REF: KAMPALA 981 ¶1. (SBU) Summary. While DRCs petroleum - TopicsExpress



          

REF: KAMPALA 981 ¶1. (SBU) Summary. While DRCs petroleum production has stagnated, international interest in exploring the DRCs potential reserves has expanded. French company Perenco currently operates the only two producing concessions, although the GDRC recently granted three new concessions for exploration. The Coastal Basin, Central Basin and the Rift in eastern Congo are the three potential reserve areas, although very little geological data exists for the latter two. While the GDRC welcomes investment, its lack of data, infrastructure, transparency, and knowledgeable government officials hinder development in this potentially lucrative sector. End summary. Current production ------------------ ¶2. (SBU) The DRCs crude oil production, which consists of one offshore and one onshore concession, averaged about 25,000 barrels of semi-heavy crude per day in 2005, totaling just over 9.2 million barrels for the year. According to the Congolese Central Bank, the DRCs 2005 crude oil export revenue was USD 452.7 million, representing about 22 percent of total export revenue. (Comment: The DRCs official statistics are of questionable reliability and should only serve as general benchmarks. End comment.) ¶3. (SBU) The French company Perenco operates both concessions. Chevron-Texaco has a 17 percent interest in the offshore concession as the result of its 2005 Unocal acquisition; a Japanese company, Teikoku, owns 32 percent, and Cohydro (the DRCs petroleum holding company and retail parastatal) 20 percent. Exploration rights run through 2034. Chevrons DRC representative says this operation produces about 14,000 barrels per day, although it produced about 22,000 barrels per day before Perencos purchase of the concession from Total in 2000. Production has decreased because Perenco has not invested in exploration and equipment modernization and because the global production surge has tripled the cost of oil rigs. However, Perencos DRC director says the company is in the process of cleaning and modernizing the wells. The GDRC receives about sixty percent of net offshore petroleum revenues, payable upon each petroleum sale. Chevron receives 17 percent of the oil produced, which it sells primarily through its U.S.-based trading company. The U.S. imported USD 118 million worth of petroleum from the DRC in 2005. ¶4. (SBU) Perenco currently produces 9,000 to 10,000 barrels per day on its 200 to 250 square mile onshore block. Cohydro, the DRCs petroleum parastatal, has a 15 percent joint venture interest. Perenco pays the GDRC 12.5 percent in royalties (payable directly to the DRCs income tax agency) and about 40 percent of net revenues, payable to the DRCs Administrative fee collection agency. The exploration rights run through 2029. Possible production areas ------------------------- ¶5. (SBU) The DRC has three actual and/or potential production areas: the Coastal Basin, the Central Basin and the Eastern border region (Graben Albertine). Joseph Pili-pili, the Ministry of Energys Director of Petroleum Projects, says that all onshore areas combined may contain an estimated 500 million barrels, although this can be no more than a rough (and optimistic) guess. Only the coastal basin is currently being exploited or explored. The 391 square mile offshore portion, Perencos concession, includes all of the DRCs territorial waters. The onshore area, including Perencos concession, is an estimated 3700 square miles and is part of the generally peaceful Bas-Congo province, adjacent to Angolas Cabinda region. ¶6. (SBU) A Polish-owned company, King and King, had five-year onshore exploration rights that expired in late 2005. The reversion of King and Kings rights prompted the then-outgoing Minister of Energy to split the area into five blocks and to launch a round of negotiations for them, even though EconOff was told that King and King is in litigation with the GDRC over this reversion. The Minister of Energy KINSHASA 00001364 002 OF 004 granted three blocks to a company called Surestream, (a company that Perencos director said is likely to resell its rights), and one to London-based Soco, a portion of which is Senegalese-owned. Toronto Stock Exchange-listed EnerGulf obtained a 260 square mile block that its CEO estimates has 90 million barrels of recoverable reserves. Surestream has received presidential approval, but EnerGulf and Soco have not, although EnerGulfs Board Chairman told EconOffs that his company already paid the USD 500,000 signing bonus. The World Banks (WB) Resident Representative, Jean-Michel Happi, said the IMF and WB asked the GDRC to refrain from signing contracts in the natural resource sector during the IMFs Staff-Monitored Program, which will run at least through December 2006. ¶7. (SBU) Prospects for Coastal Basin exploration may increase if the GDRC is able to reach agreement with the Government of Angola over the proposed Joint Development Zone (JDZ). Pili-pili said that in 2003 the GDRC and GOA signed a memorandum of understanding on the JDZ. Although the GOAs Council of Ministers approved a final document, the GDRC has not yet done so. Chevrons representative says the current draft would entitle the GDRC to half of all petroleum revenue Congolese entities discover within the zone, while the GOA would receive all proceeds on petroleum that Angolan entities discover. Part of the delay is undoubtedly due to a difference in interpretation of the draft accord. According to the Chevron representative, the Angolans view the agreement as merely giving the DRC exploration rights and access to commercial sea lanes, while the GDRC views the agreement as impacting unclear maritime boundaries. Another obstacle is an internal GDRC dispute; while the respective Energy vice-ministers negotiated the agreement, the DRCs Ministry of Foreign Affairs now wants to take over negotiations. (Note: Vice President Bembas MLC controls the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in the transitional government, while the PPRD, the party with which President Kabila is affiliated, controls the Ministry of Energy. End note.) ¶8. (SBU) The Central Basin stretches across the provinces of Mbandanka, Bandundu and Equateur. Pili-pili optimistically asserts that this basin includes the two Kasai provinces and Maniema province, and that it totals 500,000 square miles. He also said reserves have recently been discovered in the Republic of Congo (ROC) near the DRCs border, indicating a strong possibility of petroleum reserves on the DRCs side, and that the GDRC has an agreement with the ROC to share data that comes from sample wells in either countrys border region. ¶9. (SBU) The Graben Albertine area of eastern Congo runs along the Ugandan border in North Kivu province and in Ituri District, consists of five blocks, includes Lakes Albert and Edward, and covers 31,000 square miles, according to Pili-pili. This region is virtually unexplored, and its potential unknown, despite interest over the years from various petroleum companies including Amoco, Exxon, and most recently, U.K.-based Tullow Oil. Pili-pili said that the GDRC launched a tender offer in 2004, and that two Chinese companies, two Angolan companies and one South African company made offers but that none ultimately obtained concession rights. Although there are no plans yet to launch a new tender offer, the GDRC is negotiating with the Canadian company Heritage, which is also exploring on the Ugandan side of the border (reftel). ¶10. (SBU) Particular interest focuses on potential reserves under Lake Albert, divided by the DRC-Ugandan border. According to Jean-Pierre Bembas Chief of Staff, the GDRC and GOU have an agreement to share geological data, but there is no evidence this is occurring. The GOU has also reportedly tried unsuccessfully to convince the GDRC to have seismic tests conducted in Lake Albert. In addition to Heritage, Australian petroleum firm Hardman Resources is exploring on the Ugandan side of the lake. (Comment: Such exploration raises potentially sticky border issues. End comment.) The Ministry of Energy would like to reach an agreement with Heritage so that it can have data for both sides of the border, and in turn, possibly mitigate a cross-border resource-sharing dispute. Obstacles to investing KINSHASA 00001364 003 OF 004 ---------------------- ¶11. (SBU) Corruption and a lack of infrastructure, data, and government officials with substantive expertise are all obstacles to investment. The Hydrocarbon Code and the 2002 Investment Code are supposed to govern petroleum investment, and there is a separate document outlining steps for obtaining exploration and exploitation rights. However, EconOffs and EconCouns observations indicate that the GDRC only loosely follows its own stated procedures and that the concession-granting process is far from transparent. ¶12. (SBU) Further, the GDRC often fails to respect legal requirements to retrocede tax revenues back to the provincial or local levels. Residents of Moanda, the Bas-Congo town near which Perenco is based, blame Perenco for the resulting lack of social and infrastructure development, erroneously believing that Perenco does not pay royalties and taxes due to the GDRC. Indeed, the separatist group Bunda dia Kongo has organized river and road blockades to impede Perencos operations. ¶13. (SBU) The GDRC has little reliable geological data, partly because Cohydro does not use its revenue to improve its geological database. (Note: Similarly, one oil company manager said Cohydro is a bloated parastatal that fails to use its revenue from Perenco - about USD 4.5 million per month - to develop the company. End note.) Bembas Chief of Staff, a former petroleum sector executive, agrees that the GDRC desperately needs a good databank. Houston-based Fusion Petroleum Technologies entered into an agreement in 2005 with Cohydro to conduct an assessment of potential DRC reserves. According to Pili-pili, the survey will cost Fusion USD 5 to 10 million, which it will recoup by selling the data to oil exploration companies. ¶14. (SBU) The GDRC also has little petroleum sector expertise, which one petroleum sector manager called a big mistake, contrasting the GDRC with the Angolan governments substantial expertise. Part of the reason for this dearth of a knowledge base is that the Belgians, more interested in the DRCs mining sector, did not promote petroleum sector training and education among the Congolese. Another petroleum sector contact said that the Belgians only drilled a few sample wells, and oil was not discovered in the DRC until 1969. ¶15. (U) Further, the DRC lacks a developed infrastructure able to support substantial exploration and, more importantly, exploitation. Road and rail transport, water and electricity are the key underdeveloped sectors, and reliable telecommunications are also unavailable in many parts of the country. Poor infrastructure has the greatest impact on Central Basin exploration because much of that area is in the countrys interior, some of which is essentially inaccessible equatorial forest. Conversely, the other two regions at least have access to transport via the Atlantic Ocean on one side and Ugandan, Rwandan and Tanzanian road and rail systems in the East. Only two pipelines, both from Matadi to Kinshasa, exist, although the GDRC has a preliminary plan to develop a pipeline network to support future Central Basin production. ¶16. (U) Although the WB and other multilateral and bilateral donors are pouring millions of dollars into various infrastructure projects throughout the DRC, Post is not aware of any efforts particularly targeting development of the petroleum sector. (Note: Pili-pili told EconOff that the WB funded petroleum research in the late 1980s, but that civil unrest in the DRC and discoveries in the former Soviet Union turned interested companies such as Exxon and Amoco away from exploration in the Congo. End note.) Refining capacity ----------------- ¶17. (U) The DRC has one petroleum refinery, SOCIR, but it currently functions only as a storage facility, with Swiss and French managers. The facility was built in 1967 to refine light crude from the Middle East, with a 750,000 barrels per day capacity. It ceased operations in the late 90s. KINSHASA 00001364 004 OF 004 Consumption and import ---------------------- ¶18. (U) Chevrons representative told EconOff that the DRC market consumes about 60-70 percent light crude, and 30-40 percent heavy fuel. The DRC parastatal SEP-Congo imports petroleum for the western Congo (reftel B); various South African sources supply Katanga province; and Ugandan, Rwandan, Burundian and Kenyan sources supply eastern Congo. An inter-ministerial commission sets the price of petroleum products, although outside of Kinshasa and Bas-Congo high transportation expenses cause shortages that frequently force dealers to sell above the GDRCs fixed price. COMMENT ------- ¶18. (SBU) With the high price of petroleum and increasing stability in the DRC, many exploration companies, including at least two large American entities, are examining possibilities here and all along the west coast of Africa. Until recently, beyond Perencos concessions only small, little-known companies have ventured into the sector, while larger corporations have perhaps wisely been taking a more cautious approach. End comment. MEECE
Posted on: Mon, 21 Apr 2014 11:58:26 +0000

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