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Uganda, Tanzania set new fast track deadline for crude oil pipeline

Kampala, Uganda | THE INDEPENDENT | Uganda and Tanzania have agreed to further fast track their plans for the construction of the $3.5 Billion East Africa Crude Oil Project.

The Ministers of Energy from the two countries together with their Attorney Generals met for another round of negotiations over the project in Kampala as per the Inter-Governmental Agreement signed between the two governments last year.

The meeting hosted by Energy and Mineral Development Minister, Irene Muloni was also attended by her counterpart Dr. Medard Kalemani.

There was concern raised between the two parties that they seemed to be moving behind the schedule regarding the remaining legal requirements to move the project to the next stage. One of the legal requirement is the need to sign the Host Government Agreements which has been pending since last year even when the two countries have gone ahead to lay the foundation stones for the project.

Tanzania’s President, Dr. John Pombe Joseph Magufuli raised the same issue at the laying foundation stones in Hoima and Kyotera last November.

Sources privy to the meeting told URN that the ministers and their technocrats held a closed-door ministerial meeting at Protea Hotel in Kampala.

The parties agreed to have the Host Government Agreements between the two governments signed before the end of June. They reportedly also tasked the Joint Venture partners to make their financial investment Decision (FID) before the close of 2018.

It is not yet clear whether the Petroleum Authority has studied the Front End engineering Designs study to pave way for the Detailed Engineering study.

The Pipeline will be insulated and electricity heated to 50 degrees Celsius to keep the waxy crude flow.

Front End Engineering studies for the pipeline were completed last December followed by optimization studies conducted by Total E&P. The optimization study by TOTAL focused on the economic viability of the project. It was also aimed at ensuring that right standards for the pipeline running from Hoima to Port of Tanga in Tanzania.

The optimization study was reportedly completed by a consultant hired by TOTAL but a source close to the meeting said TOTAL has not released its finding to the other partner CNOOC. Both TOTAL and CNOOC officials were reluctant to comment on the matter wehn contcated on Friday.

Total E&P Uganda is the lead joint venture partner on the crude oil export pipeline. The pipeline is expected to charge $12.2 dollars for every barrel of oil that will be transported in the pipeline, making Uganda’s crude oil profitable even at today’s rate of $50 per barrel.

The two governments have from the onset required the Joint Venture Partners that the crude from Hoima should not be transported at more than $12.2 per barrel to the final destination.

CNOOC has reportedly demanded that TOTAL releases both the financial analysis from both the optimization study before it can determine whether or not to announce its Final Investment Decision (FID) .

The pipeline, is expected to be completed by the year 2020, when the country is scheduled to start oil production.

The funding for the project is expected to be raised will be raised through debt and equity from joint venture partners and national oil companies of Uganda and Tanzania.

Total E&P Uganda, Tanzania and Uganda last year appointed three companies as financial advisors for the pipeline. They included consortium of South African based Standard Bank, Imperial Bank of China (IBC) and Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation Europe Ltd.

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URN

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