Zitto: Tanzania to lose up to $1b under StatOil PSA: Open these Oil and Gas Contracts

Kibanga Ampiga Mkoloni

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Aug 9, 2007
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Tanzania to lose up to $1b under StatOil PSA: Open these Oil and Gas Contracts

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Tanzania to lose up to $1b under StatOil PSA: Open these Oil and Gas Contracts


Zitto Kabwe, MP
When news of the leaked Production Sharing Agreement (PSA) between Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC) and Norweigean State Company StatOil came out through social networks, the discussion was muted. When a blogger Ben Taylor wrote a brief about it, some of us saw how serious the issue is. According to the article Leaked agreement shows Tanzania may not get a good deal for gas â€" By Ben Taylor | African Arguments Tanzania may be losing up to $1 billion each year depending on the levels of production of natural gas. However, very few people may understand. Took a liberty to simplify the leak and comparing it with the Model PSA which shall be used as a benchmark for these contracts.
Q What exactly is the document?
The leaked document isn't the PSA per se, but an addendum to the original PSA for Block 2 to take account of the fact that the discoveries are of natural gas, not oil.
The original PSA was agreed with Statoil in 2007 (source, Statoil website). This would have been under Minister Karamagi. The original PSA was presumably based on 2004 Model PSA (pdf). The addendum signed with Statoil was based on the Model PSA Addendum for Natural Gas, finalised in 2008 to take account of contract terms for gas.
The addendum was signed in February 2012, when William Ngeleja was minister.
Q So the leaked PSA is the same as the publicly available model?
For the most part yes, but for the most important part, no. The Model PSA Addendum sets out the following profit gas sharing ratios as seen in Table 1.

Table 1 Model PSA Addendum for Natural Gas suggested terms.
Tranches of daily totalProduction rates in each of the Contract Areas (MMscf per Day)TPDC Share of Profit GasContractor Share of Profit Gas
0249.9995050
250499.9995545
500749.9996040
750999.9996535
10001249.9997030
12501499.9997525
1500Above 15008020

The actual agreed profit gas sharing terms are quite different, as seen in Table 2.
Table 2 Statoil agreed profit gas sharing terms as per leaked document.
Tranches of daily totalProduction rates in each of the Contract Areas (MMscf per Day)TPDC Share of Profit Gas Contractor Share of Profit Gas
0299.9993070
300599.9993565
600899.99937.562.5
900119.9994060
12001499.9994555
1500Above 15005050
Clearly, the agreed terms are much better for Statoil and Exxon than the proposed terms.
Q Any other significant terms in the agreement that differ from the model?
Yes. Article 8.1 (i) sets out the Domestic Market Obligation. Ten percent of production is to be reserved for the domestic market. This figure is not included in the model PSA Addendum. The model states that when the proven accessible reserves are determined, then the parties will agree on how much should go into the Gas Commercialisation Project (i.e. the LNG plant) and how much into the domestic market.
The question that arises from this is, by 2012, were the ‘proven reserves' determined. If so, how much were they?
We know that BG is seeking to have their 10 percent market obligation reduced to zero. At a meeting with stakeholders late last year, they said it was the biggest issue between them and government.
So, are Statoil / Exxon also seeking to have the 10 percent domestic obligation removed?
Was the figure reasonable in the first place?
Q How does this leak affect the conversation about revenues?
Considerably. The IMF released a projection of revenues from LNG (. One key assumption made by that report is that cost recovery is capped at 70 per cent of production and that sharing is on the basis of a six step model with a lowest government share of 35 percent and a highest of 60 percent.
The 70 percent cost recovery limit is founded in the leaked PSA. However, the sharing ratio is quite different. The Model Addendum proposed a seven step model with government share ranging from 50 to 80 percent.
The actual Statoil / Exxon agreement is a six step model with government share ranging from a low 30 percent to just 50 percent at the highest levels.
This makes us ask the question, where did the IMF get the idea of using a six step model in the range of 35 to 60 percent shares for government, when the model was a seven step model ranging from 50 to 80 and the actual Statoil / Exxon agreement was a six step model, ranging from 30 to 50 for government share?
Q Have any other PSAs in Tanzania or the region been released?
In Tanzania, no PSAs have been released. However, Swala Energy in a prospectus they released last year (very big pdf) set out the substantive terms of the two PSAs they hold in Tanzania and the single PSA they hold in Kenya. This type of disclosure is common for small companies seeking to raise capital on stock markets. In fact, the information released in the Swala prospectus goes beyond what is in the leaked Statoil / Exxon addendum and includes the work programme and obligatory payments such as training levy etc.
In Kenya, the CAMAC PSA has been released to the New York Stock Exchange, again to facilitate raising capital. Typically large firms such Statoil or BG are not obliged by capital markets to release individual PSAs, as their overall business isn't dependent on any single PSA. But small firms such as Swala or CAMAC are often obliged to do so when going to markets.
Q Is it fair that small firms like Swala have to release the terms of their PSAs but big firms like Statoil and BG do not?
Of course not!
Conclusions
For Tanzania to transform our wealth in natural resources to benefit the entire society, TRANSPARENCY must be a key. Let us make a campaign to make all these contracts in Oil and Gas open.

 
ZZK ni Msaka umaarufu..........

Fedha za uswis na majina ya wezi wa hizo fedha amefikia wapi?
 
Leaked agreement shows Tanzania may not get a good deal for gas – By Ben Taylor

Posted on July 4, 2014 by AfricanArgumentsEditor




Tanzania MP Zitto Kabwe has been outspoken on the development of the country's gas sector.
Natural gas is on the scene in Tanzania, and expectations are sky high.

There are those who see this as the end of aid dependency, or the solution to the government's perennial money troubles. And of course, there are others who see this as a personal opportunity to get rich quick. But not everybody's expectations can or will be met.
Nobody knows exactly how much gas there is in Tanzania, though the latest discoveries brought the estimated deposits up to 51 trillion cubic feet (tcf).

Equally, nobody knows how much of this it will be possible (and economic) to extract, and how much revenue will flow to the government as a result.
The IMF has had a go at working this out, in a paper published earlier this year. The results are expressed cautiously, surrounded by references to uncertainty, but suggest that the Tanzanian government could be looking at a peak of US$5-6bn revenue each year between 2029 and 2044.

Given that for the past few years, official aid to Tanzania has ranged between $2-3bn annually, and the total tax revenue in the 2014/15 Tanzanian government budget is just over $6bn, we're talking potentially a lot of money. As the IMF report concluded:
"If a large-scale gas project goes ahead, the potential fiscal revenue would be substantial, and would facilitate government spending on priority investment.

[This] could have a transformational impact on the economy."
More money for schools, hospitals, roads, etc. – so it's all good then.Not so fast. As strong as the economic potential may be, unless the politics are right, the opportunity could easily be wasted.There are worries that the Tanzanian government lacks either the capacity or the will to negotiate deals with investors that protect the interests of the Tanzanian public. When a Production Sharing Agreement (PSA) between the state-owned Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC) and the Norwegian firm Statoil was leaked a couple of weeks ago, it revealed contract terms that are significantly less favourable to the government than had been expected.

The terms were less favourable than either those of TPDC's model PSA or the assumptions used by the IMF in their analysis.
Exactly how much this contract will cost the government depends on how much gas the company produces, but it could easily be in the hundreds of millions of dollars per year. If production reaches 500 million cubic feet per day, the government could be losing as much $400m per year under this deal, compared to the model PSA. If production reaches 1,000 million cubic feet per day – which is very possible – the loss rises to over $900m per year[1].

And that's just from one deal.
Another indication of the scale involved here is that since the Norwegian government is Statoil's majority shareholder, the extra revenue to the Norwegian government from this deal could be worth more than double the total of all Norwegian aid to Tanzania since independence[2].But perhaps just as worrying is the resounding silence that met the leak. It has not been covered in the Tanzanian media, even when reporting on gas-related issues or Statoil's other activities. And aside from a brief reference in a relatively obscure parliamentary committee report (pdf, Swahili) (which itself did not attract media coverage), no leading politician has stood up to publicly make noise about the deal.

Those in the know are discussing it in hushed tones on the side-lines of meetings, in the more private corners of social media, or in coded language. The vast majority are not in the know.This does not bode well. One of the big political risks with oil and gas is that it can be seen by politicians and senior officials as ‘easy' money that doesn't come with the kind of scrutiny that taxpayers demand when they pay their taxes and donors demand when they provide aid.

Unless somebody – the media, politicians, civil society – steps up to fill the gap, decision makers in government will be left free to make whatever decisions they choose, unencumbered by any need to protect the public interest. The Statoil PSA may well have cost Tanzania several billion dollars – yet it appears no-one is trying to hold those responsible to account.
So why the silence? It may be that the media and the politicians don't understand the significance of the deal, don't have the capacity to pick apart the leaked PSA's legal language to find the meat. It's certainly not easy to do. Alternatively, it may be that they don't care.

Or it may be that they are scared.
Zitto Kabwe, an outspoken opposition MP, posted a quote on Twitter last week:"Not a single developing country that derives the bulk of its export earnings from oil and gas is a democracy," wrote Larry Diamond and Jack Mosbacher.In Tanzania, I fear we may be about to find out why.Ben Taylor (@mtega) is an analyst and blogger, writing mainly about Tanzanian media and politics at mtega.com. He works for Twaweza, but writes here in a personal capacity – his views do not necessarily represent those of Twaweza.


[1] These figures are calculated based on 500MMscfd / 1000MMscfd of "profit gas", which refers to the value of gas produced after the company's costs have been deducted.
[2] Statoil has a 65% stake in the PSA, of which the Norwegian government owns 67%. The calculation is therefore as follows: 65% x 67% x $900m x 15years = $5.9bn. Norway has given approximately $2.5bn in aid to Tanzania since 1961 (Source: World Bank).

 

[1] These figures are calculated based on 500MMscfd / 1000MMscfd of "profit gas", which refers to the value of gas produced after the company's costs have been deducted.
[2] Statoil has a 65% stake in the PSA, of which the Norwegian government owns 67%. The calculation is therefore as follows: 65% x 67% x $900m x 15years = $5.9bn. Norway has given approximately $2.5bn in aid to Tanzania since 1961 (Source: World Bank).


Amakweli wazungu wanatukilimbita sana kupitia CCM! ... Inajulikana kuwa wakitoa $1 wanachukua $7! Toka uhuru wamesha chota kiasi gani kwa kutupatia $2.4 Bn? Hii moja tu ya Gas wanachota $5.9 Billions... CCM must go!
 
Bila kupigania issue ya USIRI (secrecy, confidentiality or whatever name) nchi zenye utajiri wa maliasili zitabaki masikini daima...na hii si Tz tu ni kama sera ya dunia; when it comes to extractive industry, secrecy is the name of the game! Sa hatujuhi kama secrecy ni kipengele katika hiyo mikataba au nani anawachimba mkwara....race to the bottom ... maana nchi zote masikini zimelikubali hilo....

Tunasubiri habari za ku leak...wazalendo wetu maofisini wameapa kulinda siri za unyonyaji wa mabepari; hakuna hata mmoja amekuwa whistle blower...au mikataba analala nayo waziri ili wazalendo wasiivujishe (te te te)
 
wewe jadili hoja usimjadili ZZK
Hata mimi ningependa sana kujadili hoja, lakini mmetoka kule kwenye ule uzi mwingine mmepewa ukweli wenu hapa mnajifanya kuleta porojo za sisi kuibiwa. Kuibiwa hatukuanza jana na mnavyoleta mada hii mnadhani mtapata uungwaji mkono bila kujua mnaowasema wezi ndio wanaowafuga. Refer
Mwasi na hamjakanusha. Oneni aibu kidogo.
 
Amakweli wazungu wanatukilimbita sana kupitia CCM! ... Inajulikana kuwa wakitoa $1 wanachukua $7! Toka uhuru wamesha chota kiasi gani kwa kutupatia $2.4 Bn? Hii moja tu ya Gas wanachota $5.9 Billions... CCM must go!

mtaitoa vipi ccm kama watu wenyewe ndio zitto anatoa taarifa so what, kama ni mtu anayezani ni mtetezi asiongelee facebook atoke
 
ZZK ni Msaka umaarufu..........

Fedha za uswis na majina ya wezi wa hizo fedha amefikia wapi?

Taratibu mkuu, hapa anachokiongea kina faida kubwa kwa uchumi na maendeleo ya Tanganyika...

Msome umuelewe mkuu
 
Hata mimi ningependa sana kujadili hoja, lakini mmetoka kule kwenye ule uzi mwingine mmepewa ukweli wenu hapa mnajifanya kuleta porojo za sisi kuibiwa. Kuibiwa hatukuanza jana na mnavyoleta mada hii mnadhani mtapata uungwaji mkono bila kujua mnaowasema wezi ndio wanaowafuga. Refer
Mwasi na hamjakanusha. Oneni aibu kidogo.

Mwasi ndio nani?? Halafu unaongelea uzi gani au ule mnaotaka kuwapangia vyombo vya habari wafanye yanayowafurahisha??
 
We can confirm prezoo owns preference shares on either side..... Msakatonge tu huyo, he always talks thousand words with no action! Let him remain stupid ever!! Tukisema tutoke barabarani tupinge hujuma yeye anapoanda ndege huyoooo Ujerumani!
 
Msaka umaarufu tu huyu.Hana Lolote! Mtu aliyesaliti chama chake pale kilipomtoa hana faida yoyote kwa nchi.
 
Tulipaswa kuungana kama wapinzani tuwe na sauti moja kupambana na hawa viongozi wanaotuingiza kwenye mikataba mibovu lakini mnajifanya nyie mna elimu sana, matokeo yake tunapambana wapinzani wenyewe kwa wenyewe tena kwa nyie kujifanya mnajua mambo ili hao wezi waogope na kuwahonga. Tumewadharau kweli halafu mnajifanya kuja na swaga zenu za kwamba mnatetea mali za wananchi kisha mnakosa support toka kwa wapinzani wenzenu. Acheni utoto nyie. Mngejua jinsi upinzani ulivyochangia uwajibikaji wa serekali wala msingethubutu kufanya upuuzi mnaoufanya kwa sababu hao wezi wanawahonga.
 
Msaka umaarufu tu huyu.Hana Lolote! Mtu aliyesaliti chama chake pale kilipomtoa hana faida yoyote kwa nchi.

Umesoma lakini kilichoandikwa?? au umekurupuka tu kuchangia baada ya kuona jina la Zitto?
 
Msaka umaarufu tu huyu.Hana Lolote! Mtu aliyesaliti chama chake pale kilipomtoa hana faida yoyote kwa nchi.

Sikushangai!! Mi nakujua vizuri sana kiingereza kinakupiga chenga kama mwenyekiti wako mzee wa zero
 
hapa ndipo watanzania wengi tunapopotoka, badala ya kujikita kwenye hoja unaelekeza nguvu na muda wako kwa mtu. hiyo SIYO SAHIHI hatakidogo
Issue hapa ni lugha. Jamaa kaambulia neno zitto tu katika makala nzima. Mengine yote huraaa. Tujifunze hii lugha ya malkia wa UK
 
Umesoma lakini kilichoandikwa?? au umekurupuka tu kuchangia baada ya kuona jina la Zitto?

Muulize huyo mshirika wako kama siyo wewe mwenyewe Mabilioni ya Uswis yameishia wapi?

Ana maneno mengi lakini moyo wake umejaa uovu wa kusaliti watu wengine!
 
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