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Kenya: U.S. Firm Wins Oil Hunt Contract

February 5, 2010

Nairobi — Kenya and US firm Anardako Petroleum Corporation have signed an agreement for the exploration of five offshore oil and gas blocks in Lamu basin.
The ministry of Energy said the pact for blocks L5, L 7, L11A, L11B and L12 was signed by the Government to intensify the search for commercial crude oil and gas deposits.
Senior superintending geologist, Mr Hudson Andambi, said Anardako was awarded all the blocks because it has vast expertise in deep-sea exploration.
"Anardako is set to start its work programme," he said during an oil and gas workshop in Nairobi organised by the East Africa Environment Network and the World Wide Fund for Nature.
Anardako, the largest independent deep-water oil producer in the Gulf of Mexico, also has production or exploration interests in Alaska, Algeria, Brazil, China, Indonesia, Mozambique and West Africa.
Andambi said the Government is committed to promoting Kenya as an exploration frontier and investment destination because 19 out of the 31 wells drilled in Kenya have traces of gas.
China National Offshore Oil Corporation started sinking the $26 million (Sh2 billion) Boghal-1-1 exploratory well in Isiolo North district last October 28, 2009. Drilling proper does not begin until April 2010.