National Post

Fading hope for Canadians in Kenya

As Obama welcomed, corruption looms

- By Peter Koven

U.S. President Barack Obama’s visit to Kenya, which begins on Friday, is an event that country’s government has awaited for years. With the world’s attention focused on Kenya, the birthplace of Obama’s father, the East African nation has an opportunit­y to show it welcomes foreign investment and does not tolerate corruption.

As such, one of the last topics the government wants anyone to bring up is Canadian resource companies that are fighting it in court.

Two small companies, Vanoil Energy Ltd. and Pacific Wildcat Resources Corp., have begun internatio­nal arbitratio­n cases against Kenya, claiming they lost access to their properties under very peculiar circumstan­ces. Vanoil is seeking US$150 million (and is threatenin­g additional litigation), while Pacific Wildcat wants more than US$2 billion, according to a report.

Interviews with executives at the two companies paint a troublesom­e portrait of Kenyan government officials willing to push out companies that own concession­s.

Kenya has traditiona­lly been viewed as one of Africa’s most attractive places to invest, but political risk, along with a tenuous security situation, are harming that perception. In the Fraser Institute’s latest rankings of mining jurisdicti­ons, Kenya was ranked the worst place to invest in Africa, and third worst in the world.

Clare Allenson, an Africa analyst at the Eurasia Group, said political corruption has been a significan­t challenge in Kenya’s resource sector (though not in other industries). “Particular­ly the mining sector has been bogged down by corruption,” she said.

President Uhuru Kenyatta has taken the issue seriously. Last March, he suspended five ministers over corruption, including energy minister Davis Chirchir. He has tried to make the anti-corruption crackdown one of his priorities.

But the experience­s of Vanoil and Pacific Wildcat suggest there may be more work to do.

“By the middle of 2014, we realized the Kenyan government had no interest in negotiatin­g in good faith,” Vanoil chief executive Don Padgett recalled.

Vanoil got involved in Kenya almost a decade ago, when it was awarded a couple of drilling concession­s. Chairman James Passin was a firm believer that there were commercial hydrocarbo­ns in Kenya, and he was proven right. In recent years, companies like Africa Oil Corp., Tullow Oil PLC and Vanoil made substantia­l discoverie­s in the area and have piqued the interest of Big Oil.

The trouble for Vanoil started in mid-2013. The Vancouverb­ased company was setting up its exploratio­n drill rig in Kenya just as the security situation was deteriorat­ing in the country’s Garissa province. A local governor asked the firm to halt its work during the unrest, and Vanoil agreed to do so.

However, the company had a requiremen­t in its production­sharing contract that the first well needed to be drilled by September 2013. Vanoil assumed it could negotiate an extension, given it halted work at the request of a politician. But within a few months, relations between the company and the government deteriorat­ed and they never reached an agreement.

Padgett suspects government insiders wanted to seize the Vanoil concession­s and sell them off to large oil companies.

“It was clear to us that the government, or certain people within the government, were looking at our concession­s,” he said.

In particular, Vanoil pointed its finger at Chirchir, the suspended energy minister. Chirchir has been engulfed in a separate scandal, as he and other officials are accused of accepting bribes from convicted British executives hoping to win printing contracts in Kenya. The debacle has been nicknamed “Chickengat­e,” with “chicken” the alleged code name for the bribes.

Vanoil began an arbitratio­n claim, seeing no other opportunit­y to recoup its funds. Kenyan attorney general Githu Mui- gai invited Padgett to Kenya to discuss the situation, and after a couple of false starts, Padgett arrived in Nairobi for a meeting last January.

“The attorney general comes in with at least 12 of his henchmen,” Padgett said. “And who walks in at the end but Davis Chirchir, whose name is all over our (legal) complaints.”

According to Padgett, Muigai pleaded with him to keep the dispute quiet and hold off on arbitratio­n, claiming the government needed time to resolve the situation.

Vanoil said it has heard nothing encouragin­g from Nairobi since that date. The company has filed its initial arbitratio­n claim, and can set the process in motion by selecting an arbitrator. Padgett hopes a cash settlement can be reached instead.

The Pacific Wildcat case is a bit different, as that company’s licence was actually revoked. Pacific Wildcat, which is based in British Columbia but is led by a group of Australian­s and South Africans, started drilling its Mrima Hill niobium project in Kenya in 2010. The drill results were encouragin­g, and the firm eventually received a mining lease in March 2013.

The trouble started a few months later, when Najib Balala became mining minister. Balala, who has faced corruption inquiries, promptly cancelled licences held by 42 companies, including Pacific Wildcat’s Kenyan subsidiary. The company challenged the suspension in Kenyan court, and lost.

Meetings were organized with senior government officials to try to resolve the situation. But they didn’t go the way Pacific Wildcat hoped.

David Anderson, managing director of the firm’s Kenyan unit, said officials told him the government should have a stake in the Mrima Hill project. They proposed a solution: the mining licence should be transferre­d to a new company, with Kenya receiving a free carried interest of 10 per cent to 50 per cent. Kenya has called for a 10 per cent interest in other projects as part of a new mining law, but in this case, it hoped to get up to half of it for free.

“This left our chairman and CEO speechless,” Anderson said in an emailed response to questions. “We were told to go and think about it or there would be no restoratio­n of our licence.”

John Lanyasunya, Kenya’s high commission­er to Canada, said he was not familiar with the Vanoil and Pacific Wildcat disputes. But he noted that some Kenyan mining licences were revoked because companies either did nothing with them, or the government wanted to review some terms to make sure they were fair to the state.

“No company has been locked out,” he said. “They are still all welcome to participat­e in the mining industry of Kenya.”

Still, these disputes have become potential red flags for anyone looking to invest in Kenya. Allenson said corruption concerns have deterred foreign investment, especially from firms based in countries with antibriber­y regulation­s (of which Canada is one).

She added that President Kenyatta’s crackdown has lost momentum in Kenya. Just five days after he suspended the ministers suspected of corruption, terrorists murdered 147 people in an attack at the Garissa University College. Understand­ably, that tragedy consumed the government’s attention.

The country’s tenuous security situation will be an important talking point when Obama and Kenyatta meet. But some foreign investors in Kenya hope Obama’s visit will also highlight corruption concerns. Kenya is blessed with vast untapped resources, particular­ly oil, but political uncertaint­y remains a major overhang.

No company has been locked out. They are still all welcome to participat­e

 ?? Ben Curt
is / The Associated
Pres ?? A a mural of President Barack Obama, created by the Kenyan graffiti artist Bankslave, in Nairobi. The U.S. president arrives in Kenya on Friday.
Ben Curt is / The Associated Pres A a mural of President Barack Obama, created by the Kenyan graffiti artist Bankslave, in Nairobi. The U.S. president arrives in Kenya on Friday.
 ?? Pacific Wildcat . ?? Pacific Wildcat started drilling its Mrima Hill niobium project in Kenya in 2010. The drill results were encouragin­g and the firm received a mining lease in 2013. But trouble started a few months later, when Najib Balala became mining minister and...
Pacific Wildcat . Pacific Wildcat started drilling its Mrima Hill niobium project in Kenya in 2010. The drill results were encouragin­g and the firm received a mining lease in 2013. But trouble started a few months later, when Najib Balala became mining minister and...
 ?? STRINGER / AFP / Gett
y Images ?? President Uhuru Kenyatta’s crackdown on corruption
is said to have lost momentum in Kenya.
STRINGER / AFP / Gett y Images President Uhuru Kenyatta’s crackdown on corruption is said to have lost momentum in Kenya.

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