President Yoweri Museveni has said Uganda will exploit its resources including oil, for the benefit of Ugandans.
Mr Museveni, who is on a two-day state visit to Chad, said Uganda would follow in the footsteps of the central African state that produces and refines its oil.
The President said Uganda hopes to start with a refinery producing 30,000 barrels per day and later increases the capacity to 60,000 barrels per day.
He reiterated that he will ābreak awayā from the African slogan of āproducing what it does not consume and consuming what it does not produceā.
āI congratulate President Idriss Deby for his foresight of building this refinery. Some countries produce petroleum but donāt refine it. He has done the right thing, now Chad produces oil and consumes it. In Uganda, we have some oil wells and that is the route we are taking,ā he said.
The President, who was addressing local media during his tour of Chadās Djarmaya Oil Refinery, was accompanied by a team of engineers from the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Development (Petroleum Directorate) led by Engineer Irene Batebe and Refinery Engineer Benjamin Ariho. He was taken around the facility by Chadās Minister for Petroleum, Mines and Energy, Hon. DjĆ©rassem Le BĆ©madjiel.
Minister DjƩrassem Le BƩmadjiel said with the refinery, his country is consuming everything they produce from oil and have nothing to spare. He said they are looking at building another refinery to produce bitumen for their roads and that his country can now afford to use high quality cheap petroleum products.
Chad is the seventh biggest oil producer in sub-Saharan Africa and it is said to produce about 180,000 barrels per day. Despite being one of the poorest countries on the continent, the landlocked central African country has since 2003 when it became an oil-producing nation seen a steady economic growth over the past decade.








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