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The long road to oil riches for Kenya

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The Kenya Petroleum Refinery Ltd plant at Changamwe, Mombasa. Photo/FILE

The Kenya Petroleum Refinery Ltd plant at Changamwe, Mombasa. Photo/FILE 

By KENNEDY SENELWAPosted Wednesday, October 21 2009 at 22:30

It will take Kenya at least six years to start crude oil production if a Chinese firm strikes commercial deposits in a well drilling exercise that starts next week.

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China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) will spend $26 million to drill the 5,000-metre deep Bogal-1-1 well in block nine near Merti in Isiolo North District in an exercise that will take five months.

Hydrocarbons Management Consultants on Wednesday said caution is required if the firm finds oil as it needs to drill more wells to quantify the fossil fuel deposits before developing production facilities.

“Kenyans should not expect to see immediate results if CNOOC and its partner Africa Oil Corporation of Canada strike oil,” said Hydrocarbons lead consultant Robert Shisoka.

He said a lead time of six years is a global standard to undertake resources development appraisal, building of a pipeline and refinery among other facilities before commercial crude oil production starts.

Mr Shisoka said in an interview with the Nation on Wednesday that the country needs to place itself in a strategic position by fast-tracking upgrading of the Kenya Petroleum Refinery Ltd (KPRL) to process various crude oil grades.

Prime Minister Raila Odinga has been spearheading efforts to place Kenya in such a status given that the country is a gateway for export of Uganda and Southern Sudan’s oil resources.

Mr Odinga has already held negotiations with the Chinese Government for Southern Sudan to export oil through Kenya.

From the talks, it is expected that China will fund building of a pipeline and refinery among others facilities.

Feasibility study

Uganda has discovered commercial deposits of oil in Lake Albert Rift basin and is carrying out a feasibility study to build a refinery with a capacity of 150,000 barrels per day at a cost of $2 billion.

National Oil Corporation of Kenya (Nock) said various benefits will arise if the country concludes negotiations to be the export hub for oil produced in the two countries.

“Kenya will benefit through employment creation and charging of fees for export oil transported in the pipeline if the deal is concluded,” said Nock’s managing director Mwendia Nyaga.

Mr Shisoka said instead of building another refinery, Kenya has to speed up upgrading KPRL in four years to make it competitive and increase liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) production from the current 120,000 metric tonnes annually for domestic use as well as export.

He said the refinery is the only one in the Eastern Africa region and upgrading of the plant that currently produces LPG, petrol, diesel, kerosene and fuel oil is projected to cost about $450 million.

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Add a comment (22 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by VikkiT
    Posted October 23, 2009 10:18 PM

    Can we really trust our government to be responsible with the funds if they find oil? No!! I hope they dont find a dot. Like others I'm afraid of what will happen if Oil and politics join forces.

  2. Submitted by lyn14141414
    Posted October 23, 2009 02:11 PM

    THE LONG ROAD TO OIL RICHES FOR THE "ALREADY RICH KENYANS" including kina Devanis, Patels, Kamleshes, Singhs, Sumatras ....name them.....Wafrika hamutaona kitu, the rich continue getting richer and the poorer continue getting poorer!!!!

  3. Submitted by arapketer
    Posted October 23, 2009 03:13 AM

    with the current leadership this is a very dangerous invention

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