Rwanda Petroleum Exploration Capacity Building Project
The petroleum sector is not very well developed at the present time in Rwanda. The only petroleum related activity at this time in Rwanda is the extraction of dissolved methane from the waters of Lake Kivu. This report is the result of a short term...
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Format: | Mining/Oil and Gas |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC
2013
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2009/10/16465270/rwanda-petroleum-exploration-capacity-building-project http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12682 |
Summary: | The petroleum sector is not very well
developed at the present time in Rwanda. The only petroleum
related activity at this time in Rwanda is the extraction of
dissolved methane from the waters of Lake Kivu. This report
is the result of a short term consulting contract with the
World Bank Group and FJG energy advisors concluded on
September 1st 2009. This report is a result of a mission to
Rwanda September 12th-25th, 2009. It is not intended as an
in depth analysis of the capacity needs for the petroleum
sector in Rwanda, as this was completed in March 2009 by
bridge consult AS, but rather as an evaluation of the
'practical and operational' perspectives in
developing a local petroleum industry focused on
exploration. Further advice in dealing with potential
interested companies was also offered in the context of an
overarching petroleum policy. The main objectives of the
assignment were to: enhance the familiarity on the part of
key government officials with the main technical and
economic concepts of the petroleum exploration and
production industry; develop understanding within Government
of Rwanda of the potential impacts (positive and negative)
of an active petroleum exploration and production industry
in a developing country; familiarize government officials
with the fundamental policy issues they will face as
petroleum exploration and development activities unfold in
Rwanda with an emphasis on those up-front policy decisions
needed at the earliest phases of activity; and prepare key
officials to take a front line role in policy formulation
and negotiation with private investors. |
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