Kenya has cut its crude oil export
projections to 400,000 barrels per year between 2021 and 2023 in what
signals a depressing assessment in the international market.
That
forecast is lower than this year’s shipment target of 500,000.
Petroleum Principal Secretary Andrew Kamau said the government will
focus on field development and construction of a crude pipeline, hence
the cut in export plans.
“The
ministry projects to export some 400,000 barrels of crude annually for
the Financial Year 2020/2021, 2021/2022 and 2022/2023. We are going to
concentrate on the development of the oilfields and the pipeline,” Mr
Kamau said on Thursday during the ongoing public hearings on 2020/21
sector budget proposals.
The
unfulfilled development and construction of the pipeline is expected to
pile financial pressure on the government and its partner Tullow Oil,
whose financials have been fading in the recent past.
Tullow,
the British oil explorer, has already cut its capital expenditure for
its Kenyan operations by 43 percent for this year with some Sh4.06
billion allocated compared to last year’s outlay of Sh17.6 billion.
The
government’s conservative estimate on crude export adds to the
complexity on the controversial project that involves trucking of crude
oil from Turkana to Mombasa with the first consignment of 250,000
barrels sold to a Chinese oil multinational in August 2019.
The Kenya Civil Society Platform on Oil
and Gas (KSCPOG), which has been critical of crude oil trucking, said
the lowered projection now shows the difficulties it had earlier
outlined when the plan was announced in 2016.
“That
projection is like two ships per year. The bigger picture is probably
beginning to show and proving that the early oil pilot scheme may not
have been a good idea after all. There were more fundamental issues to
address before investing the billions in the export experiment,” KSCPOG
coordinator Charles Wanguhu said.
But
the government, which is in joint partnership with Tullow, Africa Oil
and Total to commercially prospect for oil in Turkana, has maintained a
brave face over the woes facing the project and Tullow itself.
The
British firm recently said it had reviewed its production performance
in 2019 to prepare a longer term outlook which now calls for a reset in
order to remain a valuable investment for shareholders.
Part
of the reset, according to the firm, will involve an assessment on its
ballooning cost base and investment pipeline to inform where its capital
will be allocated in what may signify a less aggression towards new
ventures starting next year.
No comments :
Post a Comment