In Summary
- Tanzania has already drafted a policy that is before the Cabinet, which requires oil and gas companies operating in the country to list on the local bourse.
- Kenya’s Capital Markets Authority announced last week that two state-owned companies dealing with the oil business are planning to list on the Nairobi Securities Exchange.
- In Uganda, London-listed Tullow Oil’s plan to cross-list has been on agenda for two years now.
East African bourses are wooing oil and gas
companies to list in an effort to increase the size of the regional
capital market and offer local investors opportunity to invest in the
industry.
Tanzania has already drafted a policy that is
before the Cabinet, which requires oil and gas companies operating in
the country to list on the local bourse.
Kenya’s Capital Markets Authority announced last
week that two state-owned companies dealing with the oil business — the
National Oil Corporation (NOCK) and the Kenya Pipeline Company — are
planning to list on the Nairobi Securities Exchange.
NOCK has an exploration licence for Block 14T. In
Tanzania, Swala Oil and Gas (Tanzania) Ltd is preparing for listing to
achieve more than 50 per cent local shareholding through listing on the
growth and enterprise market segment (Gems).
In Uganda, London-listed Tullow Oil’s plan to cross-list has been on agenda for two years now.
The listing of oil and gas companies is seen as a
short route to achieving local participation in the oil and gas industry
whose discoveries have raised the global profile of East Africa,
becoming the next oil and gas frontier after the Middle East.
Kenya’s CMA chairman Kung’u Gatabaki said
privatising NOCK, through listing “will enable Kenyans to participate in
the oil sector through ownership in the market and distribution
infrastructure.”
Oil and gas exploration activities are dominated
by foreign owned companies, partly because of the high capital outlay
required to finance exploration.
As a result, local participation in the oil and
gas sector is being threatened, with opportunities being limited to
supply of services.
When production starts in the next three to five
years with Kenya and Uganda producing an estimated 200,000 barrels a
day, oil revenues could contribute to approximately 16 per cent of each
country’s gross domestic product, according to Tony Wainaina, managing
partner at Fanisi Capital, a private equity company.
He said while local businesses can provide
accommodation, catering, water and sanitation, drilling tools and
fluids, logistics and heavy lifting, pipeline construction and other
support services, they have no choice but to comply with the high
qualification standards that the upstream companies are demanding from
service providers.
Listing is also expected to expand the size of
capital markets in the region, offering companies a wider and cheaper
avenue to fundraise as locals.
Part of the plan to achieve this aims has been the
introduction of growth enterprise market segments (Gems), which make it
easier for small and medium scale enterprises to list.
The segments have lower listing fees and less stringent regulations to listing compared with listing on the maim market segment.
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