Rwandan company Ngali Mining that won the petroleum exploration
rights in Lake Kivu has tapped a British firm to search for the
hydrocarbons.
ABI Holdings will explore for oil in the Eastern Kivu Basin following 2014 discovery that the area is favourable for petroleum.
Prospecting
for oil had however been put on hold after the government failed to
agree on the exploration rights with foreign firms.
Ngali
Mining, a subsidiary of local investment company Ngali Holdings which
is associated with the Rwandan military, won the rights for oil
exploration last year.
Francis Gatare, the chief
executive of Rwanda Mines, Petroleum and Gas Board, the government
agency that oversees the extractive sector, said exploration activities
were ongoing but declined to disclose the timeframe for the project.
“You
can talk to Ngali as to how they are doing it and who they are
subcontracting, that is really their business and I am not in position
to share business arrangements of a private company,” Mr Gatare said.
Contacted for comment, ABI Holdings said it signed a
“non-disclosure agreement with Ngali Mining Ltd [that] does not allow us
to discuss any aspects of the project with third parties”.
Parliament also said that it did not have any information about ongoing oil exploration activities.
"We
have not reviewed anything about ongoing oil exploration or possible
exploitation of reserves if they are discovered. It is something we are
considering to do in the near future," said Adolphe Bazatoha, the
chairperson of the parliamentary committee on Economy and Trade.
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