Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06KHARTOUM2654
2006-11-13 11:17:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Khartoum
Cable title:  

OIL IN SOUTHERN SUDAN - THE STORY OF "CROOKS AND NANNIES"

Tags:  PGOV PINR ECON EINV EPET ENRG ET KE GE CH SU 
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ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 131117Z NOV 06
FM AMEMBASSY KHARTOUM
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 5191
RUEHBJ/AMEMBASSY BEIJING 0040
RUEHFT/AMCONSUL FRANKFURT 0060
RUEHTC/AMEMBASSY THE HAGUE 0032
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RUCNIAD/IGAD COLLECTIVE
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 KHARTOUM 002654 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS
SENSITIVE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV PINR ECON EINV EPET ENRG ET KE GE CH SU
SUBJECT: OIL IN SOUTHERN SUDAN - THE STORY OF "CROOKS AND NANNIES"

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 KHARTOUM 002654

SIPDIS

SIPDIS
SENSITIVE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV PINR ECON EINV EPET ENRG ET KE GE CH SU
SUBJECT: OIL IN SOUTHERN SUDAN - THE STORY OF "CROOKS AND NANNIES"


1. (SBU) Summary: The history of oil exploitation in Sudan has
been marked by northern domination, killings, displacement,
community destruction, environmental degradation, arms purchases,
and accusations of cheating on revenue sharing. To break with this
legacy, the Government of Southern Sudan (GOSS) is working to
establish an indigenous oil industry independent of Khartoum.
Southern initiatives include exploration and production contracts,
and ambitious plans for refineries and pipelines serving central and
eastern Africa. Nile Petroleum Company (NilePet),the GOSS-owned
oil company, has signed international production sharing agreements
(IPSA) with British, German, Moldovan, Dutch, and Chinese companies.
The GOSS believes a strong southern oil industry will help them
enforce the wealth-sharing protocols of the Comprehensive Peace
Agreement (CPA) and yield more transparency in the oil sector. The
GoSS also hopes this will allow for either unity with the north on
more equal terms or independance. End Summary.


2. (U) The November 1-4, 2006 visit to Juba of a USG-hired oil
expert, Phil Garrison, and a member of the Sudan Programs Group
(SPG),Pamela Fierst, provided an opportunity to meet with a wide
spectrum of GOSS officials, civil society, and private oil sector
members, and obtain extensive documentation on oil contracts in the
South. (Note: All documents were provided to SPG Officer Fierst
for Washington. End Note). As one speaker said in a Freudian slip
at an oil conference in Juba that coincided with the visit, we must
look at all the "crooks and nannies" to understand the oil situation
in Sudan.

General Overview
--------------


3. (U) The GOSS has moved quickly to try to establish an
independent oil industry that it asserts is consistent with the
wealth-sharing provisions of the CPA. The GOSS-owned NilePet has
signed at least five production sharing agreements for oil

exploration, development and sales. These controversial contracts
have created divisions within the GOSS over their legality, their
lack of transparency, and their ramifications for CPA. Oil experts
believe that Southern Sudan may cover one of the largest
under-explored oil basins in the world. Southern Sudan and Abyei
already account for more than 90 percent of Sudan's approximately
330,000 b/pd of current oil production.


4. (U) Sudan's current oil production is controlled by Khartoum and
is dominated by three foreign oil companies, all state-owned -- the
Chinese National Petroleum Company (CNPC),Petroliam Nasional Berhad
(Petronas, Malaysia) and ONGC Videsh (India). According to a recent
Wood Mackenzie report, Sudan is the largest overseas operation for
all three of these companies.


5. (U) In addition to its production agreements, the GOSS has begun
to explore prospects for a pipeline to "connect to the Kenya-Uganda
pipeline somewhere in Uganda" and then transport refined oil to
Mombasa, according to one official. Others speak of building a
pipeline to Matadi in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The
GOSS sees NilePet eventually supplying an African market which
includes southern Sudan, parts of Ethiopia, Somalia, Kenya, Uganda,
Northern Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi, Eastern DRC and Central African
Republic.


Southern Sudan Players
--------------


6. (SBU) NilePet: NilePet was established in 2003 as a subsidiary
of the "New Sudan Public Corporation," which was itself created by
the "Civil Authority of the New Sudan" (CANS) under the Chairmanship
of then-Vice Chairman of the SPLM, Dr. Riek Machar. The legal
status of CANS is uncertain. NilePet was subsequently incorporated
in Yei, southern Sudan in July 2004. NilePet's purpose was to
facilitate the development of the mining industry of "New Sudan,"
including the petroleum industry, and to find partners with
appropriate technical and financial resources. In 2004, the CANS
awarded NilePet all unassigned blocks in southern Sudan. This
includes the enormous superblock B, which Khartoum awarded to a
Total-led consortium in 1980. The GOSS claims block B was available
because the Total contract had expired and was not renewed until
December 2004, after they had given the block to NilePet. NilePet's
directors are Dr. Bullon Bol, a petroleum engineer; Kuol Manyang
Juuk, Government of National Unity (GNU) Minister of Transportation;
and Simon Kun Puoch, a current member of the National Petroleum
Commission and Director of the South Sudan Relief and Rehabilitation
Commission (SSRRC). Since the signing of the CPA in January 2005,
NilePet has become wholly-owned by the GOSS.


7. (SBU) White Nile Limited (WNL): WNL is registered in the

KHARTOUM 00002654 002 OF 003


Guernsey Islands and traded on the Alternative Investment Market
(AIM) of the London Stock Exchange since February 2005. It owned
equally by NilePet and the Central African Mining and Exploration
Company (CAMAC). A "shell company," it acquired oil exploration
rights from NilePet for Block Ba, a GOSS-created section of block B
that Total believes has the greatest potential. WNL has no oil
expertise or proven development capacity, but it may be able to
deliver significant returns for the GOSS. NilePet's initial capital
ownership share value of WNL was USD 27.9 mil the day before its WNL
agreement went public; it reportedly jumped to USD 279 the day
after.


8. (U) WNL and Total are currently in litigation in the UK over
Block B, which Total continues to claim as part of a consortium
which includes Marathon Inc. and Kuwait Petroleum. WNL asserts that
its claim is based on the August 2004 CANS award to NilePet. Total
was originally awarded Block B by Khartoum in 1980 but abandoned
this huge area of savannah and marshland when war erupted in 1983.
Total pulled out in 1984 following the killing of one of its workers
but kept paying the north an annual fee to maintain its claim.
Total then renewed its contract with Khartoum in December 2004, just
before the signing of the CPA. While the CPA states existing oil
contracts cannot be renegotiated, because the NilePet deal preceded
the Total renewal, GoSS officials claim their deal is the valid
existing contract.



9. (SBU) SET Energy Gmbh (SET)/Industrial and Financial Group ASCOM
S.A. (ASCOM): SET is a German company headquartered in Hamburg,
while ASCOM is a Moldovan company. This consortium signed an IPSA
with NilePet on June 28, 2005, covering Block 5b, a block that
Khartoum had previously assigned to a Petronas-led consortium.
ASCOM has already brought in drilling rigs and other heavy equipment
and has reportedly begun construction of an airstrip to access its
block.


10. (SBU) Shaanxi Yan Chang Petroleum Group (SYC): SYC is a
partnership between the Provincial Government of Shaanxi and Yan
Chang International, Ltd (YCI),a Hong Kong-based company. NilePet
signed an IPSA with SYC for block Bc, a GOSS-created sub-block on
the southern edge of superblock B, in November 2005. SYS is also
preparing a feasibility study for the design, construction and
operation of a 150,000 b/pd refinery in the south and is interested
in the production of liquefied natural gas (LNG).


11. (SBU) Apex Petroleum N.V. (APEX) and Supex Petroleum N.V.
(SUPEX): APEX and SUPEX, based in Curacao, each signed separate
contracts with NilePet in 2005 for Blocks Dc and 7S respectively.
These blocks were previously unassigned by the north.


12. (SBU) Taken together, Nilepet has already netted signing
bonuses from these contracts totaling at least USD 25 million, the
majority of which is purportedly being held in international banks.
The contracts provide fairly generous terms for the GOSS over time,
high quotas for training and employing southern Sudanese, large
amounts of funding for community development projects, and strong
environmental protections. The contracts also give the government
of the producing states 7 percent of net revenues, more than the 2
percent provided for under the CPA.


13. Nevertheless, there are rumors and recriminations among senior
SPLM members who want an accounting of the bonuses paid and more
transparency in the deals. Many suspect Vice President Riek Machar,
among others, of profiteering, although a key minister, albeit with
reported ties to Machar, assured CG Juba officials that the bulk of
the funds are banked. Several GOSS contacts have asserted that
President Salva Kiir has ordered these contracts nullified, but
there is no evidence that such an order has been carried out. The
SPLM leadership says they have set up an investigative committee to
get more answers on oil deals. Many in the party admit the deals
lack transparency, but assert that the SPLM had the right to sign
these contracts and say they want to handle the corruption issues
internally.



CPA Compliance: Blame to go Around
--------------


14. (SBU) The GOSS asserts that its contracts are legal under the
CPA, as they cover areas controlled by the SPLM/A before January
2005 and not otherwise assigned (they did not recognize Total's
continuing claim before the new contract in 2004). Other contracts,
GOSS claims, are justified post-CPA as falling under the Interim
Southern Sudan Constitution Article 183 (2) which allows for the
"development and management of . . . petroleum development in

KHARTOUM 00002654 003 OF 003


Southern Sudan in consultation with the relevant communities, within
the overall framework of petroleum development during the interim
period."


15. (SBU) The GOSS also argues that because NilePet was awarded all
unassigned blocks in 2004, its agreement is an existing oil contract
under the CPA and not subject to renegotiation or ratification by
the National Petroleum Commission (NPC). The GOSS position is that
it will, however, submit its contracts for review by the NPC to
determine how much "profit oil" is available for division between
the Government of National Unity, GOSS, and the Oil Producing States
of Southern Sudan.


USG Help Sought
--------------


16. (SBU) The GOSS is seeking USG technical assistance to help them
develop policies and capacity to monitor existing northern oil
contracts and participate fully in the NPC when it becomes
operational. Southern officials question the usefulness and
objectivity of a Norwegian oil advisor who consults with both
Khartoum and the south. The Garrison/Fierst visit provided insight
into potential areas of assistance that would be supportive of the
CPA. There are growing concerns that oil could become the source of
separation or renewed violence. A full trip report is being
prepared by the USG oil expert for Washington's review.

HUME