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Troubled Somalia hustles Big Oil to resume exploration

MOGADISHU, Somalia, Oct. 16 (UPI) — Somalia’s  Western-backed government is talking to major international oil companies like  Exxon Mobil, Royal Dutch Shell and BP about resuming exploration programs  abandoned when the East African state collapsed into anarchy in 1991.

On the face of it, that could be an extraordinarily hard sell since Somalia  remains highly volatile despite recent military setbacks for the Islamist  insurgents of al-Shabaab who are linked to al-Qaida.

What makes it tougher is that Somalia’s neighbors, Kenya in particular, have  their eyes on potentially large oil and gas reserves in disputed waters in the  Indian Ocean.

Al-Shabaab still controls large areas of the Somali countryside and any oil  company that ventures into the country risks getting caught up in sharp  political rivalries between the fragile central government in Mogadishu and  semiautonomous regions like Puntland and the self-declared state of Somaliland  in the north. Both have deals with Western oil juniors.

A high-profile Sept. 21 attack by al-Shabaab on an upscale shopping mall in  downtown Nairobi, capital of neighboring Kenya, in which at least 67 people were  killed points to al-Shabaab widening its terror campaign across East Africa.

On top of this, the Kenyans, who provided troops for an African Union  military force that drove al-Shabaab out of Mogadishu and other Somali cities in  2011-12, are trying to set up a buffer zone in a Somali border region known as  Jubaland, the better to stake a claim on the disputed waters in the Indian  Ocean.

“The world’s leading oil companies are increasingly accepting that their  quest for new reserves will take them into challenging new territory,” analyst  Katrina Manson observed.

“In regions such as the Arctic, the problems are technical. Around the Horn  of Africa, companies must calculate whether political and security risks will  put too heavy a burden on their production costs,” she wrote in The Financial  Times.

“This is hazardous territory in which to operate. A chunk of Somalia is still  under the control of al-Shabaab. Its waters are the hunting ground of pirates,  who since 2005 have earned close to $400 million by ransoming 149 vessels.”

Despite all this, Abdullah Haidar of Somalia’s Ministry of Natural Resources  reported recently that discussions in London with the major oil companies,  including Conoco  Phillips, Chevron Corp. and Eni of Italy, “are going well.”

These companies, along with BP and Shell, acquired onshore and offshore  exploration blocks in the 1980s during the military dictatorship of Gen. Mohamed  Siad Barre.

But when Somali warlords deposed him in 1991, exploration ceased as the  country was torn apart by clan warfare. They declared force majeure.

Now several, such as Shell and Eni, want their blocks restored and to enter  into production-sharing agreements with the 8-month-old, donor-dependent  government of President Hassan Sheik Mohamed that wants to use oil to rebuild  the impoverished country’s ravaged economy.

The companies are largely tight-lipped about their dealings with Mogadishu,  but ENI said its chief executive met with Mohamed in September. Shell said talks  are currently “of a preliminary and exploratory nature.”

But there is clearly interest because these and other majors have made big  strikes across East Africa, particularly with oil around Uganda’s Lake Albert  and gas off Mozambique and Tanzania.

The only Western company to sign up with Mogadishu so far is the British  company Soma Oil & Gas, established in 2012 and headed by Lord Michel  Howard, a former Conservative Party leader who’s held several cabinet posts.

It signed an agreement Aug. 6 and will conduct seismic surveys in designated  areas on land and offshore, and update historic seismic data for the government,  in return for nominating exploration and drilling rights for up to 12 blocks.

Somalia’s U.N. Monitoring Group warned in a report to the Security Council in  July oil exploration across the shattered state risks “exacerbating clan  divisions and therefore threatens peace and security. … Oil companies should  cease and desist negotiations with Somali authorities.”

Some oil has been found in Somaliland and Puntland, which have largely  escaped the violence. But the dozen or so oil companies drilling there have to  be protected by militias or private forces.

“It is alarming that regional security forces and armed groups may clash to  protect and further Western-backed oil companies’ interests,” the U.N.  warned.

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