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This is an article from June which many may have seen but Im...

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    This is an article from June which many may have seen but Im offering it to balance the previous post. A quote is pasted also.

    "Senegal’s reputation as one of the continent’s more stable countries, reaffirmed after a smooth executive handover in 2012, already makes it an attractive prospect for investors. While inflation remains a definite concern due to potential petro windfalls – as was the result of Ghana operationalising it’s oil finds in 2010 – and fighting the resource curse remains a challenge for a variety of African policy-makers, successful exploration in Senegal would provide it with an opportunity to drastically improve its economic development."

    http://asokoinsight.com/news/tapping-into-senegal-africas-next-oil-frontier/


    Tapping into Senegal

    Africa’s next oil frontier?







    By Doreen Akiyo Yomoah| AsokoNews
    12 June 2014



    Cairn Energy offshore platform, Sagomar Deep block, 100km off the coast of Dakar, Senegal

    Guillaume Bassinet for Cairn Energy Plc




    Senegal has yet to make a name for itself as one of Africa’s new oil-producing countries, but that may change soon. Three years ago, Bloomberg reported that there were plans in the works to begin exploratory drilling in three offshore oil blocks by 2012. One block, owned by Australian oil and gas company FAR Ltd, is estimated to have one billion barrels of crude oil. In February 2014, the company announced that it had obtained US $5 million in financing from Capricorn Senegal Ltd, a fully owned subsidiary of the UK’s Cairn Energy Plc. Cairn is listed on the London Stock Exchange (LSE) and is headquartered in Edinburgh.

    Cairn announced in April 2013 that it had secured a long-term contract with Transocean Ltd, a Swiss offshore drilling contractor, saying that the company would begin operations with the Cajun Express, “a deep water, fifth generation, dynamically positioned, semi-submersible drilling unit.” The rig will be used for exploration projects in Morocco as well as Senegal, according to the Wall Street Journal.

    Cairn, along with the Senegal Petroleum Society (PETROSEN), a public body, has commenced Sangomar Deep, an oil exploration project about 100km away from Dakar. The project will have two phases, exploring two wells in succession. In April 2014, FAR, Cairn and PETROSEN began drilling the first well, Fan-1, which is the country’s first offshore oil platform in 20 years. Fan-1 is jointly owned by Cairn, with a 40% share, and PETROSEN, with a 10% share. FAR Ltd owns 15% while American multination ConocoPhillips owns 35%.
    FAR also had plans to drill two more sites: Sangomar and Rufisque Offshore. The company estimates that its blocks contain 3.59 billion barrels of oil. British company Ophir Energy Plc and US-based Noble Energy Inc are exploring a third block, co-owned by Senegal and Guinea Bissau.
    Fan-1, in Sangomar Deep’s northern territory, is 1,500m deep and may contain up to 900 million barrels of reserves. The second well is in the southeast and is expected at a depth of 1,100m.
    Great Expectations

    FAR’s Sangomar and Sangomar Deep offshore Production Sharing Contract covers roughly 7,490 square kilometres over the shelf, slope, and basin floor of Senegal’s portion of the Mauritania-Senegal-Guinea-Bissau basin. The basin is considered by many oil and gas companies to be a point of entry to West Africa.

    PETROSEN director Mamadou Faye said that the operation is projected to make close to a million dollars per day, adding, however, that beginning exploration does not necessarily guarantee that the project will be a success. Sangomar’s exploration phase is expected to take four to six months.

    Senegal’s Prime Minister, Aminata Touré, welcomed the project, saying that although oil exploration is a long process, the state is optimistic about the benefit. Touré, along with energy minister Maïmouna Ndoye Seck, was also part of a delegation that visited the Fan-1 project on May 16th.
    Overcoming the oil curse?

    Despite Africa’s “economic miracle” and recent oil discoveries, many countries across the continent have to cope with low levels of domestic energy sources and unreliable access to power. Currently, only about 40% of Senegalese households have access to electricity.
    The implementation of domestic production would therefore be a first step at creating petro self sufficiency, as oil accounts for 40% of Senegal’s energy supply and all petroleum products are imported (biomass represents up to 53% of the energy mix). Domestic supply and employment opportunities are therefore on the minds of many.
    Senegal’s reputation as one of the continent’s more stable countries, reaffirmed after a smooth executive handover in 2012, already makes it an attractive prospect for investors. While inflation remains a definite concern due to potential petro windfalls – as was the result of Ghana operationalising it’s oil finds in 2010 – and fighting the resource curse remains a challenge for a variety of African policy-makers, successful exploration in Senegal would provide it with an opportunity to drastically improve its economic development.




    Doreen Akiyo Yomoah is a freelance writer living in Dakar. Her work has appeared in The Atlantic, The Guardian, and NPR.
 
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