South Sudan to invite companies to bid for tenders in its oil fields
South Sudan will kick-start an auction of licenses to develop eight oilfields around the country later this month.
South Sudan’s oil production is up to 178,000 barrels per day (bpd) and the country aims for output to reach 200,000 bpd within the next two years.
“We are working on increasing the production of oil,” said Arkangelo Okwang Oler, director-general for planning, training and research at South Sudan’s oil ministry.
Long-term, South Sudan aims to increase production to 350,000 bpd, Oler added, without specifying a time frame.
That level was South Sudan’s peak production before 2012 when a five-year civil war brought the young country’s oil industry to its knees.
“I am optimistic that we are moving toward a stable government,” Oler said. South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir and rebel leader Riek Machar have agreed to form a transitional government by the middle of November, the information minister said last month.
South Sudan made a small oil discovery in Northern Upper Nile State in August, its first since independence in 2011.
Oler said oil minister Awow Daniel Chuang would officially launch the tender for the licenses at a conference in the capital Juba on October 29-30, and that South Sudan would declare the results in the first quarter of 2020.
“We are inviting companies to come and impart your technologies based on the best international practices,” Oler said. “South Sudan is the current destination for investment.”