Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. 24/7 Space News .




ENERGY TECH
Oilmen ready for risky push into Somalia
by Staff Writers
Mogadishu, Somalia (UPI) May 15, 2013


Foreign companies are getting ready to undertake the risky business of exploring for oil in war-torn Somalia, a quest that could trigger new conflict as the Western-backed government struggles to stop die-hard Islamist insurgents.

"The world's leading oil companies are increasingly accepting that their quest for new reserves will take them into challenging new territory," the Financial Times observed this week.

"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.

"This is hazardous territory in which to operate."

In 2011-12, U.S.-backed African forces drove al-Shabaab, the main Islamist force, out of Mogadishu and seized its main urban strongholds, including the port of Kismayo 200 miles to the south.

But large swathes of rural Somalia remain in the militants' hands and they're waging a guerrilla war of suicide bombings and hit-and-run attacks.

President Hassan Sheik Mohamud of the foreign aid-dependent Transitional National Government, who was elected seven months ago, narrowly escaped being killed in a suicide bombing in Mogadishu a few weeks ago.

Major oil strikes would potentially transform Somalia's ramshackle economy but there are fears the vast revenues it would produce could bring about new conflicts, possibly re-energizing al-Shabaab, whose transnational wing has strong links to al-Qaida.

Indeed, with oil exploration also under way in neighboring Ethiopia and Eritrea, staunch enemies who fought a bloody border war in May 1998-June 2000, the region may well become part of the East African oil and natural gas boom that runs down the Indian Ocean coast to Mozambique.

But the political landscape in historical Somalia, which includes the semi-autonomous region of Puntland and the self-declared states of Galmudug in the north and Somaliland on the border with Djibouti, is complicated, messy and militia-ridden.

It's difficult even to determine exactly what territory Mogadishu controls.

"Attempts to carve up oil blocks before the Mogadishu government even controls the whole national territory are undermining efforts to bring peace and stability to a state that has been shattered by 22 years of war and that exports terrorism," the Financial Times observed.

"The race to lay claim to resources risks triggering wider conflicts: regional authorities have been hostile to central government since the military dictatorship of Siad Barre.

"When he was deposed in 1991, warlords carved up the country -- and several clan-based militias still hold sway, sometimes cutting deals with al-Shabaab.

"The danger is that the race for oil will feed a destabilizing rivalry between Mogadishu and other regions -- some still influenced by former warlords -- just as the international community is celebrating progress."

It's a fragile progress at best. Al-Shabaab remains a deadly threat, even within the war-battered capital on the Indian Ocean, and Western intelligence services caution against writing it off as a spent force.

Much will depend on whether Mohamud can get a fully functioning government operating. Somalia's been without one since Siad Barre was booted out.

There is oil in commercial quantities out there. It was found by Western oil companies during the Siad Barre era. But the hunt was abandoned after his ouster, which plunged

the territory, ruled by Britain and Italy until 1960, into incessant clan warfare that eventually morphed into the Islamist insurgency that continues to this day.

The quest for oil now under way includes Eni of Italy and Royal Dutch Shell with BP and Conoco of the United States expected to join the hunt.

Eni, Shell and Conoco were among the Western majors that conducted exploratory drilling during the Siad Barre era. They want to reclaim their old concessions and seek new production-sharing contracts.

The Canadian wildcatter Africa Oil began exploration in Puntland in the arid northeast in January 2012, drilling Somalia's first wells in 21 years.

Issa Farah, head of Puntland's Petroleum and Minerals Agency, said at the time estimated there were reserves of 3 billion-4 billion barrels of oil in that sector.

Estimates of Somalia's oil reserves, onshore and offshore, run as high as 110 billion barrels.

There are jurisdictional problems already offshore, where Norway's Statoil is prospecting off the Jubaland region.

Neighboring Kenya, whose forces played a key role in fighting al-Shabaab and currently hold Jubaland, claims the offshore zone.

.


Related Links
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








ENERGY TECH
Awash with cash, Petrobras aims to double in size in 7 years
Rio De Janeiro (UPI) May 15, 2013
Ahead of this week's dramatic $11 billion bond sale that swelled its coffers, Brazil's state-controlled Petrobras predicts it will double in size in seven years. Although a healthy yield, the bond issue covers only a small part of a $237 billion spending Petrobras hopes to implement through 2017 as it taps into extreme depths of the Atlantic to build deep-water oil fields and a vast net ... read more


ENERGY TECH
Where on Earth did the moon's water come from

Water on moon, Earth have a common source

Northrop Grumman Completes Lunar Lander Study for Golden Spike Company

Scientists Use Laser to Find Soviet Moon Rover

ENERGY TECH
NASA Curiosity Rover Team Selects Second Drilling Target on Mars

Opportunity Making Smallest Turn Yet, As Dust Storm Affects Rover

More than 78,000 people apply for one-way trip to Mars

Austria Aims For Mars Via Morocco

ENERGY TECH
Danish Space Venture ready for lift off

Researchers use graphene quantum dots to detect humidity and pressure

Outside View: Patents laws and suffering innovators

Glow-in-the-Dark Plants on the ISS

ENERGY TECH
China launches communications satellite

On Course for Shenzhou 10

Yuanwang III, VI depart for space-tracking missions

Shenzhou's Shadow Crew

ENERGY TECH
ISS Statistics Tell the Story of Science in Orbit

Spaceman says goodbye to ISS with David Bowie classic

Canadian ISS astronaut returns to Earth a star

NASA astronauts on spacewalk to fix ammonia leak

ENERGY TECH
ATV Albert Einstein installed on Ariane 5 launcher

ILS and EchoStar Sign Launch Contract

NASA Awards Contract to Modify Mobile Launcher

Angara Rocket Launch Delayed to 2014

ENERGY TECH
Team Takes Part in Discovering New Planet

"Kepler's Dozen" - 13 Stories About Distant Worlds That Really Exist

NASA's Hubble Space Telescope Finds Dead Stars Polluted with Planet Debris

The Great Exoplanet Debate

ENERGY TECH
Scientists uncover the fundamental property of astatine, the rarest atom on Earth

Heady mathematics

Cornstarch proves to be worth its weight in gold

One order of steel; hold the greenhouse gases




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement