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Could the Hate of Eritrea from the Sole Super Power be all about Oil, Gold & …?

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Could the Hate of Eritrea from the Sole Super Power be all about Oil, Gold & …?


By Semirnna Adhanom

I am starting to wonder, why would a sole super power work so hard to hurt a young country that wants just to be left alone? Could the potentially huge natural gas and oil reserves in the red sea making the sole super power to work against us?

Through out history the US never cares about a country unless it has oil and natural gas (energy sources). And this could be  the reason why the sole super power is anti-Eritrea’s economic progress.

The special interest groups don’t want the Eritrean people to control or have a big share of the pie and that is what is going to happen if we start extracting the huge natural gas reserves in the red sea under the current nationalist government in Eritrea.So they are using agent meles to distract us from progressing by creating a border issue, somalia,djibouti, and God knows what they will bring next.

The good news is that the people are aware of what is happening and have a clear understanding of their resources and know who is their real enemy and why, so Eritrea is in good hands and despite all the distraction tactics the people are getting stronger and smarter by the day and marching towards the vision to make Eritrea a developed country at any cost. If we can win the war in 1991, we know we can win the war of today to get to where we want to reach our destiny as a people.

Long live warsay-Yekealo.

Tame or Stop Gash, Anseba & Barka rivers for total liberation.

Semir

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Video: Eritrea Fastest Growing Economy in 2011

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Video: Eritrea Fastest Growing Economy in 2011


For the full video please click here: ABNDigital


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Eastern Africa Energy Conference 2010

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Eastern Africa Energy Conference 2010


Eastern Africa

Eastern Africa

The Eastern Africa Energy Conference 2010 currently taking place in Kenya is to showcase East Africa as a new oil exploration frontier in the region.

The conference is part of worldwide suite of senior management events in/on Africa that has been conducted annually for over 16 years, and is endorsed by the Ministry of Energy, Kenya and the National Oil Corporation of Kenya.

Participating states and experts will examine emerging global oil and gas issues, economics and models driving the industry besides the black gold’s curse among others.

Further, Government policies, state interventions in the oil/energy market, state oil/energy companies, private energy investments and interests, corporate portfolio and strategies, new entrants, competition and regulation, inter-fuel issues, product pricing, taxation and the financing of non-hydrocarbon ventures, plus critical issues impacting the Eastern African future will be discussed.

It showcases the regional oil/gas and energy game in Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, DRC, Sudan, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Somalia, Seychelles, Madagascar and Mocambique, and focuses on the corporate players (private and state entities) that are shaping the fast-moving dynamics one of the Continent’s rapidly growing energy markets – upstream, midstream, downstream, and in gas/power, CBM/CTL, as well as in renewables and biofuels.

On the first evening of the Eastern Africa Energy Conference organizers will host the 31st PetroAfricanus Dinner, with Guest Speaker: Jeff Hume, Managing Director, Upstream Petroleum Consultants.

Inside the week is a special and unique 3rd Petroleum Industry Fundamentals Industry Training Workshop presented by Dr Duncan Clarke, the world’s leading authority on African oil and gas and global national oil companies, as well as the author of the widely-acclaimed Crude Continent; The Struggle for Africa’s Oil Prize (Profile, 2008).

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Sudan and Saudi Arabia Go for Red Sea Oil

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Sudan and Saudi Arabia Go for Red Sea Oil


Oil Rig

Oil Rig

Saudi state-owned Aramco has been administering a tender for a seismic survey of Saudi territorial waters in the Red Sea. Industry sources said European companies have submitted bids to survey 14,000 square kilometers in a project worth up to $200 million.

Some of the bidders were identified as Norway’s Petroleum Geo-Services, the Netherlands’s Fugro and Britain’s WesternGeco. Aramco has been preparing to begin drilling for energy reserves in the Red Sea in 2012.

The sources said Aramco has deemed the Red Sea the next major source for crude oil and natural gas for the Saudi kingdom. Saudi Arabia has reached a capacity to produce 12.5 million barrels of oil per day.

Exploration activities are taking place across the red sea region. Sudan has recently started drilling its first overseas offshore exploration well in the Red Sea Basin off Sudan with the help of the state China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC).

The well falls in Area 15 under the franchise of the Red Sea Petroleum Operating Co., a consortium of five firms including the CNPC, Malaysia’s state oil firm Petronas, Sudan’s state oil firm Sudapet, Nigeria’s Express Petroleum and Sudanese firm High Tech Group. Petronas and CNPC each have a 35 percent interest in the block 15.

According to the Sudanese minister of Energy and Mining the results from prospecting for oil and gas in the Red Sea are positive.

Tokar-1 is one of two exploration wells in Block 15, located some 130 kilometers southeast of Port Sudan. The CNPC and its partners plan to complete drilling in six months. The wells have a designed drilling depth of 3,700 meters, and water depths of 38 meters and 52 meters respectively.

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Experts See Eritrea Leading Regional Mining Surge

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Experts See Eritrea Leading Regional Mining Surge


ASMARA (Reuters) – An impending mining boom in Eritrea will challenge oil-rich neighbours to make it easier for foreign companies to prospect across a massive geological structure in the region rich in base metals and gold, analysts say.

Eritrea set the government’s stake in any mining project at 10 percent stake in 2008 with an option to buy a further 30 percent, a small claim compared to other countries in the area like Egypt which mandates a 50 percent stake or Sudan at 60 percent, according to industry experts.

The relatively liberal mining terms have led more than a dozen foreign companies to get licenses to explore in Eritrea which analysts expect to accelerate dramatically in the next five years and provide a lifeline for the impoverished economy.

Advanced projects are at Bisha, run by Canada’s Nevsun Resources Ltd, with gold production expected by the end of the year, and at Zara, run by Australia’s Chalice Gold Mines and expected to start producing a year later.

“In the next ten years other nations in the region will look at Eritrea’s mining boom and they will want in. They will relax their laws and it will become a regional boom,” Timothy Strong, Eritrea manager for British company London Africa, told Reuters.

“If you look at the geography, Eritrea is a relatively small nation compared to African giants Sudan and Egypt, but it has many more foreign mining companies than the others combined. Geologically speaking, they are just as prospective as Eritrea.”

The companies are attracted to Eritrea because it sits on a patch of the Arabian Nubian Shield, a geologic feature that stretches from Saudi Arabia and Yemen in the east to Sudan and Egypt in the west.

PRESSURE ON THE NEIGHBOURS

Tucker Barrie, an economic geologist and an expert on the Arabian Nubian Shield, says neighbouring countries have already taken note that foreign companies are now prospecting nearby.

“It is not going to wash with any foreign company if Khartoum keeps asking for 60 percent of gold mining projects. That’s why even though it’s 50 times the size of Eritrea, there is only one foreign company mining there,” he said.

“However Khartoum is well aware it needs to revise its mining law. In fact, they asked me to show them a copy of Eritrea’s mining law. The bottom line is, these are poor countries and they should take as much as they can of their own resource, but it’s a balancing act, they still need to invite foreign companies into their country.” Source: (Reuters)

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A Glimpse into East Africa’s Natural Resources

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A Glimpse into East Africa’s Natural Resources


By Olad Hassan

East Africa is believed to have one of the biggest oil deposits in the world. Companies, both western and Asian, are hunting in earnest for oil and gas in the region. East African countries are experiencing one of the highest levels of investment in the world right now. However, year long conflict and political instability made the region to one of the riskiest places for local and foreign investment. Mainly due to the region’s trouble zones, the Horn of Africa and the Sudan Region of Darfur, which are believed to have the biggest deposits in natural resources.

Somalia.

Somalia has been without a functioning government since 1991, when former Mohamed Siad Bare’s Regime was over thrown.

In a 1991 a World Bank coordinated study intended to encourage private investment in the petroleum potential of eight African nations, Somalia and the Sudan topped the list of potential commercial oil producers.

The earliest indication of oil in Somalia was a large oil seep southeast of Berbera and several other seeps in various locations of the Somaliland province which considers itself independent from the rest of Somalia.

However, early exploration concentrated on an anticline structural approach since this had met with success in the Arabian Peninsula it took the oil companies a number of years to abandon this approach in Somalia. There is no evidence of large scale compressive folding in Somalia and the anticlines in the north of the country appear to be associated with the Miocene separation of Africa and Arabia and hence post-Mesozoic and early Tertiary oil and gas accumulations. Therefore, hydrocarbon accumulations must be sought in older structures and strata graphic traps.

Puntland, remains one of the last under-explored regions that have high potential for vast reserves of hydrocarbons. During the late 1980’s the State was divided into a number of concessions for oil exploration. Significant exploration was undertaken but this effectively ceased due to political instability that arose in 1991. However, there exploration activities have never ceased for good.

For example Australian exploration company Range Resources LTD. has been conducting studies on the mineral resources of the region during 2006 with a team of geologists based in Bosasso on the northern coast. The geological work has identified the potential of large silver rich lead zinc deposits analogous to the Jabali deposit in southern Yemen.

The agreements that Range Resources has entered was followed by intense negotiations between the Parties and their legal advisors. As part of this process the Parties have satisfied themselves that all previous mining concessions have lapsed.

The government of the semi-autonomous Puntland province has given Range Resources of Australia and Canmex Minerals of Canada joint E&P rights in parts of the region. The exploration period of its Somalia oil projects have been extended from 36 months to 48 months with the Somalian authorities, this is positive news as both sides see a reason to continue exploration in the area.

China National Offshore Oil Corporation’s (CNOOC) deal covers another part of Puntland and was endorsed by former President of Puntland and Somalia, Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmad, who hailed from the province, even though the transitional government’s authority there is tenuous. The prime minister himself has questioned the validity of the Chinese agreement because it was signed before the new oil law was in place.

The war torn nation is now under the eyes of Investors. Early 2007, the state-owned Chinese oil giant has signed a PSA with the former Somali Prime Minister, Ali Mohamed Gedi a, which ranks as a high-risk frontier even in an industry well accustomed to dangerous environments.

Kenya.

The East African republic of Kenya has no known oil or gas reserves. The Kenyan government is encouraging foreign interest in oil exploration and there is a modest upstream oil industry. It is endowed with other energy sources including wood fuel, coal, solar and wind power, much of which is untapped. The country’s commercial energy needs are supplied by electricity, coal, fuel wood and oil-derived products

Petroleum is Kenya’s major source of commercial energy and has, over the years, accounted for about 80% of the country.s commercial energy requirements. Demand for oil in Kenya is quite small due to the country.s underdeveloped economy, which is heavily dependent on labour intensive and rain-fed agriculture systems. The domestic demand for various petroleum fuels on average stands at 2.5 million tons per year, all of it imported from the Gulf region, either as crude oil for processing at the Kenya Petroleum Refineries Limited or as refined petroleum products.

Uganda.

Also in nearby Uganda, there is euphoria over oil discoveries as the region is sailing up as a new hydrocarbon producing zone attracting foreign investments. Early 2007, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni used the national thanks-giving service day in the capital Kampala to announce the discovery of oil in his country by London based explorer Tullow Oil. This discovery followed several years of the country’s painstaking search for oil.

The prospect Uganda becoming an oil producing country soon has caused a lot of excitement among many Ugandans. Even the government has boasted of the possibility of import savings of about a billion dollars (almost 2 trillion shillings) a year if the country’s oil needs are met from domestic oil supply, freeing much needed foreign exchange, and even of the possibility of Uganda becoming a net oil exporter.

This follows the confirmation Hardman Resources; an Australian drilling company working in conjunction with Tullow Oil from the United Kingdom, that Uganda has the capacity to produce oil to a tune of 10,000 barrels per day.

The world’s current oil consumption stands at 80 million barrels of oil per day having gone up from 65 million barrels per day (bpd) over the last five years. This jump in demand is a result of China and India’s rising demand of oil. Locally, Uganda’s demand for oil products is also rising at a rate of 6 % per day. Last year, Uganda consumed 700,000 cm of petroleum products worth $250 million. Per day, the country’s fuel needs stand at 50,000 cm (1,000 litres make up 1 cm). Per capita consumption of petroleum in Uganda has grown from 16 litres in 1991 to 24 litres at end of 2004 and that figure must be higher now.

At the cost of $70 (about 125, 000 shillings) a barrel, the average current price, 4,200 barrels a day from Waraga 1 would generate about $294,000 (Shs 546m) a day and Shs 199.5 bn annually just from one well.

Eritrea.

Eritrea is Africa’s youngest nation, having gained its independence from Ethiopia in 1993. It lies to the north of Ethiopia and forms part of the North East African Region.  The two-year war between Eritrea and Ethiopia that began in 1998 has badly affected Eritrea’s economy, as Ethiopia was one of Eritrea’s major trading partners.

Eritrean mining and oil resources might soon become key elements of the countries economy. Two mining companies, Nevsun Resources and Chalice Gold, have announced to start within the next two years gold production in the Red Sea State. This will add Eritrea to the list of mineral exporting countries in Africa. Several other companies such as Sunridge Gold Corp. and South Boulder Mines  have also projects and mining assets in Eritrea.

Oil resources in Eritrea are believed to be substantial although there is little information available in this regard. In 2008 the Government of Eritrea signed two agreements with Defba Oil Share Company on oil exploration and development. The company is supposed to undertake oil exploration activities in two blocks of the Eritrean northern territorial waters.  The Defba Oil Share Company has been set up through the partnership of the Eritrean government and Energy Alliance Company W.L.L.

Hydrocarbon exploration, primarily offshore in the Red Sea, began in the 1960′s when Eritrea was still federated with Ethiopia. In 1995, Eritrea signed a production sharing contract (PSC) with U.S.-based Anadarko Petroleum (Anadarko) for the offshore Zula Block. Anadarko signed a second PSC for the offshore Edd Block, located south of the Zula Block, in September 1997.

Anadarko announced, in December 1997, that it had reached an agreement with ENI/Agip (Agip) to swap interests in exploration acreage. Anadarko received a 25% interest in a Tunisian block operated by Agip, and Agip received a 30% share in the 6.7-million acre Zula Block and 30% interest in the Edd Block. Burlington Resources, a U.S.-based independent, later joined the consortium by acquiring a 20% interest in both acreages. Anadarko’s first two exploration wells, both drilled on the Zula Block, were unsuccessful. In January 1999, a third dry well, Edd-1 on the Edd Block, was drilled. Citing the disappointing exploration results, Anadarko and its partners ceased exploration activities and relinquished their rights to the offshore blocks.

Ethiopia.

Ethiopia is endowed with energy resources such as coal, biomass, solar energy and natural gas and is not a great consumer of petroleum fuels. Current natural gas reserves are estimated to be 24 million cubic meters.

Just recently Ethiopia signed an oil exploration agreement for petroleum onshore development in the Ogaden Basin with Sweden- based Lundin East Africa Bv. There are in total 11 foreign companies exploring Oil in Ethiopia including Africa Oil Corporation, South West Energy and Malaysia’s state-owned Petronas. The Ethiopian government has announced that it will offer further 14 licences for oil and gas exploration over a period of three years starting from 2009.

In June 2003, the Ethiopian government signed an oil exploration deal with Malaysian company Petronas for 5,800 square mile tract in Gambela, in the far western part of the country. The region is closely related the Sudan oil fields. Petronas has committed to investing in regional infrastructure, employing local staff, improving health services, and developing the skills of the ministry of Mines. Petronas is also interested in natural gas exploration in Ogadenia region.

Ethiopia is totally reliant on imports to meet its petroleum requirements. Some petroleum imports are received at the port of Djibouti, and shipped via rail and tanker truck to Ethiopia. With the recent development of oil in Sudan, however, Ethiopia has begun importing oil which, under COMESA, is not subject to tariffs. Oil imports from Sudan began in January 2003 transported by tanker trucks along a new road between the two countries.

Petronas, is going to drill three oil exploration wells in Ethiopia’s Ogaden basin. They have hired a Dubai-based exploration company to replace China’s Zhonguyuan Petroleum Exploration Bureau, which refuses to go back to the region, after the Ogaden National Liberation Front, an ethnic Somali separatist group, attacked a Chinese-run exploration site, killing 65 Ethiopian and nine Chinese.

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What About Oil?

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What About Oil?


Puntland Oil

African oil production accounts for 13% of total oil production worldwide. Experts believe that Africa is going to contribute 33% of total expected oil production growth in the coming years. The growth projection creates amongst investors as well as exploration companies an atmosphere comparable to the mining rush experienced by North America in the mid-1840s. The search for oil and gas has begun all over the African continent.

Dubai based company Black Marlin Energy is an oil and gas exploration company focusing on identifying overlooked or misinterpreted ground floor opportunities around the globe. The company emphasizes that it has long ago recognized the oil and gas potential of the East African Margin, which has been underestimated in the past. According to Black Marlin Energy, $ 500 million us dollars has been spent on research in East Africa and approximately 600 wells have been drilled from Eritrea to Mozambique with a high success rate.

Range Resources Ltd., another company engaged in oil and gas exploration from Australia, has directed its principle activity towards searching oil, gas and mineral resources in Puntland, Somalia. Range Resource could be described as a high risk taker considering the current situation in Somalia. However, some investors believe that there are large undiscovered oil fields off the coast of Somalia, which could provide a huge return in capital employed in the near future.

Interestingly, exploration of natural resources appears to be conflict resistant and bullet proof even in the most violent corners of this planet.

Coastal countries especially in the Horn of Africa are predestined for offshore oil exploration as they share the same geographical region as the Arabian Peninsula.

Eritrea has proven that mining could become one of the important pillars of its economy. In a recently published statement the Government of Eritrea has announced that the country will export gold and copper starting from autumn 2010.

This is a major step forward for the country because the export of gold and other metallic ores will significantly contribute to the earnings of much needed foreign exchange.

In 2008 the Government of Eritrea signed two agreements with Defba Oil Share Company on oil exploration and development. The company is supposed to undertake oil exploration activities in two blocks of the Eritrean northern territorial waters.  The Defba Oil Share Company has been set up through the partnership of the Eritrean government and Energy Alliance Company W.L.L. Thus, time will tell if oil and gas exploration could become another pillar, which will play an important role in the development of the country’s economy.

In financial investment overestimated risk can turn into huge profits, if detailed analysis has been conducted in understanding the facts on the ground when assessing a business, company or country.

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Red Sea, Sudan: Seadrill Secures Offshore Contract

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Red Sea, Sudan: Seadrill Secures Offshore Contract


Seadrill has been awarded a two-well contract by Red Sea Petroleum Operating Company Limited (RSPOC) for the jack-up rig West Prospero. The assignment is for operation offshore Sudan with mobilization scheduled for December this year.

The drilling assignment is expected to take some six months and the estimated contract value is approximately US$49.9 million inclusive of mobilization and demobilization.

West Prospero, which is currently idle in Indonesia, will be upgraded with high pressure, high temperature (HTHP) capabilities prior to moving to Sudan on a heavy lift vessel. (Scanoil)

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China Pouring Money Into Resource-Rich Africa

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China Pouring Money Into Resource-Rich Africa


China in Africa

China in Africa

DALIAN, China, Sept 11 – Standard Bank (SBKJ.J: Quote), Africa’s top bank by assets, said on Friday it had obtained a $1 billion loan facility from four Chinese banks, drawing on its equity tie-up with China’s biggest bank to push into Asia.

China has been pouring money into resource-rich Africa, welcomed by some, but drawing criticism from Western aid groups, who say the country is turning a blind eye to misrule and corruption.

China argues it is spreading prosperity in the world’s poorest continent where the West has failed.

One of the four Chinese banks behind the facility is Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) (1398.HK: Quote) (601398.SS: Quote), which owns 20 percent of Standard Bank and is the world’s biggest bank by market value, Standard Bank said in a statement.

The other three banks are Bank of China (3988.HK: Quote) (601988.SS: Quote) China Development Bank and China CITIC Bank (601998.SS: Quote) (0998.HK: Quote), according to the statement.

“This deal will serve as a platform for future cooperation between Standard Bank and these banks across a range of different banking products and geographies to support Chinese companies going global into emerging markets,” said Standard Bank Chief Executive Jacko Maree in the statement.

CHINA PARTNERS

Standard Bank and ICBC aim to jointly support Chinese companies going out into emerging markets especially into Africa, Maree said.

The facility between Standard Bank and its Chinese partners is a five-year fund-raising deal, repayable in a bullet capital single tranche at maturity, and the facility is a “debut term loan for Standard Bank’s fund raising in the Asian market”, the bank said in the statement.

Standard Bank expects to seal a dozen major lending deals in Africa with its China partner next year, as resource-hungry Chinese firms begin returning to the continent, Reuters reported earlier this week. [ID:nHKG127767]

Standard Bank has said that Chinese companies are looking for opportunities in Africa with focuses on mining, oil and gas and mineral sectors, where the African bank expects to see fast-growing and huge demand for financing in these resources and infrastructure-related sectors. Source: (Reuters)

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Two Companies Involved in Eritrea


massawa-oil-jetty
massawa-oil-jetty
Company number one, Lanka Hydraulic Institute (LHI), which prepared a study on a project to improve the oil and gas product import / export facilities at the port of Massawa, has been awarded to restruct Srilankan coastal areas, which were hit by the 2004 Tsunami. The company made a proposal to the Stake Holders, advising on how to replace the old jetty (jetty = petroleum pipe line, photo on the left by Brian Samuel Bar) with a newly build jetty at the power plant at Hirgigo Bay – Massawa harbour. In 2008 the Government of Eritrea invited in an international tender, foreign companies

to apply for a contract to build the facilities, financed by (IDA) International Development Association, the European Union and the Government of Eritrea.  The bidding, which had to be laid out according to World Bank’s eligibility rules and procedures, required proposals from the applying companies. LHI informs about how it would approach the  Massawa project as well as other news on their Home Page.

The feasibility study, design as well as the management of the tender for the petroleum jetty has been executed by company number 2, the Maritim Consultancy Royal Haskoning (RH). The award and the contracts of the  tender were supposed to be finished at the end of 2008 and construction was supposed to start by early 2009 according to RH.

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