Big oil strike fuels Congo conflict
The seemingly endless civil war over the mineral riches of the Democratic Republic of Congo seems likely to escalate
because of a major oil strike and a plan to build the most powerful hydroelectric dam ever conceived.
The oil was found in July 2007 by Tullow Oil of Ireland and Heritage Oil of Canada in Lake Albert, which lies on the
border with Uganda and is part of the system of the Upper Nile. The field is now estimated to hold several bn barrels
of oil. If that proves to be accurate it will be the largest onshore field found in sub-Saharan Africa in two
decades.
Initially, Heritage estimated the field contained 600 mm barrels, but later pegged the deposits on the Ugandan side
at 2.4 bn barrels worth an estimated $ 7 bn. Tullow estimates that the Congo deposits included a vast reservoir of
natural gas that could produce 14 mm cfpd.
However, development of the field will require a 750-mile pipeline to the Atlantic coast to the west -- and an oil
price of $ 80 per barrel to make it commercially viable.
The increased activity in the oil sector has attracted several international security companies that will be needed
to protect the oil facilities, fuelling the tension in the war-torn region where many of Congo's neighbours either
have military forces in action or support paramilitary proxies.
Uganda, Rwanda, Angola, Namibia and Zimbabwe among others have been caught up in the conflict at various times in
which some 5 mm people have perished, mainly from disease and starvation.
The DRC, a country of 63 mm in the heart of Africa that is a big as Western Europe, has been ravaged by war for 15
years. The civil war that erupted in 1998, a spillover of the genocidal war in Rwanda, supposedly came to an end in
2003 when a peace settlement was reached by the main protagonists and a transitional government established in the
Congo.
But fighting has continued in the lawless eastern part of the country where rebel holdouts still plunder, rape and
murder.
The Congo is immensely richin resources, such as gold, copper, diamonds, uranium and tantalum, known as coltan, which
is used in electronic devices such as cell phones and computers. But it is also rich in water power. The flow of the
mighty Congo River could one day light up the entire continent.
And this could also become a cause of conflict in a region where war and slaughter are endemic.
Plans to link Europe to the world's biggest hydroelectric dam project are causing growing controversy, amid claims
that diverting electrical power to Europe would rob needy Africans of their birthright. Supporters of the project say
that the 40,000 MW of power the $ 80 bn Grand Inga Dam on the Congo River could generate would double the amount of
electricity available in all of Africa.
Right now, only 30 % of Africans have access to electricity, but that drops to less than 10 % in some countries.
Even so, the Grand Inga electrical output is twice as much as the world's current largest dam, the Three Gorges
project in China, and it could accelerate industrialization across Africa in the span of a few years.
The World Bank supports the scheme. It concedes there is concern that a project that could provide electricity for
500 mm homes in Africa, from Cairo to Cape Town, might also have some of its power diverted to Europe and even
Israel.
But they stress that the success of the ambitious project could hinge on exporting energy to wealthy countries to
ensure the scheme gets financing from international banks and other investors.
"We need creditworthy anchor customers to subscribe so investment can go ahead," explained Vijay Iyer of the Africa
Energy Group at the World Bank.
