Uganda sues Kenya over fuel importation saga
The tussle between Kenya and Uganda over the
importation of Uganda petroleum products has moved to the East African Court of
Justice (EACJ) corridors.
Uganda is suing Kenya over her refusal to
allow it use of the Kenya Pipeline Company (KPC) infrastructure to move its
refined petroleum products from Mombasa port to Uganda under a new arrangement
as directed by Uganda’s Cabinet.
In the suit, Uganda accuses Kenya of denying
its entity, the Uganda National Oil Company (UNOC), the rights to operate as an
Oil Marketing Company (0MC) in Kenya.
Uganda, through the UNOC, had sought to move
fuel products through Kenya Pipeline but was directed to register as an oil marketer
in Kenya by the Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority (EPRA), a move that
would allow UNOC to import and export petroleum products through Kenya and use
the country’s pipeline to do so.
EPRA had asked UNOC to fulfil a number of
requirements, among them; business registration certificates, identification
documents for all directors, work permits, tax compliance certificate, proof of
financial capability including proof of sales volumes of 6.6 million litres of
super petrol/gasoil or A1jet or kerosene in Kenya, evidence of operating five
licensed retail stations and operating a licensed depot with a turnover of USD 10
million over the last three years.
UNOC could not provide all the required
document s and found some of the requirements a burden, arguing that it was a
fully State-owned company in Uganda that only sought to transport product
through Kenya and had no intention of doing business in Kenya.
It sought exemption, which Kenya said it
would consider at Cabinet level.
A case was filed at the Machakos High court
on November 7, 2023 that listed Royani Energy Ltd as 1st petitioner, Charles
Kombo as 2nd petitioner, John Kinuthia Mwangi and Acaccia Ridge Construction as
3rd petitioner, against Energy Cabinet Secretary, the Attorney General, EPRA
Director General and UNOC.
It sought to stop the granting of exemptions
to UNOC, with Justice Francis Rayola Olel granting conservatory orders against
any such exemption for UNOC.
Uganda, in its suit at the East Africa Court
of Justice, holds Kenya’s government responsible for this delay in granting
exemptions.
Uganda is seeking to have the licensing
protocols imposed by EPRA on UNOC declared irrelevant, irrational and illegal.
Uganda, in court documents, also accuses
Kenya of going against the treaty for the establishment of the East African Community
by restraining EPRA from issuing the OMC license to Uganda.
It further wants the court to declare that
the landlocked country does not require a license from EPRA to access the Kenya
Pipeline Company’s systems and transport petrol from Mombasa to Uganda.
It also wants Kenya to unconditionally accord
as a UNOC a service supplier of the republic of Uganda, commercial terms for
the use of KPC, no less favourable than it accords to other suppliers, and it
also wants a permanent injunction issued against Kenya from imposing
unrealistic restrictions to UNOC accessing the KPC.
Uganda currently imports 90% of her refined
petroleum products through the port of Mombasa, and transports them to Uganda
through the Kenya State-owned KPC.
Uganda’s petroleum products supply has been
handled by the oil marketing companies, and through the government-to-government
arrangements between Kenya and foreign governments adopted in early 2023 by
Kenya, meaning that the OMCs operating in Kenya import petroleum products and
in turn sell the same to Uganda’s OMCs.
Uganda argues that the complete reliance and
dependency on Kenyan OMCs to import and supply petrol products to Uganda has
exposed it to supply vulnerabilities resulting in avoidable increases in fuel
pump prices, hence the decision by Uganda to import directly through UNOC.
But as Uganda waits for the case it has filed
at the EACJ to be heard and determined, it is expected to cease buying fuel
from Kenyan OMCs after it entered into a five-year contract with an Arab company
that will now supply its entire fuel needs.
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