Oil & Energy Scrapbook: Firm specialising in Oil and Gas leads the way in sector

I am tempted to write about West Nile night, the once-in-a- month groove that brings rumba, Congolese dance and buses to town some cool cats from Arua, Moyo, Adjumani and Koboko to a fete at club Palui in Ntinda. But perhaps another time.

It is a cultural experience not to be missed if ever you are in Kampala. The sheer number of patched jeans, the whirl of constant waist shaking and genuine happiness transported me back to my school hall in Moyo Senior Secondary, back then when I was something of Mr. Happy Feet when Wenge Musica played .

Anyhow.

Some  of you may have noticed the domain Ugandaoilandgas.com. It is registered and owned by Mr. Hakeem Muwonge who together with Dennis Kusasira, Henry Kaliisa and George Senyomo are partners in perhaps the only firm presently focussed exclusively on oil, gas and minerals.

Kusaasira & Co. – OiLaw Profile (1)

There are several individuals within the legal, engineering and other professions associated with the oil sector but no firm has been set up specifically to serve it. The partners are part of the new breed of younger professionals flocking to the oil industry.

Dennis Kusasira and Henry Kaliisa are graduated from the University of Dundee ( Scotland) a favoured direction for Ugandan students seeking to join the sector. Am not sure why Dundee? but I first heard of the destination in relation to a less talked about government sponsorship program to grow the stock of Ugandan professionals ( more of this at another opportunity).

I first heard of Hakeem Muwonge when our Think Tank Kwawote organised Uganda’s first oil sector debate back in 2008. He was one of the only African students studying in Professor Jacqueline Weaver’s class at the University of Houston, another coveted direction for Ugandans eager to make their mark in the oil sector.

Since Kwawote was set up as a network of Ugandan professionals ( as amongst others a forum to trade in active research in changing policy), Mr. Muwonge spoke on behalf of the Think Tank several times on oil issues. The Think Tank promotes the participation of local professionals in all sectors but in particular the oil sector.

Several weeks ago I visited their new offices at Plot 18 Shimoni Road next to the Imperial Royale Hotel to speak to them about continuing public engagement in the oil sector besides running a business consulting.

” We hope that our firm will lead the way in drawing out professionals specialising in this area. So far because the oil industry is new those involved in it have not be specialists or have been foreign experts” said Dennis Kusasira.  A booky bunch, the group were happy to show me their growing library.

No doubt many new firms will be set up for business in the oil sector. The Non-governmental civil society is one of those. One of the focuses in the upcoming laws will be the participation of nationals and presents an opportunity to shape the attitude of Ugandans to the sector, especially young professionals joining this area, polarised right now by politicking by well, professional politicians.

Within the journalism fraternity the African Center for Media Excellence ( ACME) started by my two former editors Dr. Peter Mwesige and Bernard Tabaire is in its second cycle of media fellowships training a new generation of journos covering this sector.

We will try and profile more Ugandans critical to the oil industry in the coming weeks. Hopefully they will fine tune this slippery sector and get it to dance to a new beat ( no pun intended).

We sign off with Prof. Paul Collier’s lecture paper from the annual lecture commemorating the first Central Bank governor in Uganda last week (Prof _Collier’s_paper_Oct_211). The paper is on managing the oil and gas sector in Uganda. Collier, one government official said to me is an advisor to our President- a point we are bound to return to as well.

Oil & Energy Scrapbook; Oil sector laws, politics, postpone Tullow Farmdown. Bujagali power on the grid this week

Our last correspondence on this blog, was about the Tullow farm down being just hours away from conclusion.  That was at the beginning of the week.

Tullow executives including its chief internal counsel Graham Martin left the country on Thursday without signing the deal. It was however a week of high-level meetings and those who attended said that “progress” had been made. This was one of the most difficult meets to “break into”. We called it the Death Watch. Each evening as the meetings winded, we call sources and sources of sources, often from a bar stool, to try and figure out what was going on.

Even then very little information was coming through. Finally on Thursday I spoke to senior government official involved directly with the negotiations. He basically said the Ugandan side was in no hurry to sign just for the sake of closure. When I asked if new timelines had been set he declined to commit.

“ We asked the companies to allow for more time to negotiate after the 15th of July when the first deadline was missed” he said. So as it is now the Tullow farm down has no deadlines save for that being contingent on all issues being resolved.

As the markets open tomorrow however there is good news about this deal. The reason it was not signed was not because the parties were not ready to sign. “ The government told them that because of pressure from parliament, signing should be withheld for two or three weeks as two bills regulating the oil sector are brought to the House,” said one insider. He added that the companies including Tullow were also “reluctant” to sign under the present political situation (probably worrying that the deal would be under siege or even overturned in the near future)

The responsiveness of the government, often given to ignoring the House, is very interesting. First it shows the sensitivity of the oil sector to the government. It also shows how deep the present upheavals in the ruling party are cutting. Parliament has a minority Opposition with such small numbers to be ineffectual. In effect the so-called newly discovered independence of the House is possible because of splits within the ruling party itself. While the negotiations were going on, the party leadership was fire-fighting Mps who among others have set their eyes on forcefully removing the Prime Minister Amama Mbabazi from his office and his position as party Secretary General. He is being defended by President Yoweri Museveni. The bond between the men is increasingly being played out in the media.

Their relationship deserves separate comment. The battles with ruling party Mps will continue for a while. It happens that every after an election, activism by Mps is highest. This time around it has benefitted openness and transparency in the oil sector for which am personally grateful since I went to court over this matter in 2007.

However Mps leveraging their power against the executive may not always be on principle, but as a bargaining tool. It follows that if what they are bargaining for is settled- these gains in transparency could also be reversed or supported less actively. Such is the politics.

Meanwhile Bujagali Hydro-power Dam will start testing 50 MW on the national grid this week. Before this all testing was on the turbines. The electricity distributor, Umeme and the Uganda National Electricity Transmission Company (UETCL) are fast tracking lines to bring the cheaper power into homes and businesses. UETCL in particular has created a second route ending at Kawanda outside Kampala and near a sub-station that Umeme runs. Kampala and Entebbe together form the bulk of electricity consumers (over half) in Uganda. Tariffs are however expected to remain high or rise even if the country plans to decommission another thermal power plant by Christmas.

In other news, ahem, the MTN marathon date is set for late November and so begins the hustle to get in shape.

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