Breaking News:

Russian Fuel Cargos Pile Up at Sea as South Korean Buyers Grow Cautious

DRC: Congo Investors Beware of 'peace-means-war' deal

Bottom Line: A DRC "peace" deal signed in Ethiopia last week is a "war" deal that will see the creation of a UN-backed "military brigade" of 2,000-2,500 South African troops who will descend on North and South Kivu to fight M23 rebels who are threatening the Congolese government's control of the area. Control of the country's mineral and oil resources will be remapped to some extent in the chaos. Look to South Africa for answers.

Analysis: South Africa is keen to back the Congolese government against any opposition (most notably right now M23) to protect its dubious rights to two oil blocks in eastern DRC. In 2010, the Congolese government awarded these oil blocks to two companies (Caprikat and Foxwhelp) registered in the British Virgin Islands and tied to Khulubuse Zuma, the nephew of the South African president. This situation has kept other foreign investors away.

Also linked to the oil blocks is Israeli businessman Dan Gertler (a major investor in DRC who enjoys very close ties to DRC President Kabila. Right now, these oil blocks are languishing in a state of non-activity. South Africa will use this UN-backed opportunity to secure its foothold in DRC, and its interest go well beyond these two oil blocks: South Africa is deep in the mining sector, and has its eyes on a massive dam on the Congo River which would eventually be able to provide power to South Africa's entire industrial sector. This is the big prize. It made gains towards this in 2011 with an MOU…

To read the full article

Please sign up and become a premium OilPrice.com member to gain access to read the full article.

Register Login

Loading ...

« Previous: This Week in Energy: Sequester Day - What it Means for the Energy Sector

Next: Last Stops on the East Africa Oil & Gas Frontier: Eritrea, Ethiopia »

Editorial Dept

More