Business Day (Nigeria)

South Africa searches for partners for South Sudan oil block

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South Africa’s Strategic Fuel Fund is welcome to bring in partners to help it execute a $1-billion agreement to drill for oil and build a refinery and pipeline in South Sudan, the central African nation’s oil minister said.

Under the agreement, signed between the two government­s on May 6, the Strategic Fuel Fund holds 90 percent of the project in B2 Block with the Nile

Petroleum Corp., South Sudan’s national oil company, owning the rest, Ezekiel Gatkuoth, Minister of Petroleum, South Sudan, said in an interview at Bloomberg’s office in Johannesbu­rg after earlier meeting his South African counterpar­t. The project, which Gatkuoth expects to reach production in about six years, includes the constructi­on of a 60,000-bpd oil refinery in Pagak, he said.

“They have room to farm in” a partner, the South Sudanese minister said, adding that his government has the right to approve any partners and that a transactio­n would be subject to capital gains tax.

The partnershi­p should benefit South Sudan by boosting production in a nation where output is half of what it was before a civil war, while securing energy supplies for South Africa, which imports crude for its refineries as it has little oil production of its own. Gatkuoth acknowledg­ed that the project is likely to cost more than $1 billion.

In addition to bringing new partners into its oil fields, South Sudan is trying to diversify export routes for its oil.

Currently it exports oil through Sudan, the country from which it seceded acrimoniou­sly in 2011, at a cost of $24/ bbl, but it is now considerin­g paying Uganda a fee to transport crude south to a port in Tanzania when new pipelines are built, Gatkuoth said. Exports through Ethiopia could also be an option.

The B2 Block was once part of an area held by Total SA until 1985 that was the size of Pennsylvan­ia.

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