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Uganda's EACOP Pipeline worth $5 billion gets a funding boost

EACOP Ltd, the company responsible for building Uganda's EACOP oil pipeline, announced on Wednesday that it had closed its first external financing round from a consortium of institutions which included commercial banks and Afreximbank.

Standard Bank, Stanbic Bank Uganda, KCB Bank Uganda, and the Islamic Corporation for the Development of the Private Sector in Saudi Arabia are among the financiers.

The statement stated that "the successful closure of this first tranche is a significant landmark." The statement did not give a value to the financial backing.

Uganda's Energy Minister said in October that the partners of the $5 billion East African Crude Oil Pipeline, (EACOP), were injecting additional cash into the project. This was to avoid it stalling because debt financing had been difficult to obtain.

Minister Ruth Nankabirwa travelled to Beijing in order to meet potential Chinese financiers. This was seen as vital for the success EACOP, after several Western banks including BNP Paribas Societe Generale, and Barclays pledged to not finance the pipeline due to pressure from climate activists.

EACOP, which links oilfields in Uganda with Tanga port, is part of an broader $15 billion plan by TotalEnergies, China's CNOOC, and other partners, to develop the Kingfisher, Tilenga, and Lake Albert discoveries.

Sources briefed about the financing agreement told a source on Wednesday that Chinese support is also guaranteed.

Oil companies who are already involved in the project will be taking both equity and debt. "The Chinese are in," said the source. (Reporting and editing by Kirby Donovan; Wendell Roelf)

(source: Reuters)