Drilling
begins for oil in Kenya
By Thomas Pearmain
GLOBAL INSIGHT
Petroleumworld.com 12 09 06
Offshore drilling has begun in Kenya as Australia's
Woodside Petroleum spudded the Pomboo-1 exploration well in deepwater
Block L5. By the end of next year, when other test wells have been drilled,
analysis of initial results should tell whether the country has the
commercial deposits to become an oil-producing nation.
Woodside leads a consortium of independent exploration
companies and is the operator in Block L5 with a 30% stake, Dana Petroleum
(30%), Repsol (20%), and Global Petroleum (20%) are the other partners.
Woodside has said that it will spend more than US$90
million to drill a single well in Blocks L5 and L7 in the Indian Ocean.
Woodside has previously stated that the Kenyan coast is "the most
prospective part of East Africa with several large geological structures
hosting multiple targets similar to those found on Australia's North-West
Shelf". Dana Petroleum has also said that it believes that the
blocks could contain over one billion barrels each. The first well is
being drilled in 2,200 metres of water to a planned total depth of 5,005
metres. The drilling will be undertaken by the Japanese deepwater drilling
vessel MV Chikyu.
Oil Deposits Will Not Bring Employment Opportunities
The drilling is taking place about 135 km off Lamu,
but residents have already started believing that a future living off
the riches of petrodollars is only a short time away. Mary M'Mukindia
the managing director of Kenya's National Oil Co. (NOCK) is therefore
having to calm the levels of excitement by organising seminars and public
rallies to educate the local population. Even if commercial oil deposits
are discovered in the Lamu basin, revenue is not expected to start rolling
in until 2011-14. Another problem that the residents of Lamu are set
to experience is that oil production would not increase the employment
opportunities as the local workforce is largely unskilled and most jobs
would be contracted out.
There is also the need for an independent environmental
impact assessment as Lamu's waters represent the livelihood of its fisherman
and despoliation of the environment would be a catastrophe for them
and for the vital tourism sector. A National Environment Management
Authority (NEMA) investigation is being carried out, but NEMA represents
the government, which has a vested interest in oil being found in Lamu's
deepwaters.
China to Prospect for Oil in Kenya
In April 2006, Chinese President Hu Jintao flew to Kenya
to meet President Mwai Kibaki and conclude a deal for the China National
Offshore Oil Corp. (CNOOC) to prospect for oil in mainly offshore areas.
Fu Chengyu chief executive of CNOOC Ltd, announced last
week that the company’s subsidiary, CNOOC Africa Ltd, would take
on six production-sharing contracts (PSCs) in Kenya. These six PSCs
cover Blocks 1, 9, 10A, L2, L3, and L4 in three basins of Lamu, Anza,
and Mandera, with a total area of 115,343 sq. km. This marks the first
time that CNOOC has explored in East.
The agreement appears to be a low-risk investment for
Kenya, with China taking on all exploration costs. While Kenya is seen
as a highly prospective region, China's deal with Kenya can be seen
as an insurance policy for its government, which is desperate to protect
its investment in neighbouring Sudan, which ships the majority of its
oil to Chinese markets. Most of Sudan’s oilfields are in the centre
or south of the country and the Kenya Pipeline Corp. (KPC) has offered
to build a pipeline transporting oil from southern Sudan to the port
of Lamu. This could protect Sudanese marketing routes in the event that
the south of the country decides to secede under the terms of its six-year
interim peace agreement with the government in the Sudanese capital,
Khartoum.
KPC managing director George Okungu told officials from
southern Sudan that Kenya's position on the eastern coast of Africa
and its experience in pipeline management would best enable Sudan to
exploit its proven oil reserves. However, it is believed that a pipeline
connecting south Sudan to the Kenyan coast would cost around US$1.4
billion, which makes the idea very much a long-term project.
Outlook and Implications
Next year will be crucial in determining whether Kenya
has a future as an oil-producing country. Woodside, which has already
spent 852 million Kenya shillings (US$12 million) in exploration work
and seismic data since 2003, is committed to drilling at least two wells
over the next 12 months, and it will sink 13 wells throughout Africa
in the next year.
Kenya will be hoping the test results show hydrocarbon
deposits, not least because its neighbour Uganda proved this year it
has commercial amounts of oil and is set to become an oil-producing
country by 2009. Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni has stated his government
will launch an "Early Oil-Production Scheme" that will see
the creation of a mini-refinery next year that will produce diesel,
kerosene, and heavy oil by 2009. At a later date, the country will be
able to produce gasoline.
The question of whether Kenya discovers oil through
its exploratory activities also has downstream implications. The Kenya
Petroleum Refineries Ltd (KPRL) needs around 21 billion Kenya shillings
(US$300 million) to redevelop the country's Mombasa refinery; in its
current state it is a burden on the economy. The inefficient refinery
costs the taxpayer 5 billion Kenya shillings a year as a result of its
poor performance; any upgrade to the refinery would need to enable it
to produce environmentally friendly low sulphur diesel as the current
refinery does not contain a de-sulphurisation plant. Also, by modernising
the Mombasa refinery, one of the government's aims—of increasing
Kenya’s production of liquid petroleum gas—could be achieved.
If drilling results show a future as an oil-producing nation, this could
lead to a much larger expansion and investment in the Mombasa refinery.
However, if over the next 12 months no commercial oil
deposits are discovered in Kenya it could lead to the refinery being
shut down and transformed into a mass storage facility for imported
refined products. George Wachira general manager at the Petroleum Institute
of East Africa said that it cost 2-3 Kenya shillings per litre more
to refine a litre of fuel compared with importing refined products from
the Middle East, where large and efficient refineries take advantage
of economies of scale.. With Uganda already saying that it will construct
a mini refinery on the basis of its known crude reserves, this could
place Uganda in control of the East Africa fuels market.
Now the first well has been spudded in Kenya—the
first offshore well for 28 years—the country has stepped up its
programme to determine whether Kenya has a future as an oil-producing
nation. This has been accompanied by the country's Energy Minister Kiraitu
Murungi publishing a gazette of 38 exploration blocks in the country,
in total covering 115,242 sq. km. Kenyans and energy industry observers
will gain a clearer in 2007 as to whether the country will join Sudan
and Uganda in having proven hydrocarbon reserves.
GLOBAL
INSIGHT 12 05 06
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