Uganda Doubles Oil-Industry Budget as Start of Production Nears

Via Bloomberg, an article on Uganda’s decision to increase its oil industry budget:

Uganda more than doubled its annual budget for the oil and gas industry as it moves closer to the start of production, targeted for the next financial year.

The government allocated 920.9 billion shillings ($246 million) to the sector for the year through June 2025, Finance Minister Matia Kasaija said Thursday in a speech in the capital, Kampala. That compares with 447 billion shillings in the previous budget.

Funding will be centered on the 900-mile East African Crude Oil Pipeline, or EACOP, which will transport crude from fields in landlocked Uganda to Tanzania’s port of Tanga.

TotalEnergies SE is leading development of the country’s oil fields and the $5 billion pipeline, along with partners Uganda National Oil Corp., Tanzania Petroleum Development Corp. and China’s Cnooc Ltd.

Money will also be channeled to a planned 60,000 barrel-a-day refinery. Uganda in January said it had picked Dubai-based Alpha MBM Investments to lead development of the $4 billion plant, which will supply local and regional markets. The government is targeting startup in 2028.

Funding will also be allocated to a petroleum geoscience laboratory, and to procuring thousands of liquefied petroleum gas cylinders for clean cooking, Kasaija said.

The country has about 6.5 billion barrels of oil resource, holding as much as 1.4 billion barrels of recoverable oil.



This entry was posted on Sunday, June 16th, 2024 at 9:30 pm and is filed under Uganda.  You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.  Both comments and pings are currently closed. 

Comments are closed.


ABOUT
WILDCATS AND BLACK SHEEP
Wildcats & Black Sheep is a personal interest blog dedicated to the identification and evaluation of maverick investment opportunities arising in frontier - and, what some may consider to be, “rogue” or “black sheep” - markets around the world.

Focusing primarily on The New Seven Sisters - the largely state owned petroleum companies from the emerging world that have become key players in the oil & gas industry as identified by Carola Hoyos, Chief Energy Correspondent for The Financial Times - but spanning other nascent opportunities around the globe that may hold potential in the years ahead, Wildcats & Black Sheep is a place for the adventurous to contemplate & evaluate the emerging markets of tomorrow.