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    All Eyes on Kenya:  The Next Big Oil Exporter
	
  By James Stafford
     
       
      Oil Price,
      Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, September 29, 2014
  
	Not even the specter of a spillover of influence of fighting from Somalia 
	can dampen the atmosphere in Kenya, where commercial oil production is 
	expected to begin in 2016 and discovery after discovery has made this the 
	hottest and fastest-paced hydrocarbon scene on the continent.     
	When it comes to new oil and gas frontiers, today it’s all about Africa. And 
	more specifically, it’s all about the eastern coast, with Kenya the clear 
	darling--not just because it’s outpacing neighboring Uganda by leaps and 
	bounds, but also because despite some political instability hiccups from 
	Somalia, it’s still one of the safest venues in the region.    Six of 
	the last 10 biggest finds have been in Africa, where—all told--there are 
	some 130 billion barrels of crude oil waiting to be tapped by more than 500 
	companies, according to a
	
	recent report by PriceWaterhouseCoopers.    Topping this list are 
	Kenya’s Anza and South Lokichar basins where the discovery and development 
	news has been fast-paced.     In the last days of August, Tullow 
	Oil—the British explorer behind Kenya’s
	
	oil discovery debut in 2012—announced another oil find that will extend 
	the already proven South Lokichar basin “significantly 
	northwards”.    Earlier this year, in May, Tullow and partner 
	Africa Oil Corporation left a hefty impression on the market with the 
	announcement of the country’s
	
	first commercial oil discovery, worth $10 billion, in this basin.    
	And the next testing ground will be the neighboring
	
	Kerio Basin, which should get off the ground later this month, while 
	there has been a flurry of attention lately surrounding the
	
	Ogaden basin where initial estimates are enough to send stocks soaring.
	   In the meantime, while bigger players such as Tullow and Africa Oil 
	have benefited from the fame of their initial discoveries, they have also 
	become burdened by the pressure of rising expectations for more discoveries. 
	Not so the smaller players on this scene, who stand to benefit from the 
	original discoveries and continued drilling—without the pressure. Investors 
	will now be looking at who is poised to make the next discovery.  Africa 
	Oil and Marathon are currently drilling an appraisal well on the Sala gas 
	discovery in the Anza Graben Basin onshore Kenya, which will benefit other 
	explorers with acreage just south of this, including UK-listed Afren Plc, 
	UK-listed Tower 
	Resources and Taipan Resources 
	Inc (TPN-TSK), which has two onshore blocks in key basins. If these 
	explorers come up with their own first find, it will be a superior 
	risk-reward scenario.    In the Ogaden Basin, the market will 
	certainly take notice of
	Afren’s 
	new estimates late last month that a large under-explored sub-basin, El Wak, 
	contains up to 6.65 billion barrels of oil. If this estimate is accurate—and 
	it comes in well above partner Taipan Resources’ earlier estimates of about 
	a quarter of that—they would be looking at the largest onshore target ever 
	drilled anywhere in Africa. Later this year, Afren will be conducting 
	seismic surveys to further define El Wak’s potential, and investors will be 
	watching closely.    The bigger picture, though, is of an East African 
	country that has the advantage over its neighbors due to a convergence of 
	add-on factors, including
	
	infrastructure aims, relative stability and what appears to be a smarter 
	use of natural resources to generate more investment and economic growth, 
	according to
	
	Jennifer Cooke of the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
	   Among other planned infrastructure projects of a massive scale, 
	discussions are under way for a
	
	pipeline from neighboring Uganda, which would pass through the South 
	Lokichar basin and come close enough to some of the prime drilling areas 
	that could be the site of Kenya’s next discoveries.    The
	
	World Bank’s approval in July of $50 million for the Kenyan government 
	to boost its management and distribution of natural resource revenues, with 
	an eye on long-term sustainable growth, has further boosted confidence in 
	long-term sustainable growth.     In the meantime, political 
	stability has also been given a slight reprieve with the International 
	Criminal Court’s (ICC)
	indefinite 
	adjournment of the trial against Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta due to 
	lack of evidence that he organized post-election ethnic violence in 2007.
	   But the security situation with the regrouping of the Somalia-based 
	al-Shabaab militant group and an uptick of the group’s apparent
	
	attacks on Kenya continue to be problematic, even more so because no one 
	seems to be sure whether the threat is emanating entirely
	
	from al-Shabaab.   While this remains a clear threat, it has not 
	affected exploration and development—and it certainly has done little to 
	scare foreign investors from this hydrocarbon frenzy that is expected to 
	continue over the next five years, further boosted by
	
	relatively cheap exploration licenses.     In this race, 
	Kenya is the top contender, moving forward at double the speed of 
	neighboring Uganda which discovered oil in 2006, six years before Kenya, but 
	will lag a year behind the newcomer in terms of commercial production.  
	 Source:  
	
	
	http://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/All-Eyes-on-Kenya-The-Next-Big-Oil-Exporter.html
	 
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