Angola Chairs Opec At Market's Crucial Moment
Published on 16th December 2008
Angola will formally assumed as from
December 17, the presidency of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting
Countries (OPEC), at a very troubled moment of the world market, due to
the sharp drop in crude prices according to AngolaPress. On this day,
the cartel shall hold in the Algerian city of, Oran, one more
ministerial ordinary session, in which the Angolan Oil minister, José
Maria Botelho de Vasconcelos, shall take up the post that is currently
under the possession of his counterpart of Algeria, Chakib Khelil.
OPEC, whose production quota is determined by the organisation, shall
not rule out the possibility of reducing, one more, its levels of
production estimated at over USD 30 million barrels of oil/day. The
cartel reduced its production of 1.55 million barrels/day in its last
extraordinary session, held last October in Vienna, Austria.
Uganda Warned that Anti-LRA Offensive Could Backfire
Peace activists in northern Uganda have criticised a weekend air and
ground assault by the armed forces of Uganda, Southern Sudan and the
Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) against several Lord's Resistance
Army (LRA) camps in north-eastern DRC. According to IRIN, the
activists warned the operation could derail a two-year peace process
that had brought "some normalcy" to northern Uganda. "It is
unfortunate; life will be lost and that is not of any benefit to
humanity," Bishop John Baptist Odama, the Catholic Archbishop of Gulu,
said. "The state we had reached was merely to agree and iron out the
ICC [International Criminal Court] indictments. We thought that they
will wait and then we find a better way forward." Nobert Mao, Gulu
district council chairman and also spearheading attempts to find a
peaceful solution to the conflict, expressed shock at the operation and
said leaders in northern Uganda felt betrayed. "We feel betrayed
because we expected them to wait for the UN envoy, Joachim Chissano, to
make his report to the UN Security Council and any actions thereafter
should have been done under a bigger umbrella organisation that has
been supporting the peace process," Mao said.
PetroSA Puts Plan for Coal Fuel Plant on Ice
South African state-owned oil and gas company PetroSA had shelved plans
for a 40000 barrel-a-day coal-to-liquid plant as it looked further into
issues such as water availability and carbon sequestration according to
the BUSINESSDAY. The proposed plant, earmarked for Limpopo, is part of
PetroSA's Vision 2020 that is central to its efforts to increase SA's
refining capacity. The state energy security master plan for the liquid
fuels sector recommended that PetroSA procure 30% of crude oil consumed
in SA by 2020.After the group posted annual result; CEO Sipho Mkhize
said the coal-to-liquid plant was put on hold "to allow key challenges
such as water availability, carbon sequestration and other
infrastructure requirements to be further investigated". Mkhize said
PetroSA was drawn to the coal-to-liquid option because of the abundance
of cheap coal and opportunities it provided for beneficiating local
resources.
Somalia: PM Wins Vote-of-Confidence, Deals Blow to President
Somalia's interim Prime Minister, Nur "Adde" Hassan Hussein, decisively
won a vote-of-confidence motion on Monday after lawmakers approved his
new Cabinet, Radio Garowe reported. Prime Minister Nur Adde addressed
165 MPs at ADC Hall in Baidoa, the seat of parliament, where he
defended his administration's one-year record and accused President
Abdullahi Yusuf of being an obstacle to peace.” The President refused
his constitutional duty to approve the Cabinet," Prime Minister Nur
Adde said, while formally requesting lawmakers to vote on the new
Cabinet list. Sheikh Adan "Madobe" Mohamed, the Speaker, later
announced the vote results: 143 MPs approved, 20 rejected and two MPs
abstained. The vote is a blow to President Yusuf, a day after he
announced that Prime Minister Nur Adde was fired.
Cameroon Energy Concerns At Centre of Europe Friendship
The Minister of External Relations, Henri Eyebe Ayissi, and the French
Ambassador to Cameroon, H.E. Georges Serre, have both expressed the
need for concerted efforts in the development of the energy sector in
the world and Cameroon in particular according to Postnewsline.com.
Both personalities expressed their concerns at the 6th edition of the
Cameroon-Europe friendship days that was commemorated in Yaounde
recently under the theme: "Cameroon's Energy Policy and Cooperation
with Europe." Henri Eyebe in his address, noted that like other
countries in the world, Cameroon is also faced with the problem of
energy insufficiency notably electricity, which has for the past years,
hampered the re-launch of its economic growth. He said despite the fact
that Cameroon is ranked second in Africa in terms of hydro-electric
energy potentials, exploitable natural gas deposits and biomass
resources, some of the country's economic ambitions have witnessed a
negative trend due to national energy crisis.
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