The military offensive against Islamic al-Shabaab fighters is gearing up
for an assault on Kismayo that's seen as a key element in a dispute
over oil and gas.
MOGADISHU, Somalia, Aug. 3 (UPI) -- The
military offensive by Kenyan and Ethiopian forces against Islamic
al-Shabaab fighters is gearing up for an assault on the Indian Ocean
port of Kismayo that's increasingly seen as a key element in a brewing
dispute over oil and natural gas.
Kismayo, in southern Somalia near the Kenyan border, is al-Shabaab's
most important base, through which it gets its supply of weapons and
much of its revenue.
But the strategic value of the city, one of Somalia's three
deep-water ports, has swelled in recent months because of the huge oil
and gas discoveries off East Africa.
Kenya made its first big strike in March and the discoveries, all the
way south to Mozambique, are piling up. Even South Africa is
undertaking major seismic testing, hoping to join the region's growing
energy boom.
The oil and gas strikes, including some in neighboring Ethiopia, a
U.S. ally that's played a prominent role in the 6-year-old war against
the Somali Islamists, have raised the strategic context of the conflict
to a new level.
On July 6, the Western-backed Transitional Federal Government in
Mogadishu, Somalia's war-battered capital, accused neighboring Kenya of
illegally awarding offshore oil and gas exploration rights to leading
European oil companies in waters claimed by Somalia.
Eni of Italy got three blocks and Total of France got one.
Kenya and Ethiopia, encouraged by the United States, deployed armored
columns into Somalia from the south and west in late 2011 to aid the
beleaguered TFG crush the Islamists. In recent months, they have pushed
al-Shabaab into a southwestern pocket, with Kismayo as its main
stronghold.
The dispute over the four exploration blocks is likely to complicate
the stampede of oil companies into a region that over the last year or
so has become one of the world's hottest energy prospects.
Analyst Jen Alic, reporting for energy Web site OilPrice.com,
observed July 15 that Kenya's timing "will be viewed as suspicious in
Somalia ...
"It's plausible that Kenya was hoping that its very successful
assistance in pushing al-Shabaab out of Mogadishu and a number of other
key bases and strongholds would give it carte blanche to act on oil
exploration in contested coastal waters."
It's a tricky situation that goes beyond the legal aspects on ownership of these waters.
"Kenya's involvement in southern Somalia was designed to gain the
upper hand on offshore oil block concessions that rightfully belong to
Somalia as stipulated in the 1982 U.N. Law of the Seas convention," said
Abdillahi Mohamud, director of the East African Energy Forum.
That's an international lobby group that seeks to protect Somalia's energy assets from being exploited by other states.
The forum estimates that impoverished Somalia, ravaged by clan
warfare since the dictatorship of Siad Mohammed Barre was toppled in
1992, has offshore and onshore oil reserves of 80 billion-100 billion
barrels.
"This small nation of 10 million stands to have the fifth largest
petroleum reserves in the world, eclipsing heavyweights like the United
Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Nigeria," Mohamud noted.
That may well be an overly optimistic estimation. But there's little
doubt that the volume of oil and natural gas in the region is vast.
The recoverable gas reserves found off Tanzania and Mozambique since
2010 are estimated to total 100 trillion cubic feet. Exploration
companies say the true figure may be more than double that.
The U.S. Geological Survey says East Africa's waters hold more than
440 tcf of recoverable gas reserves, which will transform the region
into one of the world's leading gas exporters, primarily to
energy-hungry Asia.
The danger is, of course, that the oil and gas strikes off Somalia
will end up fueling the Somali conflict, if they haven't already, and
possibly even widening it as regional powers vie with each other to
control the energy riches.
This could apply to other East African states as well. Ethiopia, for
instance, is considered to be sitting on considerable energy reserves.
These looks set to inflame a long-running insurgency against the brutal regime of Prime Minister Meles Zenawi
, who took power in 1991 and who is now reported to be in poor health.
Oil discoveries in the Democratic Republic of Congo, a treasure house
of mineral riches, are adding fuel to a murderous war waged largely by
neighboring states over its resources.
Source: United Press International (UPI)