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Africa Oil Corp. T.AOI

Alternate Symbol(s):  AOIFF

Africa Oil Corp. is a Canadian oil and gas company with producing and development assets in deepwater Nigeria, an interest in the Venus light oil and associated gas discovery, offshore Namibia, and an exploration/appraisal portfolio in west and south of Africa. The Company holds its interests through direct ownership interests in concessions and through its shareholdings in investee companies, including Prime Oil & Gas Cooperatief U.A. (Prime); Impact Oil and Gas Limited (Impact); Africa Energy Corp. (Africa Energy), and Eco (Atlantic) Oil & Gas Limited (Eco). The Company is focused on its Nigerian assets, Namibian Orange Basin opportunity set (Blocks 2913B and 2912), Block 3B/4B in South Africa's Orange Basin, and Equatorial Guinean exploration blocks (EG-18 and EG-31). The Block 3B/4B covers an area of approximately 17,581 square kilometers (km2) within the Orange Basin offshore of the Republic of South Africa. The Company has approximately 17% interest in Block 3B/4B.


TSX:AOI - Post by User

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Post by fasttrack5on Feb 06, 2014 1:16pm
496 Views
Post# 22180159

Copied this from "rig zone"

Copied this from "rig zone"

KAMPALA, Feb 6 (Reuters) - Uganda has signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) regarding the start of oil production with Britain's Tullow Oil, Total of France and China's CNOOC, the government said on Thursday.

Uganda discovered oil deposits in 2006 but a tussle with oil firms over Uganda's plans for a refinery postponed commercial production, now expected to start in 2016 at the earliest.

East Africa has become one of the world's hottest new oil and gas provinces after a string of finds, although moving towards production has been slow, as governments update laws and slowly build expertise in the new industry.

Before two recent Kenyan finds, Tullow said oil output from Uganda and Kenya combined could be 500,000 barrels per day (bpd). Tanzania and Mozambique are working on gas projects.

"The government has signed an MoU on the sustainable development of the discovered petroleum resources in the Albertine Graben (basin) with the licensed oil companies operating in the country," the Energy Ministry said.

It said in a statement that the deal was signed late on Wednesday with the Ugandan units of Tullow, Total and CNOOC, which have formed a joint venture to develop the fields. A formal ceremony to mark the signing was held on Thursday.

The ministry said the MoU provided a framework for commercial production, including providing fuel for power generation, supplying crude oil to the planned refinery and exporting crude by pipeline.

Uganda has scaled back its refining ambitions. It now plans to start with a plant with capacity of 30,000 bpd, rising to 60,000 bpd. It had wanted one that could process 120,000 bpd, which oil firms argued would not be commercially viable.

Asked when a lead investor for the refinery would be picked, Energy Ministry Permanent Secretary Kabagambe Kaliisa said: "By mid this year we will have finished the selection process ... so the winner (of the tender) should be known by then."

Other east African nations, potential export markets for the refined products, have been offered stakes in the refinery.

Kaliisa said Rwanda had expressed an interest in participating, while Kenya and Tanzania wanted more details.

"However we'll not wait for them to decide, we will just go ahead with whoever is willing to participate and others can come onboard later," he said.

Uganda would use its own resources to finance its stake in the refinery that was expected to start up in 2018, he said.

Energy Minister Irene Muloni said last month that developing Uganda's oil fields and building infrastructure would cost between $15 billion and $22 billion, although there were plans to try to reduce that.

Uganda has agreed to join a pipeline project that will run to Kenya's planned new Indian Ocean port of Lamu, which is expected to become an export terminal for crude from Uganda, Kenya and other regional states.

(Reporting by Elias Biryabarema; writing by Edmund Blair; editing


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