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South Sudan instructs oil companies to resume production

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October 18, 2012 (JUBA) - South Sudan on Thursday issued an order instructing foreign and national companies involved in oil industry to immediately resume production and exports through the territory of neigbouring Sudan.

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Stephen Dhieu Dau (Getty/file)

Stephen Dhieu Dau, South Sudan’s Minister of Petroleum and Mining on Thursday said the government had completed assessing all oil infrastructures located in the world’s youngest nation and was technically ready to recommence operations within three months.

Production was halted at the beginning of the year over a transit fee disputed between the two countries. South Sudan split from Sudan in July 2011 without bilateral agreements on oil and other issues leading to a conflict over a disputed border area in April this year.

Last month the two sides signed agreements on nine post-partition issues including allowing South Sudan to continue pumping its oil through Sudan for export. Before the shutdown oil accounted for 98% of government income.

The order to resume production barely a day after South Sudan’s national parliament voted to ratify the deal. In a sitting chaired by speaker of the house, James Wani Igga Maring, on Tuesday saw a heated debate during which 189 members voted to ratify the cooperation agreement, with 15 members voting against the deal, specifically over the controversy of the "14 mile" area.

South Sudan President Salva Kiir Mayardit signed the deal with his Sudanese counterpart Omer Ahmed Hassan El Bashir in the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa on 27 September.

The deal did not address border demarcation or the status of areas claimed by both sides, such as Abyei, however it did create a demilitarized border zone 10km either side of a non-binding notional boundary put forward by the African Union mediation.

The house revoked the resolution which it passed in January ordering the oil shutdown after South Sudan’s upper house - the council of ministers - passed a decision stopping oil production and exports to the international markets through Sudanese territory, after accusing Sudan of stealing its crude oil.

Khartoum admitted taking some crude but said it was payment in kind for unpaid fees.

Civil rights and community members from Northern Bahr el Ghazal State on Monday took to the street to stage a peaceful protest against the deal, waving placards and banners critical of the government, despite assertions by leaders of the country’s governing Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) that the deal was only temporary arrangement seeking ways to settle post secession dispute involving two nations.

South Sudan’s Minister of Petroleum and Mining Stephen Dhieu Dau said that a successful technical evaluation of oil infrastructure in Upper Nile State had been completed.

"There are no problems in these places to resume oil production and export. We have therefore instructed companies to immediately resumed production and exports of the crude oil to the international markets through Sudan as agreed in the agreement”, Dau said.

“What was preventing immediate resumption was the ratification of the agreement by the national parliaments of the two nations. But with the ratification of the agreement by the two parliaments, we as government of the republic of South Sudan and parliament approved resumption of the operations within production blocks from today henceforth. The ministry would start production from blocks, 1, 2, 4, 3, 7 and 5a”, Dau told journalists at news briefing on Thursday in country’s capital Juba.

Minister Dau explained that biggest foreign operators, like Dar Petroleum, run by Chinese state firm Sinopec, China National Petroleum Corp and Malaysia’s PETRONAS expects an initial output of 180,000 barrels per day (bpd) within three months.

This is a decrease from production levels before the shutdown. The senior government official noted that Petrodar, which runs oil blocks 3 and 7 in Upper Nile State, used to export between 230,000 bpd and 250,000 bpd until the shutdown.

“The two export pipelines through Sudan were filled with water to avoid gelling and some fields in western Unity state were damaged during weeks of fighting in April. A processing plant for the Unity fields located on the Sudan side of the disputed border was badly hit. Oil companies are currently working on it. This will take time. It requires technical assessment first”, explained Dau

The minister said South Sudan will only pump oil at about 70 percent of its former capacity as it would take up to six months for oil to flow into the pipeline from Upper Nile State and nine to 12 months in the pipeline from Unity State.

(ST)

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  • 19 October 2012 07:34, by sunny

    "A processing plant for the Unity fields located on the Sudan side of the disputed border was badly hit". Which plant do you actually mean Mr. Minister? For your information, we have only Panthou processing plant located in the far north of South Sudan’s Unity State and I think that is not where you mean Sir.

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    • 19 October 2012 07:36, by Mi diit

      And the price of oil has greatly increased to $120 per barrel. Please make sure this time that thieves do not get their hands on oil revenues again. We need tangible development. But there are thirsty thieves waiting for the money to put in pockets. There is no transparency and accountability in this nation at all!!!

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    • 19 October 2012 09:26, by Lang

      Everybody don’t get too excited! The bush leaders will continue to steal oil money anyway....

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      • 19 October 2012 09:30, by Lang

        I wonder have these stupid people in government make sure there are no new diversion lines built on the pipeline to port sudan. I hope they remember those diversion pipes to steal southern oil.

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    • 19 October 2012 14:29, by Logic

      As the oil flows, so will the troubles! Greed is almost an inseparable nature of politicians in both Sudans. God help the needy and helpless of this great region of Africa, because the current leaders certainly will not.

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  • 19 October 2012 07:35, by Mi diit

    And the price of oil has greatly increased to $120 per barrel. Please make sure this time that thieves do not get their hands on oil revenues again. We need tangible development. But there are thirsty thieves waiting for the money to put in pockets. There is no transparency and accountability in this nation at all!!!

    repondre message

    • 19 October 2012 07:46, by Dinka Dominated SPLA/M

      The resumation of oil will significantly reduce our brothers from defection, if Simon Gatwech Duel the former defense minster of Nasser gangster and right hand man of Mr Riek machar pout Nyuon was find his way to join Yauyau , we would have still buy him with million of dollars just like we bough matip and Gadata yak,
      So resumation of oil will reduce Nyagatism ,

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    • 19 October 2012 11:12, by Dumodit

      Did Sudanese parliament in Khartoum canceled the law of considering South Sudan as worse #1 ENEMY than Israel?
      How can you apple able to build relationship with Sudan?
      Was relation restore because our land was sold to Sudan by president Kiir?

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  • 19 October 2012 07:41, by George Bol

    Here what Jallaba might calculate, if the SPLA get mad about the issue of Abyei, Panthou, and South Kordufan and Blue Nile issues plus others CPA while the oil is operating, then we revenge for their oil in our facility/pipeline and our port.

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  • 19 October 2012 07:41, by SeekingTruth

    FEW MONTHS BACK IT WAS LIKE WE BETTER LET THE OIL REMAINED UNDERGROUND FOR OUR CITIZENS BENEFIT IN FUTURE RATHER THAN LET THE KHARTOUM KEEP STEALING IT DAY IN AND DAY OUT! LOLOL, ONE WOULD WONDER THOUGH AS TO WHAT CHANGES NOW TO RESUME ITS PRODUCTION THIS FAST THAT KHARTOUM WON’T START STEALING IT AGAIN! WAIT A MINUTE, DID THE RSS GET BACK THE $ 815 MILLIONS THAT WAS SIPHONED?

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    • 19 October 2012 07:52, by Dinka Dominated SPLA/M

      Well, you have seen how food lover where prepared to rebelled. They don’t overcome bad situation, they will leave just like they did it during the war time. Resumation of oil will close their habitat of nyagating. Food lover is alway sized with the place that there is food and forget about tommorow, than later on become a big shame to them,

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      • 19 October 2012 10:10, by Ram mi Ran

        Dinka lienyach
        hahahahahahahahahahaha foolish boy slave those who are haappy on oil resumption are you theive and those who are attepting coup are you dika bor that stupid Majak lie nyach death to him and all bor time is coming you will run to Nimule before your death.

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  • 19 October 2012 08:31, by Kenyan the cushite

    SS has to build its currency reserves and develop its institutions. Kenya has oil in the North next to Uganda and SS.Kenya and Uganda will start building the pipeline in 2013 then SS can export without worry. remember 2million dead and the wars. move away from the evil fake arabs and join those who want the best future for you. together we will prosper with railway, pipelines and highways :)

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  • 19 October 2012 09:58, by Jalaby

    What a great news for south official thieves!
    South official thieves are waiting impatiently for oil to be resumed so they can loot more money!
    Ironically, S Sudan is the only country in earth that doesn’t punish thieves,the maximum thing they get in that country is just a letter from the president begging them to return the money (or few) they stole!

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    • 19 October 2012 11:43, by Junta

      Jallaby
      unfortunately, Sudan led by fake Arabs is the only Islamic zealots which promotes and honours Genocidaires, Looting, Deceptions and falsefly grabbing black men lands (Blue Nile, S Kordofan in the North then Panthou, Kafie Kingi, Hofrat e nahas, mile 14 etc in the South). Which verse in Islam condones all these evil did propagated by your kinsmen Jallaby?

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    • 19 October 2012 15:04, by Dumodit

      Can a thief have right to punish another thief? It won’t happen!! Kiir Mayardit can’t do it otherwise those obvious thieves would expose’s!!
      Dead to SPLM/A under Kiir Mayardiit hands!!

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      • 19 October 2012 15:39, by Dumodit

        The army will no longer remain SPLA but as SSAF

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    • 19 October 2012 15:12, by Chol

      Jalaby please stop your irrational reverse psychology! If South Sudanese leaders were thieves; why do they shut down the pipeline? Can you tell us why South Sudanese were getting about a $ 1 billion annually when both Sudans use to produce 500,000 barrels per day? Based on any legitimate calculations; where were unaccounted billions of dollars going? Definately not to SouthSudan.

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  • 19 October 2012 10:26, by Ram mi Ran

    Jaalaba
    did you forget what was done by your Godfather Bishir and hs alike when they stolen millions of money to malashia and construct their houses while you very stupid and innocence one where miss lead by just baking on streets with ward islam. shame on you .

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  • 19 October 2012 15:33, by Viva Dong

    Jallaba or Slave stop your arrogant language,be rational our thieves are new what about your NCP looters who have everything for last twenty years untill the icc indict them,why dont u talk about them. plse mine ur business.

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  • 19 October 2012 18:40, by James Maker Akok

    12-Sudans-col.jpg

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