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Uganda misses 2025 deadline for oil production

A government spokesperson announced on Tuesday that Uganda would not start oil production in this year. This is a failure to meet a longstanding goal of beginning crude extraction from the western fields.

Patricia Litho said, "Due unforeseen challenges we are not able to meet the target above," a spokesperson from the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Development.

She didn't give any reason why the country failed to reach the 2025 goal and stated that a new start date for production has yet to be announced.

Uganda discovered commercial petroleum reserves in the Albertine Rift basin near its border to the Democratic Republic of Congo almost two decades ago.

The start of production has been repeatedly delayed by obstacles, including disagreements over taxes and strategy with international oil companies and slow progress on the construction of the necessary infrastructure.

According to the government geologists, TotalEnergies in France and CNOOC in China are developing these fields. They contain an estimated 6 billion barrels worth of crude oil reserves.

Together with the Ugandan government and the Tanzanian government, the two companies are developing a $5 Billion pipeline that will help export crude oil via a port located on the coast of Tanzania's Indian Ocean. (Reporting and editing by George Obulutsa, Sharon Singleton, and Elias Biryabarema)

(source: Reuters)