Sayed Farouk, chairman of The Arab Contractors, talks to The Energy Year about trends and prospects the company sees in the Egyptian and regional energy construction…
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Oil reserves:1.4 billion barrels
Gas reserves:14.2 bcm
Uganda’s oil and gas industry is attempting to quickly build up its infrastructure to take advantage of opportunities found in recent hydrocarbons discoveries before the world transitions away from fossil fuels towards more sustainable energy sources. Since oil was first discovered in 2006, the government has put comprehensive measures in place to ensure the efficient and value-added development of the nation’s petroleum resources, most of which are found alongside its western border with the Democratic Republic of Congo. More than 20% of Uganda’s impressive oil and gas reserves are thought to be recoverable.
Uganda’s petroleum industry is regulated by the Petroleum Authority of Uganda in tandem with the state-run Uganda National Oil Company, which heads its upstream operations. The Ministry of Energy and Mineral Development is the government entity responsible for developing and managing the nation’s energy resources. The country has successfully attracted international players such as TotalEnergies and China National Offshore Oil Corporation in developing the country’s upstream, midstream and downstream potential.
While being East Africa’s third-largest economy, more than 60% of Ugandan citizens lack adequate energy supply. Greenfield investments in the upstream industry have the potential to halt the country’s reliance on energy imports and add to its economic development through exports to the region. The country has significant renewable energy potential, including hydropower, biomass, solar, geothermal, wind and peat. Uganda National Renewable Energy Efficiency Alliance cites the country’s overall renewable energy potential as 5.3 GW.
“The energy industry is crucial, especially because of associated industries like infrastructure, processing and fabrication. Activity will not happen if there is no electricity. Electricity and other forms of energy are essential,” Ugandan President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni told the Energy Year. “Oil is finite and exhaustible, so we should use the oil money to create durable capacity. This capacity will be for modernising our railways, our energy and our transportation. That will attract the business that needs this infrastructure, especially manufacturing.”
Uganda's energy minister says the country is exploring for oil in two new regions.
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Equatorial Guinea is in talks with commodities giant Trafigura for USD 2 billion in oil financing.
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TotalEnergies has acquired a portfolio of hydropower projects in Uganda, Rwanda and Malawi.
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The East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) will deliver crude from Uganda's Lake Albert upstream projects to the Tanzanian port…
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The government of Uganda has more than doubled its budget for oil industry spending for the coming year.
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Uganda is targeting net-zero emissions from its booming energy industry by 2062.
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TotalEnergies has hired former prime minister of Benin Lionel Zinsou to assess its land acquisition programme related to its…
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Sayed Farouk, chairman of The Arab Contractors, talks to The Energy Year about trends and prospects the company sees in the Egyptian and regional energy construction…
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Tom Okurut, executive director of the National Environment Management Authority (NEMA), talks to The Energy Year about the agency’s role in the development of…
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TotalEnergies, through local subsidiary Total E&P Uganda, has awarded five drilling packages reportedly worth almost $600 million for its Tilenga oil project in…
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A McDermott-Sinopec consortium has received a conditional letter of award for a USD 1.9-billion contract to provide EPCC services to Uganda’s Total-led Tilenga…
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Anne Juuko, chief executive of Stanbic Bank Uganda, talks to The Energy Year about the recent evolution of investor confidence in Uganda, the bank’s role in the…
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Ugandan authorities will launch tenders for the construction of major projects related to the country’s oil developments in December, the country’s petroleum authority…
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Lawrence Byensi, director-general of the Uganda Investment Authority (UIA), talks to The Energy Year about how UIA has made it easier to do business in Uganda and the…
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Ernest Rubondo, executive director of the Petroleum Authority of Uganda (PAU), talks to The Energy Year about the competitive advantages of investing in Uganda’s oil…
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Ugandan President H.E. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni talks to The Energy Year about the economic transformation the country is undergoing, the role of the energy industry in…
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Uganda expects to add 60,000 direct and indirect jobs as a result of the tripartite agreement to develop its Lake Albert oil resources, the country’s energy minister…
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