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Chad suspends work by Chinese oil company CNPC
by Staff Writers
N'Djamena (AFP) May 23, 2014


Exploration companies stay optimistic following Ethiopian disappointment
London (UPI) May 23, 2013 - Only trace amounts of gas were found in a frontier well in Ethiopia, though data are key for future development, Tullow Oil said Friday.

Tullow drilled its Shimela-1 wildcat well, or a well tapping into a basin not known to have volumes of oil or gas, at the Chew Bahir basin in Ethiopia. It found only trace amounts of gas, and the company said it would now move the drilling rig to a new location in the southeast corner of the basin.

"Although the Shimela well only found traces of thermogenic gas, it has provided key data to continue to build our understanding of the north-western part of the Chew Bahir basin," Tullow Exploration Director Angus McCoss said in a statement.

Tullow is a partner with Africa Oil, a Canadian exploration company.

Keith Hill, the company's president and chief executive officer, said results from Shimela-1 were disappointing, but there still may be "significant potential" in the Ethiopian basin.

Chad has suspended all work by the local unit of China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) for allegedly violating environmental law, Oil Minister Djerassem Bemadjiele said in a letter seen by AFP on Friday.

The ministerial letter accused CNPC's Chadian subsidiary of systematically carrying out polluting practices banned by both Chadian and international legislation and said that all of the company's exploration and drilling activities were to have been suspended as of May 21.

Chad suspended CNPC activities over similar concerns in August 2013, lifting the ban weeks later, but this time the government in N'Djamena demanded that the Chinese giant pay 1.2 billion dollars (880 million euros) in damages for "a serious violation of regulations on the protection of the environment".

Several dozen research and drilling sites in the poor sub-Saharan nation "have been subjected to dumping harmful to the environment", the letter said, accusing the CNPC of "filling polluted sites without prior treatment" of the waste.

With foreign assistance, Chad began to exploit oil resources in the south of the country in 2003. According to the latest available official figures, the partly desert nation in northern central Africa produced 120,000 barrels per day in 2011.

Chadian authorities and oil workers have already been in conflict with Chinese partners. Last March, trade unions for local oil workers employed by a Chinese consortium organised a brief strike in protest against bad labour conditions and to demand better pay.

The oil income has enabled the regime of President Idriss Deby Itno to modernise the army and to construct new public buildings and improve the road network. However, activists in civil society frequently urge the authorities to use more of the revenue to better living standards for the general population.

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