Kenya Oil Fields Rake in $12 in Maiden Export Shipment
Kenya has made 12 million dollars in its first batch of oil export since it found mineral deposits in 2012.
President Uhuru Kenyatta declared the shipment of 200,000 barrels a “special moment” in the country’s history.
The president unfolded the Kenyan flag atop a tanker at the Indian Ocean port of Mombasa that will be carrying the oil to Asia.
“There are special moments that mark a turning point in the destiny of our nation,” Kenyatta remarked at the ceremony.
“The first export of crude oil by our nation, therefore, marks a special moment in our history as a people and as a country,” the Kenyan President added.
The maiden shipment was purchased for USD$12 million (10.8 million euros) by Chinese trading company ChemChina for export to Malaysia.
Kenyatta said the first attempts at finding oil in Kenya date back to 1937 but it was not until 2012 that a commercially-viable deposit was located.
This field was discovered in the South Lokichar Basin in Turkana, in Kenya’s far north, by British firm Tullow and its joint venture partners.
The company estimates the field holds 560 million barrels of oil.
In early June 2018, the company began shipping crude from Turkana to Mombasa by road. It will eventually be shipped via a pipeline under construction.
Kenyatta said it “showed the global market that Kenya possesses the know-how and the infrastructure required to facilitate full-fired development.”
“This first oil pilot scheme has also brought with it prosperity for the people of Turkana but also the wider republic with very many local communities directly benefiting from employment opportunities in production and logistics,” he said.
Meet Kenyan Chef Who Broke Guinness World Record for Longest Cooking
The Continuous Wealth Decline of Patrice Motsepe: A Further Loss of $100 Million
Patrice Motsepe, South African billionaire, continues to face financial setbacks as his n…