By LILIAN OCHIENG', laochieng@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
French oil giant Total has affirmed its commitment to
construct the $4 billion (Sh406 billion) pipeline through Tanga despite
the push by Kenya to have Uganda ship its crude oil through the Lamu
port.
Total E&P Uganda general manager Adewale Fayemi said the
French giant has made the decision to have the pipeline run through
Tanzania despite talks between Uganda and Kenya.
“As a company, our position remains that we are going through
Tanga…I understand there are issues being discussed but our position
remains the same,” said Mr Fayemi said on Wednesday while attending a
two-day East Africa Oil and Gas conference in Tanzania.
He said all available options had been carefully considered and
the firm is more interested in the Tanga route, which will be cheaper
for oil production than the Kenyan option.
Total is UK Tullow Oil’s partner in the Ugandan oil fields and
the main financier of the operations. China National Offshore Oil
Companies is also a partner. The firms are eyeing production of an
estimated 6.5 billion barrels of Uganda’s crude oil by 2018.
Kenya Thursday put on a brave face in light of the Total’s
position. “We will build an oil pipeline, whether we are together with
the Ugandans or not,” said Energy PS Joseph Njoroge.
Total’s stand on the issue comes as President Uhuru Kenyatta
considers negotiating for the Lamu route through his host President
François Hollande during his April trip to France.
At the moment, Kenya and Ugandan officials are touring Lamu and
Lokichar following a decision by President Kenyatta and Uganda’s Yoweri
Museveni, to have all possible routes reviewed and harmonised.
In the tour, the team is looking at the terrain, technical and
economic aspects of three possible routes through Tanga, Lamu or Mombasa
port.
President Museveni on March 21 in Nairobi delayed making a final
decision on the proposed shipping of its crude oil through Lamu port
setting up Kenya and Tanzania for intense rivalry in their quest to
become the preferred regional trade and transport hub.
The Nairobi meeting came just weeks after President Museveni and
his Tanzanian counterpart John Magufuli reached a deal to build a
1,120-kilometre oil pipeline between Tanga and Uganda where an estimated
6.5 billion barrels of oil were discovered in the Albertine basin near
the border with Democratic Republic of Congo.
The twist of events rattled Kenya, which now finds itself in a
head-to-head competition with Tanzania to win Uganda’s decision to have
its oil exported through Kenyan territory.
Tanzania has previously been labelled a “lone ranger” among East
African Community partners on key integration issues such as trade and
infrastructure development — a tag it sought to shed-off with the Uganda
pipeline deal.
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