Ugandan crude export pipeline boost
EACOP has overcome a significant hurdle, with a group of regional banks providing an initial financing tranche for a scheme that has attracted criticism from environmental campaigners
Efforts to build a pipeline to send crude oil 1,443km from Uganda’s Lake Albert oilfields to Tanzania’s port of Tanga inched forward in late March, with the first external financing tranche closing on the East African Crude Oil Pipeline. EACOP Ltd—shareholders in which are TotalEnergies (62%), Uganda National Oil Company Limited (UNOC: 15%), Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC: 15%) and China’s state-controlled CNOOC (8%)—said the successful closing of this first tranche of external financing, understood to be worth $1b, represented a significant milestone. EACOP said it demonstrates the support of financial institutions on “transformative regional infrastructure”. The financing
Also in this section
9 March 2026
Petroleum Economist analysis sees increases in output from Saudi Arabia, Venezuela and Kazakhstan among others before region’s murky descent
9 March 2026
Energy sanctions are becoming an increasingly prominent tool of US foreign policy, with the country’s growth in oil and gas production allowing it to impose pressure on rivals without jeopardising its own energy security or that of its allies, argues Matthew McManus, a visiting fellow at the National Center for Energy Analytics
6 March 2026
The March 2026 issue of Petroleum Economist is out now!
6 March 2026
After Europe’s rapid buildout of floating LNG import capacity, Exmar CEO Carl-Antoine Saverys says future growth in floating gas infrastructure will increasingly be driven by developing markets as lower prices, rising energy demand and the need to replace coal unlock new opportunities for unconventional and tailor-made solutions






