Norway company contracted to survey oil blocks in disputed Kenya-Somalia blocks speaks

A Norwegian consultancy firm that gathered data on Mogadishu’s oil stock in the Indian Ocean says it only worked on blocks in Somali territory clearing claims that earlier surfaced claiming that blocks disputed by Kenya and Somalia had been involved.

The information gathered by Spectrum Geo was used to market the blocks to investors in London.

“Spectrum acquired a total of 20,185km of 2D seismic data, in a grid stretching from south of the maritime border with the Federal State of Puntland, to north of the maritime border with the Republic of Kenya.

BREAKING Somalia Government says it is not and does not have any plans to sell oil blocks in the disputed territories for sale until a case before the International Court of Justice is heard and determined #Somalia #SomaliaVsKenya pic.twitter.com/enX64BMH2u— Radio Dalsan (@DalsanFM) February 17, 2019

“All of this seismic data was acquired wholly within the maritime territory of the Federal Government of Somalia and no data were acquired within the area currently the subject of the maritime delimitation case with Kenya,” Graham Mayhew, the company’s Executive Vice-President for Africa said.

The company, though not responding directly, was referring to Kenya’s claim on Saturday that Somalia had “auctioned” oil blocks belonging to Nairobi, during an oil conference on February 7 in London.

Somali delegates had marketed their oil stock profile to investors, largely relying on seismic data gathered by Spectrum since 2015 when it signed a contract with Mogadishu to obtain additional data.

The data depicted oil stocks in 15 blocks, covering water depths of between 30 metres to 4 kilometres, analysed using what Spectrum called modern processing algorithms to achieve “optimal imaging of steeply-dipping extensional and compressional features and illumination of subtle amplitude anomalies.”

The company confirmed no oil blocks had been auctioned but said the conference had only been a “promotion” of the Somalia offshore oil and gas.

Mogadishu had equally denied the charge on Sunday.

But even as the firm clarified the matter, both sides continued to front divergent maps of the same area.

Spectrum produced a map of seismic study area, indicating all the 15 blocks were in Somali territory, including the three southern blocks in the Jubba-Lamu Basin, but north of the parallel latitude proposed by Kenya.

Kenya had on its part produced the same map, but indicating the blocks labelled L21, L23, L24 and L25 as some of those controversially marketed.

Despite the apparent calming of the tensions between Nairobi and Mogadishu; the tiff over which blocks should be marketed and which ones shouldn’t have been a matter of controversy before.

Long before Somalia filed a case at the International Court of Justice, seeking to redraw the maritime boundary with Kenya, it accused Kenya of granting exploration licences to French firm Total and Italian firm Eni; even as the two sides presented the disputed before the UN Commission on Law of the Sea.

Somalia would later sue at the ICJ, but the matter on exploration still emerged.

For example, Somalia’s legal team argued Kenya had continued offering  offshore blocks based on its claimed boundary, even though Somalia objected.

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