Showing posts tagged as "Oil"

Showing posts tagged Oil

15 Nov
Iraqi Kurdistan Pushes Limits on Oil, Autonomy | Voice of America
By Mark Snowiss
With Kurds asserting themselves throughout the Middle East, Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region has stepped up its profile on the world’s oil scene.
A series of recent petroleum deals signals a direct challenge to Baghdad’s claim of total control over the country’s oil exports and a possible step by the Kurds toward their longstanding aspirations for increased autonomy, or outright independence.
Within the last few months, Iraq’s Kurdistan Regional Government, or KRG, has begun construction on a major international oil and gas pipeline project with neighboring Turkey that would allow the Kurds direct access to world markets via the Mediterranean.
FULL ARTICLE (Voice of America)
Photo: jan Sefti/Flickr

Iraqi Kurdistan Pushes Limits on Oil, Autonomy | Voice of America

By Mark Snowiss

With Kurds asserting themselves throughout the Middle East, Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region has stepped up its profile on the world’s oil scene.

A series of recent petroleum deals signals a direct challenge to Baghdad’s claim of total control over the country’s oil exports and a possible step by the Kurds toward their longstanding aspirations for increased autonomy, or outright independence.

Within the last few months, Iraq’s Kurdistan Regional Government, or KRG, has begun construction on a major international oil and gas pipeline project with neighboring Turkey that would allow the Kurds direct access to world markets via the Mediterranean.

FULL ARTICLE (Voice of America)

Photo: jan Sefti/Flickr

12 Sep
"التصالح بين حكومة المالكي والأكراد وإقامة علاقات ودية بينهما أمر غير مرجح، وإن أي اتفاق جديد سيكون مجرد وسيلة مؤقتة لتلبية احتياجاتهم الحالية فقط"

—Joost Hiltermann, Crisis Group’s MENA Deputy Program Director, on developments in Kurdistan’s oil industry and their impact on Kurdistan’s relationship with the Iraqi central government, in “Iraq’s Oil Battle”, Asharq Alawsat

(Source: crisisgroup.org)

6 Sep
New Algeria govt faces ‘massive’ challenges | AFP
ALGIERS — After months of political inertia, Algeria’s newly appointed cabinet faces a raft of social problems, including joblessness, poor housing and ongoing water cuts, which threaten to aggravate simmering discontent.
FULL ARTICLE (AFP)
Photo: Magharebia/Flickr

New Algeria govt faces ‘massive’ challenges | AFP

ALGIERS — After months of political inertia, Algeria’s newly appointed cabinet faces a raft of social problems, including joblessness, poor housing and ongoing water cuts, which threaten to aggravate simmering discontent.

FULL ARTICLE (AFP)

Photo: Magharebia/Flickr

29 Aug
Survey Shows Lake Tanganyika’s Oil ‘Potential’ in Tanzania | Voice of America
By Nick Long
An Australian company exploring for oil on the Tanzanian side of Lake Tanganyika says it may target potential areas for drilling in about six months’ time.  The company, Beach Energy, says the lake has the potential for large discoveries and there are clear signs of a working petroleum system on the Congolese side. 
FULL ARTICLE (VOA)
Photo: Worldtraveller/Wikimedia Commons

Survey Shows Lake Tanganyika’s Oil ‘Potential’ in Tanzania | Voice of America

By Nick Long

An Australian company exploring for oil on the Tanzanian side of Lake Tanganyika says it may target potential areas for drilling in about six months’ time.  The company, Beach Energy, says the lake has the potential for large discoveries and there are clear signs of a working petroleum system on the Congolese side. 

FULL ARTICLE (VOA)

Photo: Worldtraveller/Wikimedia Commons

3 Aug
Analysis - China unveils oil offensive in South China Sea squabble  |  Swissinfo.ch
By Randy Fabi and Chen Aizhu / REUTERS
SINGAPORE/BEIJING - First came the diplomatic offensive, then the flexing of military muscle.
Now, China is opening a third front to assert its claims in the South China Sea - moving ahead with its first major tender of oil and gas blocks in disputed parts of its waters.
FULL ARTICLE (Swissinfo.ch)
Photo: U.S. Navy Photo/Flickr

Analysis - China unveils oil offensive in South China Sea squabble  |  Swissinfo.ch

By Randy Fabi and Chen Aizhu / REUTERS

SINGAPORE/BEIJING - First came the diplomatic offensive, then the flexing of military muscle.

Now, China is opening a third front to assert its claims in the South China Sea - moving ahead with its first major tender of oil and gas blocks in disputed parts of its waters.

FULL ARTICLE (Swissinfo.ch)

Photo: U.S. Navy Photo/Flickr

11 Jul
"In a context of massive poverty, a weak state, poor governance and regional insecurity, an oil rush will have a strong destabilising effect unless the government adopts several significant steps regionally and nationally to avert such a devastating scenario."

Black Gold in the Congo: Threat to Stability or Development Opportunity?

"If their expectations of new finds are confirmed, Congo’s black gold may dislodge the mining sector from its prime status in the country."

Black Gold in the Congo: Threat to Stability or Development Opportunity?

A map showing Central Basin and Eastern Congo oil blocks in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and the companies operating in them. 
Click through to read our full report on oil and conflict in DR Congo, Black Gold in the Congo: Threat to Stability or Development Opportunity?

A map showing Central Basin and Eastern Congo oil blocks in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and the companies operating in them. 

Click through to read our full report on oil and conflict in DR Congo, Black Gold in the Congo: Threat to Stability or Development Opportunity?

Black Gold in the Congo: Threat to Stability or Development Opportunity? | International Crisis Group
Kinshasa/Nairobi/Brussels  |   11 Jul 2012
Renewed oil interest in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) could nurture communal resentments, exacerbate deep-rooted conflict dynamics and weaken national cohesion.Black Gold in the Congo: Threat to Stability or Development Opportunity?, the latest report from the International Crisis Group, warns of a potential “oil curse” in the still vulnerable country. Oil exploration in the east and the Central Basin could aggravate conflict in the high-risk areas of the Kivus, and feed secessionist tendencies in a context of failed decentralisation and financial discontent between the central state and the provinces. If confirmed, oil discoveries could redefine the country’s geopolitics, and notably question mineral-rich Katanga’s political influence.“In the context of a general oil rush in Central and East Africa, the lack of clearly defined borders, especially in the Great Lakes region, poses significant risk for maintaining regional stability”, says Marc-André Lagrange, Crisis Group’s Central Africa Senior Analyst. “Oil reserves straddling the country’s borders with Uganda and Angola have already caused tension”.Eastern DRC is plagued by rebel groups that are already illegally exploiting natural resources, along with the Congolese army. The April 2012 failed mutiny by General Bosco Ntaganda, wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes since 2006, and the emergence of a new armed group (M23) are illustrations of this longstanding instability. In the west, while offshore oil production for Angola started several years ago, Kinshasa is contesting the definition of maritime borders.In addition, poor governance has been the hallmark of the oil sector since exploration resumed. Black gold is the main source of government revenue and yet, with exploration in full swing, oil sector reform is several years behind schedule. Instead of creating a transparent legal framework and robust institutions, the previous governments behaved like speculators.The state’s failure to adequately regulate the diverging and potentially conflicting interests of companies and poor communities is fuelling resentment, which could easily flare up into local violence. Exploration blocks include natural parks and a World Heritage Site.Regionally, the government should work with neighbouring countries and the African Union to design a management model for cross-border reserves and launch a border demarcation program. Nationally, it should reform the oil sector and declare a moratorium on exploration in unstable areas, especially in the east, and involve provinces in the main management decisions concerning this resource.“In a context of massive poverty, a weak state, poor governance and regional insecurity, an oil rush will have a strong destabilising effect”, says Thierry Vircoulon, Crisis Group’s Central Africa Project Director. “To avert such a devastating scenario, the government should, at the regional level, favour dialogue with its neighbours to solve border disputes, and, at the national level, regulate oil exploitation to improve governance and accountability”. 
FULL REPORT

Black Gold in the Congo: Threat to Stability or Development Opportunity? | International Crisis Group

Kinshasa/Nairobi/Brussels  |   11 Jul 2012

Renewed oil interest in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) could nurture communal resentments, exacerbate deep-rooted conflict dynamics and weaken national cohesion.

Black Gold in the Congo: Threat to Stability or Development Opportunity?, the latest report from the International Crisis Group, warns of a potential “oil curse” in the still vulnerable country. Oil exploration in the east and the Central Basin could aggravate conflict in the high-risk areas of the Kivus, and feed secessionist tendencies in a context of failed decentralisation and financial discontent between the central state and the provinces. If confirmed, oil discoveries could redefine the country’s geopolitics, and notably question mineral-rich Katanga’s political influence.

“In the context of a general oil rush in Central and East Africa, the lack of clearly defined borders, especially in the Great Lakes region, poses significant risk for maintaining regional stability”, says Marc-André Lagrange, Crisis Group’s Central Africa Senior Analyst. “Oil reserves straddling the country’s borders with Uganda and Angola have already caused tension”.

Eastern DRC is plagued by rebel groups that are already illegally exploiting natural resources, along with the Congolese army. The April 2012 failed mutiny by General Bosco Ntaganda, wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes since 2006, and the emergence of a new armed group (M23) are illustrations of this longstanding instability. In the west, while offshore oil production for Angola started several years ago, Kinshasa is contesting the definition of maritime borders.

In addition, poor governance has been the hallmark of the oil sector since exploration resumed. Black gold is the main source of government revenue and yet, with exploration in full swing, oil sector reform is several years behind schedule. Instead of creating a transparent legal framework and robust institutions, the previous governments behaved like speculators.

The state’s failure to adequately regulate the diverging and potentially conflicting interests of companies and poor communities is fuelling resentment, which could easily flare up into local violence. Exploration blocks include natural parks and a World Heritage Site.

Regionally, the government should work with neighbouring countries and the African Union to design a management model for cross-border reserves and launch a border demarcation program. Nationally, it should reform the oil sector and declare a moratorium on exploration in unstable areas, especially in the east, and involve provinces in the main management decisions concerning this resource.

“In a context of massive poverty, a weak state, poor governance and regional insecurity, an oil rush will have a strong destabilising effect”, says Thierry Vircoulon, Crisis Group’s Central Africa Project Director. “To avert such a devastating scenario, the government should, at the regional level, favour dialogue with its neighbours to solve border disputes, and, at the national level, regulate oil exploitation to improve governance and accountability”. 

FULL REPORT

Congo Oil Exploration May Spark More Insecurity | NASDAQ
By Devon Maylie
Oil development in the Congo could revive existing tensions with its neighbors and the lack of transparency in the sector risks preventing the benefits from energy extraction from assisting country development, according to a new report from International Crisis Group.
“Renewed oil interest in the Democratic Republic of the Congo represents a real threat to stability in a still vulnerable post-conflict country,” the group said in the report released Wednesday.
FULL ARTICLE (NASDAQ)
Photo: Richard Masoner/ Cyclelicious/ Flickr

Congo Oil Exploration May Spark More Insecurity | NASDAQ

By Devon Maylie

Oil development in the Congo could revive existing tensions with its neighbors and the lack of transparency in the sector risks preventing the benefits from energy extraction from assisting country development, according to a new report from International Crisis Group.

“Renewed oil interest in the Democratic Republic of the Congo represents a real threat to stability in a still vulnerable post-conflict country,” the group said in the report released Wednesday.

Photo: Richard Masoner/ Cyclelicious/ Flickr