Sudan’s oil fee demand forces South to consider new pipeline
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September 1, 2011 (KHARTOUM) - Building an oil pipeline through Kenya
to the Indian Ocean may be more cost effective than paying the
transport and refinery fees demanded by North Sudan, a South Sudan
official said Thursday.


Pagan Amum, Secretary General of the Sudan’s People Liberation
Movement (SPLM) - Reuters A deal on splitting oil revenue ended on
July 9 when South Sudan seceded from the rest of Sudan taking with it
380,000 barrels a day of oil production, leaving North Sudan producing
only 120,000 barrels a day.

Under a 2005 peace deal South Sudan shared its oil wealth 50-50 with
Khartoum for six years. Since southern independence a new deal has
been hard to come by. Sudan’s president has threatened to not allow
South Sudan to use its infrastructure unless it pays $32 a barrel.

South Sudan, which began negotiations by offering less than half a
dollar per barrel, says it will not accept customs fees above $7 per
barrel for oil from new oil fields and $4 per barrel from existing
ones.

At a mining industry conference in Australia, Pagan Amum a senior
member of South Sudan’s ruling party told Reuters that the landlocked
state was looking at "alternatives" to using the northern pipeline to
Post Sudan on the Red Sea.

South Sudan’s long stated plan to build a pipeline through Kenya are
years away from possible conclusion according to experts. Amum, the
secretary general of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM),
said he excepts that a deal between North and South Sudan would "be in
the interests" of both countries.

Amum who has led the SPLM negotiating team, which has been meeting
with their Khartoum counterparts in Addis Ababa, urged the Africa
Union and other international mediators to encourage North Sudan to
make "reasonable" demands in order to find a compromise.

Sudan’s two North-South civil wars (1955-1973 and 1983-2005) were over
political representation, economic marginalisation, identity, religion
and latterly oil, which was not discovered until the 70’s. The most
recent conflict between South Sudan and various Khartoum governments
killed around 2 million people, and was fought especially bitterly
around the South’s oil fields.

Chinese and Indian companies dominate oil production in South Sudan
but Amum said he hopes that South Sudan’s disassociation with Khartoum
will allow more Western companies to invest and have a presence.

"There’s a lot of interest from companies from the Western world...
the pariah nature of the Sudanese system made it politically and
morally difficult or embarrassing for Western companies to be
engaged," Amum told Reuters.

The budget of the South Sudan government is almost totally reliant on
oil. However, there are concerns over the social, environmental and
health impact of oil production and exploration in the communities
near, fledgling country’s oil fields.

A conference in December 2010 urged both Sudan and South Sudan to
establish a fully-fledged audit system to cater for the oil industry’s
socio-economic, environmental, and security impact after the South’s
referendum on independence.

JONGLEI, UNITY DISCUSS OIL POLICY

South Sudan’s Unity state hosted Thursday a conference with
neighbouring Jonglei state to assess the environmental impact the oil
industry is having on communities and to suggest how to overcome such
problems to oil companies and the government.

The minister for environment in oil-rich Unity state, William Gatjang
Gieng, said the purpose of the conference was to ensure all
communities in oil-producing states are being represented and their
views are expressed to the government.

He said that affected communities in South Sudan should have an input
into the policies of the ministry of petroleum. To enable this process
oil task forces were established in 2009, with the backing of
Norwegian People’s Aid (NPA), in Jonglei and Unity state.

Jonglei state’s delegation said that they hoped to learn from the
experiences of Unity and Upper Nile before oil-production begins in
their state. Solomon Pur, a member of Jonglei state task force, said
the initiative will help communities, the government and oil companies
to produce better policies.

Pur said that Jonglei hoped to learn the skills needed to be able to
deal with oil companies when they start operating in the state.

Espom Loken, from Norway’s trade union for industry and energy
workers, said that the challenges faced by South Sudan are similar to
his country’s experience 40-50 years ago when they started producing
oil.

(ST)

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