Daily Nation Newspaper

CHINA INVITES UGANDA’S ENERGY MINISTER FOR TALKS ON PIPELINE FINANCING

- – REUTERS.

KAMPALA - China has invited Uganda's energy minister to Beijing to discuss the East African country's $5 billion crude oil pipeline, Uganda's presidency has said on Friday.

The developmen­t could signal a possible breakthrou­gh in Uganda's efforts to woo Chinese financiers to fund the pipeline, which the country requires to start crude production from oilfields that were discovered in 2006.

Potential Chinese funding is being considered as pivotal after Western banks declined to fund the pipeline after pressure from environmen­talists who said the project would add to global carbon emissions.

China's special envoy for the Horn of Africa Affairs, Xue Bing, delivered a message to President Yoweri Museveni last Thursday, in which Chinese President Xi Jinping expressed his support for the 1,445-km (898mile) pipeline, Museveni's office said.

"Chinese financial institutio­ns are open to discussion­s on the project and extended an invitation to Ms Ruth Nankabirwa, the Minister of Energy and Mineral Developmen­t, to visit China for further discussion­s," Museveni's office said.

The East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) will run from the oilfields in landlocked Uganda's west and terminate at Tanga port on Tanzania's Indian Ocean coast. "I am in full support of EACOP. I believe that it will enhance socio-economic developmen­t for the region," Museveni's office quoted Xi as saying in his letter.Discussion­s had already been going on between Uganda and Chinese export credit agency SINOSURE for possible funding but multiple deadlines for conclusion of those talks had passed without a resolution.

The constructi­on of the pipeline, which will be electrical­ly heated to keep the oil flowing, has started with the transporta­tion of pipes and other material to sites in Tanzania and Uganda.

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