Ivory Coast Prime Minister Daniel Kablan Duncan said his nation will
boost oil production within five years to 200,000 barrels a day,
rivaling neighboring Ghana as stability returns to a country racked by a
decade of turmoil.
The West African nation wants oil companies to increase exploration
and drilling offshore after output more than halved to about 30,000
barrels a day because of technical problems, he said in an interview
Jan. 6.
Ghana pumps about 100,000 barrels a day and wants to more than
double output to 250,000 by 2021. Ghana is West Africa’s fourth-largest
producer, after Nigeria, Equatorial Guinea and Gabon.
“We have about 50 oil blocks of which half have been awarded,” Duncan
said in the commercial capital, Abidjan. “We expect to add at least
five wells a year.”
President Alassane Ouattara has pledged to spur economic growth by
investing in energy and infrastructure to sustain growth near 10 percent
annually. The economy of the world’s largest cocoa producer has
expanded at a faster pace than sub-Saharan African nations since gross
domestic product contracted in 2011 following post-election violence
that left more than 3,000 dead.
The government will sell Eurobonds in the first half of the year, the
first since a 2011 default, to fund the projects and is turning to
China for additional financing. The economy will expand 10 percent this
year, from 9 percent in 2013, Duncan said.
Bond Yields
Yields on Ivory Coast’s $2.5 billion of dollar bonds due 2032 fell 1
basis point, or 0.01 percentage point, to 7.48 percent at 9:13 a.m. in
London, where the debt is listed. The government will seek to sell $800
million to $1 billion in the new Eurobond offer this year, Duncan said.
Foreign donors have pledged $8.6 billion to fund $19 billion of
projects in the Ivory Coast in the next two years. Chinese agencies and
banks, including the Export-Import Bank of China, plan to lend $10
billion to fund infrastructure projects in the next six years at below
market rates, Planning Minister Albert Mabri Toikeusse said in July. The
Chinese have offered Ivory coast 20- to 25-year loans with interest
rates between 2 percent and 3 percent, Duncan said.
Ivory Coast missed out on soaring oil prices in the past few years as
output dropped to 30,000 barrels a day last year from about 60,000
barrels a day in 2008. Total SA, U.K.-based Tullow Oil Plc. and Anadarko
Petroleum Corp. operate in Ivory Coast. Ghana and the Ivory Coast ended
a dispute over the delineation of a maritime boundary in which an
oilfield is located.
The government is also reviewing its mining regulations to as it
plans to receive increased revenue from an expanding mining industry,
Duncan said. “The state has begun to impose order in the sector,” he
said.
Ivory Coast contains reserves of gold, diamonds, nickel, manganese
and iron ore. Parliament is set to endorse a new mining code while a
minimum investment level for prospect licenses was set last year.
[ENERGY MIX REPORT]
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