An armed member of the South
Sudanese security forces is seen during a ceremony marking the
restarting of crude oil pumping at the Unity oilfields in South Sudan on
January 21, 2019. [Reuters]
The country gets almost all its revenue from oil and has boosted output, now at 180,000 barrels per day, as it struggles to rebuild its shattered economy after a five-year civil war. In 2012 a dispute with Sudan over pipeline fees caused South Sudan to close its oil industry for over a year. The shutdown crippled the economy, leaving soldiers and civil servants unpaid. Months later the country was plunged into civil war. Much of the landlocked East African nation’s oil infrastructure was damaged in the conflict, during which about 400,000 people were killed and more than a third of the 12 million population uprooted. The government is keen to reach pre-war oil production levels of 350,000 to 400,000 bpd by mid-2020. A fragile ceasefire reached in September ended most of the fighting, but plans to form a unity government in May were delayed after there was no funding to disarm, retrain and integrate militias and rebels. SEE ALSO :South Sudan MPs quit budget presentation over unpaid public salaries
The oil ministry will conduct an environmental audit
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