What you need to know:
- The explorer said it had suspended its intended sale of stake in the project.
- Tullow said it had been granted another 15 months for exploration phase of the Turkana oil project.
- The move now pushes further away the timelines for the project that had originally been set for 2021 before several extensions.
Kenyans will have to wait until after 2025 for
petrodollars from Turkana oil fields to start trickling in after the
government extended the exploration timeline for Tullow.
The British oil explorer Wednesday said it had
been granted another 15 months for exploration phase of the Turkana oil
project, essentially pushing ahead production timelines and extending
the long-awaited final investment decision.
Tullow in a statement accompanying its half
year results to June 2020 said the extension was part of the deal that
led to its lifting of a force majeure on the project last month.
The explorer said it had suspended its
intended sale of stake in the project without specifying its next move
on the intended farm down for a 50 percent shareholding in blocks 10BB
and 3T in the Turkana.
“Kenya has agreed to an initial extension to
the second additional exploration period for the 10BB and 13T licence
blocks until 31 December 2020 with a final extension until 31 December
2021, contingent on an agreed work programme and budgets. Separately,
the farm down process has been suspended while the joint venture
partners complete a comprehensive review of the development concept to
ensure it continues to be robust at low oil prices, and also consider
the strategic alternatives for the asset,” Tullow said in a statement.
Timelines pushed
The move now pushes further away the timelines for the project that had originally been set for 2021 before several extensions.
Tullow whose half year net earnings dropped
138 percent to a loss of $1.3 billion, will need to source for funds
together with the Kenyan Government to build a pipeline after the
investment decision has been made.
This will be followed by another 38 months to
build the Lamu-Lokichar pipeline, effectively putting Kenya’s first
yield from the oil resources beyond 2025.
The Kenya Civil Society Platform on Oil and
Gas said the new change of timeline reveals how slow the project has
been progressing closer to the production phase and risks its future
prospects as more delay may hurt its attractiveness for investments in
the long run.
edokoth@ke.nationmedia.com
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