The Citizen (Gauteng)

Firms in Moz suffer greatly

TOTAL: UNLIKELY TO RESUME WORK THIS YEAR Local SMEs have already lost R1.2bn since terrorist attacks on Palma, a town close to Total’s gas project.

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Mozambican businesses looking to cash in on Africa’s biggest private investment are facing disaster following attacks by Islamic State-linked militants on a town close to Total’s $20 billion (about R285 billion) natural gas export project.

The French oil major has begun terminatin­g business with at least some contractor­s working at the project site in Palma in northeaste­rn Mozambique, according to letters seen by Bloomberg. Total declined to comment. Hours after Total announced on 24 March, it was returning to work on its Mozambique liquefied-natural gas project stalled since January because of rising insecurity, more than 100 rebels began a raid on Palma. Dozens of people died, millions of dollars of property was damaged in the ensuing violence, and the company froze its plans to resume the project.

Julio Sethy, a businessma­n born in Palma who’s invested in property, a quarry and transport business in the provincial capital of Pemba, reckons it’s unlikely Total will restart this year. The consequenc­es for businesses like his are dire.

“It’s a complete disaster,” Sethy said in an interview last week. “We don’t know what’s going to happen.”

Small and medium-sized local enterprise­s have already lost $90 million (about R1.2 billion) since the attack on Palma, Agostinho Vuma, president of the Confederat­ion of Economic Associatio­ns of Mozambique, said in the capital, Maputo, on Tuesday.

The associatio­n is assessing how many contracts have been suspended, with at least two known so far, he said.

The insurgency that began in the northeast of the country in 2017 has left at least 2 780 people dead, according to the Cabo Ligado website, which tracks the conflict. It’s also displaced more than 700 000 people in Cabo Delgado province, and Pemba’s population has more than doubled as people seek safety in the city normally home to more than 200 000.

The Mozambican state had been hoping to reap nearly $100 billion in revenue over 25 years from LNG projects. So costly has been the delay to the start of gas production that the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has had to scale back its forecast for 2021 economic growth to just 2.1%, from 38% it projected in January 2016.

Total’s terminatio­n of contracts indicates it won’t restart work on the LNG facility for at least a year, Eurasia Group said in an e-mailed note yesterday. That will lead to significan­t delays in natural-gas revenues to the government, according to the New York-based company that monitors political risk for investor clients.

Total in 2019 bought its 26.5% stake in the Mozambique LNG project for $3.9 billion. The previous operator, Anadarko Petroleum Corporatio­n, reached a final investment decision the same year.

Total said the morning before the attack that the project had reached financial close and the first draw-down of the financing deal would take place at the start of this month.

With work now on hold indefinite­ly, Sethy said some of his tenants have cancelled their contracts, including an insurance company at will vacate by the end of the month.

More will leave as people fear there may be an attack on Pemba itself, he said. – Bloomberg

We don’t know what’s going to happen

 ?? Picture: Bloomberg ?? BOOM-BUST. Total has begun terminatin­g business with at least some contractor­s working at the project site in Palma, northeaste­rn Mozambique.
Picture: Bloomberg BOOM-BUST. Total has begun terminatin­g business with at least some contractor­s working at the project site in Palma, northeaste­rn Mozambique.

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