Ethiopia, Chinese Firm Ink Gas Commercialisation Deal

Apr 25 , 2020


The Ministry of Mines & Petroleum and the Chinese POLY-GCL Petroleum Investment have signed a gas commercialisation agreement, which will ensure the planned fertiliser plant in Dire Dawa is supplied with ammonia. The agreement, which was signed on the premises of the Ministry on April 24, 2020, grants POLY-GCL the right to commercialise four trillion cubic feet of gas for both the local and international markets. Half of the gas will be supplied to the fertiliser plant, which Morocco’s Office Cherifien des Phosphates (OCP), the world’s largest phosphate exporter, and the state-run Chemical Industries Corporation agreed to build in Dire Dawa for 3.7 billion dollars. The agreement was signed four years ago. The remaining will be made available to the international market through a pipeline stretching from Ethiopia to Djibouti and later converted to liquified natural gas (LNG) at a natural gas processing plant to be built in Djibouti. POLY-GCL has been extracting natural gas at Calub, Hilala and Shilabo sites in the Ogaden area in the Somali Regional State. The plant is expected to convert 215 million cubic feet of natural gas to LNG daily. The project is expected to generate six billion dollars over 20 years. The area has a reserve of eight trillion cubic feet of gas.


Radar

Union Urges Meeting with Premier Over Living Cost

Rising living costs that reduce the purchasing power of stagnant workers' wages prompted leaders of the Confederation of Ethiopian Trade Unions (CETU) to urge a meeting with Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed (PhD). Flanked by Minster of Justice Gedion Timotheos, Abiy met with senior members of the Union last year to discuss issues related to freedom of associations, collective bargaining and the imminent challenge of inflation to the workforce. However, Kasahun Follo, head of the Union, said reduced...


Radar

Customs Chief Accuses Critics of Bias, Vows to Address Steel Imports

Steel manufacturers' struggles and the impact of duty-free imports on domestic production have caught the attention of parliamentarians. During the Customs Commission's presentation of its nine-month performance, an MP directed a question to Commissioner Debele Kabeta, seeking clarification on the measures being taken by his institution to mitigate the influx of imports that are negatively affecting local manufacturers. While the source remains elusive, over 56 million Br worth of contrab...


Radar

Tech Tools Offer Digital Lifeline to Refugees

A digital platform that aims to connect skilled refugees and potential employers within the host communities was launched in a partnership between the UNHCR and Gebeya Inc. The project has onboarded 300 refugees into the system since its inception five months ago and hopes to reach 2,000 individuals across Gebeya's system soon. Ethiopia is currently the third largest refugee and asylum seeker hosting country in Africa, with close to one million individuals. The country also has an additional...


Back
WhatsApp
Telegram
Email