By TEA staff
In Summary
Four firms have been selected to negotiate for Production
Sharing Agreements (PSA’s) after successful evaluation in the country’s
first round of competitive licensing round in the promising oil sector,
government has today announced.
Nigerian firms dominate the list with three first having gone through the sieve.
“The Ministry of Energy and Mineral Development has completed evaluation of bids for the first competitive licensing round and invited the successful companies to negotiate Production Sharing Agreements (PSAs).
“The Ministry of Energy and Mineral Development has completed evaluation of bids for the first competitive licensing round and invited the successful companies to negotiate Production Sharing Agreements (PSAs).
The successful firms according to the statement are, Armour
Energy Limited of Australia for the Kanywataba Block;
WalterSmithPetroman Oil Limited of Nigeria, for the Shallow and Deep
Plays in the Turaco area; Oranto Petroleum International Ltd of Nigeria
for the Shallow and Deep Plays in the Ngassa area and Niger Delta
Petroleum Resources Ltd of Nigeria for the Shallow and Deep Plays in the
Ngassa area.
The ministry announced that five licenses will be issued to the
successful firms “the five PSAs are one for the Kanywataba block and two
for the shallow and deep plays of the Turaco and Ngassa blocks
respectively,” the statement reads in part.
Final milestone
“Negotiations for the five PSAs will commence during the first
week of August 2016 and are expected to be concluded during the month,”
Mr Ernest Rubondo, Director for Petroleum in the Ministry of Energy
& Mineral Development (MEMD), said that negotiations for these PSAs
is the final milestone before granting exploration rights over these
areas.
The next rounds of negotiations are expected to cover work
programmes, national content and the fiscal aspects like royalty which
were biddable.
“Further due diligence will be undertaken on the successful
bidders with regard to their financial, technical and health, safety and
environment management capabilities prior to the issuance of licenses,”
the statement added.
Mr Rubondo added that the investments and activities arising out
of the exploration work under these new exploration licences are
expected to come at the same time as the investments and activities of
developing the already discovered oil fields in the country and those
for constructing the infrastructure for commercialization which include a
refinery and an export pipeline.
These multiple activities will lead to a significant increase in
investment in Uganda’s oil and gas sector and an increase in its
knock-on effect on the other sectors of the economy.
Uganda’s first licensing round is being undertaken in line with
the National Oil and Gas Policy for Uganda (2008) and in accordance with
the Petroleum (Exploration, Development and Production) Act 2013.
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