(Reuters): Somalia aims to get oil flowing by 2020

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Mon, 20 Oct 2014 22:40:01 +0200

Somalia aims to get oil flowing by 2020


Mon Oct 20, 2014 2:20pm GMT

* Call for oil majors to lift force majeure

* Petroleum ministry talking with regional governments

* Improved offshore security should enable exploration

By Sam Wilkin

LONDON, Oct 20 (Reuters) - Somalia aims to produce oil within six years,
Petroleum Minister Daud Mohamed Omar said on Monday, as he announced plans
to reassert control over a sector which has foundered since the outbreak of
civil war in 1991.

Hopes that the impoverished East African nation could emulate neighbouring
Kenya by discovering and bringing to market offshore resources have been
kept on ice by long-running territorial disputes between regional
authorities.

The Ministry of Petroleum and Mineral Resources has drafted bills for
revenue sharing and downstream development, and submitted them to state
governments for approval, Omar said in a statement read by an interpreter at
the second annual Somalia Oil and Gas summit in London.

He added that the ministry, created less than a year ago, was the only
legitimate authority in the sector and that deals signed with regional
governments were illegal.

The federal government is in talks with international oil companies,
including Shell, to revive contracts which were put under force majeure in
1991, Omar said.

He said the government would protect the rights of concession holders, but
warned companies not to "sit on the nation's assets" by keeping the force
majeure clauses in place.

Force majeure clauses temporarily absolve a company of its contractual
obligations due to events beyond its control, including armed conflict.

Omar said that offshore production should begin in six years, and onshore
production in nine years.

Alirio Parra, former energy minister of Venezuela who was involved in
organising the conference, said Somalia faced many challenges associated
with building a sector from the ground up, including developing a workforce,
installing infrastructure and accessing finance.

NO TIME TO WASTE

The ministry aims to bring in new investors to achieve these goals,
including small oil companies which Omar praised for their flexibility and
quick start-up times.

"Somalia does not have time to waste," he added.

Soma Oil & Gas, a British company working exclusively in Somalia, is
conducting offshore seismic exploration which it expects to complete by
early 2015.

Chief executive Robert Sheppard said that if the results were promising, the
company would begin shooting 3D seismic and drilling exploration wells under
a production sharing agreement with the government.

He added that the seismic teams had not suffered any security incidents
during several months of offshore activities.

Somalia's coastline is a hotspot for piracy, though a NATO task force and a
growing private security industry have partially offset the risk.

Much will depend on whether the ministry can push through a deal with
regional governments to jointly administer the oil sector. Omar said that
the ministry was awaiting responses from these governments on the draft
revenue sharing bill.

The federal government signed an agreement last week with the state of
Puntland to resume relations, a United Nations statement said.

But another break-away territory, Somaliland, remains effectively
independent and last month extended an oil deal with Norway's DNO until late
2017.

The ministry recently criticised companies which had struck deals with
regional governments, accusing them of destabilising the country.

"Somalia is a sovereign nation," Omar said. "The days of impunity are over."
(Editing by Mark Potter)

C Thomson Reuters 2014 All rights reserved

 
Received on Mon Oct 20 2014 - 16:40:04 EDT

Dehai Admin
© Copyright DEHAI-Eritrea OnLine, 1993-2013
All rights reserved