- TotalEnergies plans to resume this year the natural gas project in Cabo Delgado, northern Mozambique, which was suspended in March 2021 after an armed insurgent attack, announced the companyโs chief executive Patrick Pouyannรฉ.ย
โMy goal is that the project restarts in 2022, but I am not alone. We are readyโ, he said at the Presidency of the Republic building in Maputo, after a meeting with the Mozambican head of state, Filipe Nyusi earlier this week.
The construction of the gas liquefaction plant, extracted from the seabed (about 40 kilometres offshore) is the largest currently financed private investment in Africa and was suspended in March 2021 and TotalEnergies was forced to call force majeur. Read more
โI am optimisticโ, said Pouyannรฉ, about the resumption of works, although without commitments.ย The CEO of TotalEnergies said thatย the next time he returns to Mozambique, he wants to be able to go โto Palma, Mocรญmboa da Praia and Muedaโ
โWhenย I see that life is back to normal, with State services and the population, then the project can start overโ, he said.
Patrick Pouyannรฉ said that โa lot of progress has already been made and I want to congratulate the Mozambican authorities who together with Rwanda and SADC [Southern African Development Community] managed to get a lot doneโ.
A joint military force has been fighting insurgent groups in the region.ย Pouyannรฉ referred to two crucial points, Mocรญmboa da Praia and Palma,ย pointing to them as safe places now.ย โBut there is still some progress to be made in order to have sustained security. We want to see the population and villages return to their normal livesโ, he highlighted.
Pouyannรฉ today signed an agreement with the Mozambican authorities for training actions for 2,500 young people from Cabo Delgado, with a view to creating job opportunities arising from the ongoing investments.
A theme that, he mentioned, is linked to security issues.ย โThe normalization of social life is part of security, it is not just a matter for the armed forces,โ he said.
The Mozambican President said that the oil company โdid not leave because it wanted toโ.
Likewise, the population โleft because it was attacked, but it will returnโ, as normalcy is resumed, Nyusi said, recalling a request made to him during a visit to Palma:for people to be able to travel peacefully in the province.
Satisfied with the military advance on the insurgency, the Head of State hopes to see this tranquillity reign throughout the province soon.
โItโs not likeย weโre singing victories, but we are working and enjoying the work that the young [military]are doingโ,ย the President underlined.
Regarding Pouyannรฉโs presence in Maputo, Nyusi commented that โthis visit was important to assess what is happeningโ and promised joint work.
โOne of the things we are going to do quickly, together, is to try to bring tranquility to lifeโ in Cabo Delgado, the President told reporters at the end of the meeting with the leader of TotalEnergies.
The conflict has already caused more than 3,100 deaths, according to the ACLED conflict registration project, and more than 817,000 displaced people, according to the Mozambican authorities.
Since July, an offensive by government troops with the support of Rwanda, which was later joined by the Southern African Development Community (SADC), has increased security, recovering several areas where there was a presence of rebels, namely theย town of Mocรญmboa da Praia, which had been seizedย inย August 2020.
Author: Bryan Groenendaal
Source: LUSA