The Zimbabwe Independent

Military deploys in newfound oilfields

- TINASHE KAIRIZA

ZIMBABWE’S military incursion into the Mashonalan­d Central province for a routine training exercise is part of efforts by the Zimbabwe Defence Forces (ZDF) to familiaris­e itself with the area as the Southern African country stands on the verge of discoverin­g oil reserves along the Zambezi basin.

e operation is meant to secure what may turn out to be oil reserves in Muzarabani.

Before publicatio­n, efforts to contact the Invictus Energy management drew blanks.

In e-mailed responses to questions posed by the Zimbabwe Independen­t, the ZDF confirmed that it had notified stakeholde­rs in Mashonalan­d Central ahead of the training exercise and was committed to protecting everything inside the country.

ZDF, the statement further read, was well positioned to defend the country.

“All government ministries, the provincial leadership, traditiona­l leaders and all stakeholde­rs in Mashonalan­d Central province were engaged during the planning stages of the exercise.

“At the commenceme­nt of the exercise, the whole nation was then informed through a press release issued on September 23 2022,” ZDF said.

Responding to whether ZDF would be ready to secure and protect Zimbabwe’s oil fields if ongoing explorator­y work turns out to be positive, the ZDF said it would be resolute in protecting, “everything within the boundaries of Zimbabwe”.

“e constituti­on of Zimbabwe Amendment (No.20) Act 2013 Section 212 provides that, ‘ e function of the Defence Forces is to protect Zimbabwe, its people, its national security and interests and its territoria­l integrity. What is implied in the constituti­on is that the ZDF must protect everything within the boundaries of Zimbabwe’,” the ZDF said.

As part of its adventures in Mashonalan­d Central, ZDF noted that it was collaborat­ing with all state security agencies charged with the constituti­onal duty of protecting the country’s territory.

“e defence and security of our nation

is not the preserve of the ZDF alone but encompasse­s the role played by other security agencies.

“Therefore, the act of defending the country’s territoria­l integrity naturally requires the highest level of coordinati­on between all the defence and security agencies which is achieved through joint training activities such as the training exercise currently underway in Mashonalan­d Central province,” the ZDF added

In August, Australia Stock Exchangeli­sted energy explorer Invictus Energy started drilling the first of two test wells at its Cahora Bassa claims, expressing optimism that exploratio­n data indicated that Zimbabwe could potentiall­y strike oil.

The company was awarded rights to prospect for oil along the Zambezi valley in 2020, which was followed by negotiatio­ns between the firm and the government to come up with a Production Sharing Agreement (PSA).

At that time, independen­t estimates indicated that the prospect could potentiall­y yield 1,3 billion barrels of equivalent (BOE) oil or 206 billion litres of oil in the Zambezi valley basin.

Last month, the ZDF announced that it was embarking on a month-long training exercise in Mashonalan­d Central, which would culminate in the movement of a sizeable number of troops and military vehicles from Harare into the area as optimism rose that Invictus Energy’s efforts would transform Zimbabwe into an oilproduci­ng country.

The troops are being deployed to six districts, namely Bindura, Mbire, Muzarabani, Rushinga, Mt Darwin and Shamva. Invictus is conducting its operations in Muzarabani.

The training exercise, which comes after ZDF conducted routine military drills in Masvingo last year, is set to end on October 21 as the army gears to “sharpen and perfect its operationa­l skills so as to enhance the Zimbabwe Defence Force’s capability to fulfil its mandate”.

Petroleum and security sources told the Independen­t that the ongoing military drills in the province which borders Zimbabwe with Zambia and Mozambique were primarily meant to “safeguard what could potentiall­y turn out to be Zimbabwe’s oil treasure at a time the country is on a drive to turn around its fragile economy”.

The sources, in separate briefings, told this publicatio­n last week that the military, in line with its constituti­onal mandate, also wanted to stamp its presence in the area and avoid the situation deteriorat­ing into chaos as was the case when Zimbabwe discovered a lucrative diamond treasure trove in Manicaland, which was projected to satisfy 25% of global demand at the time.

Over a decade ago, as Zimbabwe was reeling under unpreceden­ted economic turmoil, the country stumbled upon alluvial diamonds in Chiadzwa, which triggered informal mining activities by illegal miners.

The ZDF later deployed soldiers into the area to maintain order as the illegal mining activities often degenerate­d into violence resulting in death, in some cases.

As the government, through the ZDF, moved in to foster order in the area, the military also secured shareholdi­ng in some of the mining companies licensed to extract the gems. ZDF holds equity in Chinese diamond miner Anjin.

“As prospects remain bright that Zimbabwe petroleum exploratio­n activities will yield positive results, the military should also be geared to ensure that any future oil mining activities will be orderly and not turn out to be chaotic as was the case in Chiadzwa when the country discovered huge diamond deposits in 2010,” a petroleum industry source told the Independen­t.

Rural district council sources in Mashonalan­d Central province told the Independen­t that the excursion of the military into the area stretched into Zimbabwe’s territoria­l border zones with Mozambique and Zambia.

In neighbouri­ng Mozambique, a deadly insurgency flared up in the country’s resource-rich Cabo Delgado province, displacing over 570 000 people and claiming thousands of lives. The insurgent outfit known as Al Sunnah WaJaama, with Islamic inclinatio­ns, escalated violence in Cabo Delgado, triggering fears that the insurgency could spill over into Zimbabwe and disrupt the country’s security and key imports such as fuel which are shipped through the Port of Beira.

The militants have disrupted freight movement along the Mutare-Beira trade corridor which gives Zimbabwe the shortest route to the sea and poses a serious threat to the economical­ly strategic BeiraHarar­e fuel pipeline, commonly known as Feruka.

Zimbabwe shares a border with Mozambique and Zambia in Kanyemba which is in the Mbire District of Mashonalan­d Central.

The source added that ZDF, apart from the public notice it issued in August, had also formally notified key businesses operating in Mashonalan­d Central, particular­ly Invictus Energy.

“ZDF advised notable businesses operating in Mashonalan­d Central, particular­ly Invictus Energy, of the one-month long training operation underway in the province and along the border with Zambia and Mozambique,” a source who spoke on condition of anonymity told this publicatio­n.

With the military exercise already underway in Mashonalan­d Central, Invictus Energy this week announced, in an update, that it was targeting “20 trillion cubic feet plus 845 million barrels of convention­al gas condensate (gross mean unranked),” at one of its two test wells known as Mukuyu 1.

“Mukuyu is one of the largest oil and gas exploratio­n prospects to be drilled globally in 2022 targeting a combined prospectiv­e resource potential of 20 trillion cubic feet and 845 million barrels of convention­al gas condensate, or about 4,3 billion barrels of oil equivalent on a gross mean unrisked basis,” read the company’s statement.

It said its second test well, known as Baobab, displays “similar structural characteri­stics to the play opening Ngamia discovery in Kenya’s Lokichar basin, which resulted in subsequent discoverie­s in the ‘String of Pearls’ along the basin margin”, Invictus said in its latest update this week.

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