Turkey invited by Somalia to explore for oil in its seas, president Erdogan said

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Monday
that Somalia had invited Turkey to conduct energy drilling and exploration
operations in its seas.
“We had a proposal from Somalia. They said that Somalia had
oil in its seas. [They said] as in Libya, [we] could do the same [drilling
operations] in [Somalia],” Erdogan told journalists on the presidential plane
returning from a summit in Berlin on Sunday, where world powers discussed
the situation in Libya.
Erdogan said Ankara was intending to honour the invitation.
“There would be steps that we will take there. This is something beneficial for
us,” he said.
According to seismic data processing firm Seismic Geo, there is a high potential for hydrocarbon
exploration off Somalia's shores. The country last week passed a new petroleum law to attract foreign investment
in the energy sector from giant firms such as ExxonMobil and Shell.
Abdirashid Mohamed Ahmed, the Somali minister in charge of
petroleum and mineral resources, announced last October that the country was opening up 15
blocks for oil companies to bid on for exploration and production licenses.
Turkey and Somalia have been growing close in the past
decade due to a deepening of commercial and military ties, with Ankara well
aware of the economic and political gains to be made in the Horn of Africa.
Since Erdogan’s historic visit to the capital Mogadishu
during a deadly famine in 2011, Turkey has been providing tens of millions of dollars of humanitarian aid to
Somalia. Turkey has also built a military base in the Somali capital to train
local forces. The Mogadishu international airport and the sea port are run by
Turkish companies.
The estimated bilateral trade between the two countries is now
around 250 million dollars, as Turkey invested 100 million dollars in the
country.
Turkish companies and workers were targeted in two separate
deadly bombing attacks in the last two months by al-Shabab, a
local Al-Qaeda affiliate.
Source: Middle east Eye
Comments
Post a Comment