The Phnom Penh Post

Dreams of economic boom

- Susan Njanji and Adrien Barbier

THE small, palm-fringed fishing town of Palma was meant to become a symbol of Mozambique’s glittering future, transforme­d by one of the world’s largest liquefied natural gas projects.

But constructi­on has fallen far behind schedule and the town’s fate is uncertain after gas prices fell and the government became engulfed in a $2 billion debt scandal.

Tucked between the Indian Ocean and tropical forests, Palma remains a sleepy village of 3,000, still waiting for the arrival of jobs and infrastruc­ture.

The discovery of gas reserves in 2010, estimated at 180 trillion cubic feet (5 trillion cubic metres) in the surroundin­g Rovuma Basin, was the biggest natural gas find in recent decades.

Experts have predicted that Mozambique could become the world’s thirdlarge­st exporter of liquefied natural gas (LNG) – and an African version of wealthy Qatar.

Plans to exploit the reserves moved fast, and Palma’s residents were soon looking for opportunit­ies to lift themselves out of poverty in one of the world’s poorest nations.

“It’s only through such projects that we will get proper jobs because otherwise we just depend on the sea,” said 46-year-old fisherman Pedro AbudaNcham­o.

Since the discovery of the gas, the face of the town has started to change.

Excavators and constructi­on vehicles are working on the planned liquefacti­on plant and export facilities.

A gated residentia­l complex for the anticipate­d influx of skilled workers is almost ready, and the town’s first shopping mall is being built.

But the much-touted gas project has run into strong headwinds.

Initial estimates were that the first LNG would come on stream in 2016 but now it is expected in 2023 – or later.

The plunge in global gas prices has led energy companies to slow down capital expenditur­e.

Meanwhile the government in Maputo is caught up in a debt scandal that has triggered an economic crisis.

News emerged last year that the government had borrowed massively – including three secret loans amounting to $2 billion – between 2012 and 2014 to fund a coastal protection project. As a result, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and World Bank have suspended budgetary support.

The loans, which the government is unable to repay, were taken out in anticipati­on of the gas windfall.

“The government thought it would repay the loans with gas money,” said Borges Nhamire, analyst with CIP, an anti-corruption non-government­al organisati­on.

Analysts fear that Mozambique’s state-owned Empresa Nacional de Hidrocarbo­netos (ENH), a minority partner in the gas project, may now struggle to raise its contributi­on of the share capital – although ENH insists it will honour its share of the deal.

Meanwhile, other players in the multibilli­on-dollar gas project appear to be making investment decisions.

In March Exxon announced that it was buying for $28 billion, a 25 percent stake in Italian energy giant ENI’s Mozambique gas resource.

That same month another major player, US oil and natural gas company Anadarko, also said it was investing $770 million in its deepwater project in Mozambique where it “expects to continue advancing” and that it has “made good progress on the legal and contractua­l framework”.

But Nhamire said it will take a “long time” for any benefits from the gas project to reach average Mozambican­s.

The long-running conflict between the ruling Frelimo party and opposition Renamo fighters engaged in a low-key armed insurgency resurfaced in 2013, but a ceasefire in place since December has raised hopes of progress towards permanent peace.

Yet the debt controvers­y has dented investor confidence.

“It’s been really a pretty serious disaster that impacted right throughout the economy,” said Peter Fabricius, a consultant with the South Africa-based Institute of Security Studies.

“What it does indicate is serious deficiency in governance and that is at the heart of any discussion about whether resources are going to become a blessing or a curse.”

For a decade until 2014, Mozambique experience­d growth of more than 7 percent annually, fuelled by foreign capital inflows on the back of coal and natural gas discoverie­s. But growth has slowed by half from 6.6 percent in 2015 to 3.3 percent last year, and the central bank in April forecast “a continuati­on of the weakening of economic activity”.

“Foreign direct investment declined by 20 percent indicating a decline in confidence in the economy,” said the World Bank in its country overview.

For Palma residents, delays in the start of the gas project are breeding anxiety and frustratio­n.

“They promised that when the companies come we would get jobs but until now it has not happen and people are complainin­g,” said Amade Mussa, a village leader.

The government insists the project is on track and local people will benefit even as some have to be relocated for the constructi­on of the gas terminal.

“Our priority is to take that community out of poverty,” Land Minister Celso Correa said.

 ?? JOHN WESSELS/AFP ?? A man sits at his work station on the main road in Palma, where large deposits of natural gas where found offshore.
JOHN WESSELS/AFP A man sits at his work station on the main road in Palma, where large deposits of natural gas where found offshore.

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