EAC
Secretary General Amb Dr Richard Sezibera with EAC Deputy Secretary
General incharge of Planning and Infrastructure Dr Enos Bukuku at the
EAC-IMF Workshop on Fiscal Mgt of Oil and Natuarl Gas in EA.
Group Photo EAC-IMF Workshop on Fiscal Mgt of Oil and Natuarl Gas in EA.
A
three-day workshop on Fiscal Management of oil and Natural Gas in East
African organized by the East African Community together with the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) opened today at Mount Meru Hotel, in
Arusha,Tanzania.
The
15-17 January workshop is designed to discuss key issues that EAC
governments face in managing the fiscal impacts of oil and gas
development and emphasize how the issues and policy choices are
interlinked. These relate to design of the fiscal regime (tax and
non-tax instrument) and revenue collection; options for the macro-fiscal
policy framework and fiscal anchor as well as institutional reforms to
integrate natural resources revenues into the budget and credible
medium-term frameworks.
Delivering
the keynote address, the Cabinet Secretary, Ministry of Energy and
Petroleum in the Republic of Kenya Hon. Davis Chirchir said that the
timing and importance of the workshop to the East African Partner States
cannot be over-emphasized due to the fact that the East African region
is rapidly emerging as the preferred investment destination by
international oil companies who own the risk capital for conducting
upstream oil and natural gas operations.
The
Kenya Cabinet Secretary disclosed that in Africa out of a combined East
African sedimentary basin surface area of about 900, 000km2, only an
insignificant number of about 190 exploration wells have so far been
drilled in that expansive area.
He
noted that number of the wells drilled relative to the expansiveness of
the regional sedimentary basins according to international standards
translates into a very low average well density of about one well in
every 5000 km. The current developments have had a very positive impact
of projecting East Africa as a promising alternative destination for
exploration and production of commercially viable oil and gas resources,
added Hon. Davis Chirchir.
“I am
happy that the International Monetary Fund team and the East African
Secretariat have, through this workshop, provided East Africa with the a
forum to benefit from the invaluable knowledge, skills and experience
that the IMF team has built over a long period of time’’.
The
Kenya Cabinet Secretary underscored the importance of working together
to address and mitigate the challenges that either delay or become
impediments to enabling the people of EAC region realize the full
benefits across the whole value chain of oil and gas production and
sale.
Minister
of State for Finance, Planning and Economic Development in charge of
Privatization in Uganda, Hon. Aston P. Kajara, reiterated that
extraction of natural resources-oil, gas, and hard minerals can play a
large role in the regional economies provided that a good framework is
in place for effective management.
“I
look forward to the ensuing discussions as we marshal experiences on how
best to manage these new revenues in ways that can expand our economies
and consolidate and build on the gains that have been made in living
standards over the past decade in EAC Partner States’’.
Hon.
Aston P. Kajara reminded the participants that good decision making in
the management of natural resources wealth are exceptionally high and at
the same time the damage caused by bad decisions can be carried by
future generations for many years to come.
On his
part, the EAC Secretary General Amb. Dr. Richard Sezibera said the
workshop on Fiscal Management of Oil and Natural gas will in no doubt
make a big step in fiscal policy management since revenue from finite
natural resources such as oil and natural gas must definitely present
opportunities for EAC’s solid economic development but can also
destabilize macro-economic management if not well managed.
Amb.
Sezibera informed the workshop that discoveries of natural gas in
Tanzania, and oil in Uganda and more recently in Kenya with mineral
exploration proceeds in Methanol Gas in Rwanda and possible reserves in
Burundi calls for robust frameworks for managing revenue from this
resource in order to benefit the East Africans.
The
EAC region is bound to take off to the emerging economies if the
revenues from natural resources are well managed compounded with the
establishment of the single currency and adherence to prudent and sound
fiscal and monetary policies, remarked Amb. Sezibera.
Among
the delegates in attendance were; the EAC Deputy Secretary General in
charge of Planning and Infrastructure Dr. Enos Bukuku; Mr. Roger Nord,
Deputy Director, Africa Department, IMF; Mr. Michael Keen, Deputy
Director, Fiscal Affairs Department, IMF; and experts of natural gas and
oil in the EAC Partner States.
0 comments:
Post a Comment