Thursday 9th of February 2012 03:00:41 PM
 
 
 
Home Business Business News Tullow to pump 60m litres of Uganda crude oil per day

Tullow to pump 60m litres of Uganda crude oil per day

E-mail Print PDF

Uganda's oil production target could more than double to 350,000 b/d by 2018 from the current target of 150,000 b/d in 2013 if the right business plan is adopted, according to Tullow Oil PLC.

"When the oil basin is in full production, we are probably talking about 350,000 b/d," said Tullow Chief Executive Officer Aidan Heavey, adding that the firm plans to begin producing crude oil this year, with initial production of 1,000 b/d.

A barrel of crude oil is equal to about 160 litres. To compare, Ugandans today consume 2 million litres of fuel daily; 1.2 million litres of diesel, 600,000 litres of petrol and 200,000 litres of kerosene per day.

Heavey said output will rise to 10,000 b/d in 2011 and to 150,000 in 2013. The 150,000 bbl-target for 2013 is based on current proven reserves of 700 million boe. But there is upside in the basin as proved, probable, and possible reserves are estimated to total 1.5-2 billion boe.

Tullow owns 100% of Block 2 and is awaiting approval from the Ugandan government to purchase the remaining 50% stakes in Blocks 1 and 3A from Heritage Oil, giving it full ownership over the three blocks in Uganda's Albertine Rift basin.

Tullow is talking to Total SA and China National Offshore Oil Corp. (CNOOC) about selling them a 50% stake in the licenses and jointly managing development of the Lake Albert's oil resources. Tullow also expects the partner to help with the construction of a refinery and export pipeline.

"The investment is going to be huge. You are talking about multiple billions of dollars of investments. The only two companies that are currently in the final process are CNOOC and Total," Heavey said, adding, "It would be good if both were involved."

However, Tullow's proposed farm-in may deviate from that plan as the Ugandan government has asked the Irish firm to reduce the size of its proposed share from 50% to 33% in two of the blocks and to allow CNOOC and Total each to operate one block.

"In recognizing the need to avoid a monopoly, Tullow has presented their plan to partner with both Total and CNOOC," said Kalisa Kabagambe, the energy ministry's permanent secretary.

"However, government has asked Tullow to reconsider its proposal of operating two out of three exploration areas and instead let each partner operate an exploration area," Kabagambe said.

The Ugandan government is still considering the development plans presented by Total and CNOOC, after which a final decision will be made on Tullow's acquisition of the Heritage stake""probably by the end of March.

"The farming-in partners, CNOOC and Total, have been invited to present their plans for development of the oil sector to the government," Kabagambe said.

"The approval for the partners to join the licenses shall be made only upon confirmation that the partnership addresses the country's interests," Kabagambe said.

Kabagambe said Uganda required significant investment of $8 billion over the next 10 years to develop the oil and gas industry, and he also called for the creation of a national oil company.

"The government should form an oil company to increase national participation, especially in commercial aspects of the oil and gas sector," Kabagambe said.

Comments (4)Add Comment
...
written by Major Adam Kifaliso, March 10, 2010
Who really owns Ugandan oil . ? would uganda get fishing rights in medetterenian if it had boats ? If you contract a builder to build a house , does the builder own it when it is finished ? What if Tullow didnt find oil ? who would pay for their investment ? Who is really trying to steal Ugandan oil ? should there be oil deals before 2011 elections ? who is cashing on bogus oil deals now ? will the next after m7 govts honor these bogus deals ? Has Uganda made the studies needed to contain pollution and contamination from oil spillage ?
Mr
written by kabayekka, March 13, 2010
One has two minds over the better prospect of investment from this oil. First the external massive profits these foreign companies are already making for themselves and stashing away. Second is the ability and credibility of the current Uganda government to collect, save and spend oil revenue for the real benefit of this country. It is definite that the historical records of accountability for this government will put this project in jeopardy unless the coming general election can untangle some of these problems.
Mr
written by kabayekka, March 13, 2010
Inevitably as the life span of an oil industry can be determined Tallow must tell the African citizens when the good oil from the Albertine volcanic basin will run out as millions of litres of it is greedily excavated daily. When everybody will go back home to leave the African savannah land and fresh lake to the indigenous living. Let not that be the day of reckoning for what good was this project.
lubricants manufactured
written by diesel oil additive, October 07, 2010
Our lubricant additives have proved superior performance to control oxidation, inhibit corrosion, dissolve deposits and reduce friction and wear, thus giving the customers the competitive edge.

Write comment

busy
 
 
 

Podcasts

Videos

You need Flash player 6+ and JavaScript enabled to view this video.




RECOMMENDED

Society
Forget `Angry Birds’ Now you can play `Angry Brides’ A new Facebook app created by popular matrimonial website shaadi.com lets players fight ‘greedy grooms’ who demand dowry – a practice that stubbornly persists...
 

MOST READ

LATEST COMMENTS

Gusto Says:
2012-02-09 12:17:00
Who owns Umeme is the pertinent question now.

mulwani. Taminwa Says:
2012-02-09 13:06:14
UMEME Must be scraped since its not owned by nobody in UK its not  registered, Here registrar of companies has failed to  produce the people who registered Umeme in Uganda. who is telling  Uganda

 
Joomla Templates and Joomla Extensions by JoomlaVision.Com
Overcast

32°C

Overcast

Humidity: 13%

Wind: NE at 12 mph

POLL

Is it right for government to give each MP 103 Million shillings to buy a car?
 
ON THE SHELVES
Banner
 

Cover: Besigye, supporters disagree on guns, Colonel under pressure over calls for war not words.

Special reportLicensed killers, how the state protects those who kill for it.

BusinessMore hope than fear with SIM registration..


Name:

Email:

COMMENT
A light at the end of the tunnel Eliminating the menace of Neglected Tropical Diseases Though much of the world has never heard of diseases like lymphat...
 
 

 
 
Copyright © 2012 The Independent: You get the truth We Pay the Price. All Rights Reserved.