A consortium of five organisations has commissioned two studies that seek to define business opportunities in the agriculture, and housing sectors linked to Uganda’s emerging oil and gas economy.
This comes days after the government signed the Final Investment Decision (FID) for the crude oil pipeline, Tilenga and Kingfisher oil development projects.
The consortium includes Stanbic Bank Uganda, aBi Finance, Economic Policy Research Centre (EPRC), Stanbic Properties Limited, and the Petroleum Authority of Uganda (PAU), the government agency that monitors and regulates the exploration, development, and production of oil.
In one of the agreements signed in Kampala, Stanbic Bank, aBi Finance, and PAU have agreed to collectively invest Shs 350million to contract the services of the Economic Policy Research Centre (EPRC) “to define the linkages between Agriculture and oil and sector Development in Uganda.”
The study is expected to estimate the current and future demand and supply, assess status of standards, as well as active agricultural enterprises with potential to harness capacity to ably absorb emerging opportunities linked to the oil and gas economy which is expected to drive demand as the country enters production phase.
Based at Makerere University, EPRC is a think-tank specialising in economics and development policy-oriented research and analysis aimed at supporting the formulation, implementation, monitoring, and evaluation of government policies.
In the second agreement, PAU has contracted Stanbic Properties Uganda Limited to ‘undertake a baseline study and project the future supply and demand of housing, cost and availability of land, cost and availability of building materials and housing preferences and delivery systems in the Albertine region.’
Stanbic Properties will also analyse the strengths, opportunities, weaknesses, risks, and threats in the housing market in the Albertine region and the identified EACOP districts, to establish the current feasible incentives along the housing value chain provided by government, non- government entities and the private sector which can complement investment.
In the agreement, Stanbic Properties has also committed to undertaking studies to help identify areas with land available for housing development and the modalities of land acquisition by investors; and to develop a housing strategy action plan with costed measures, an implementation road map, and an implementation process map for the realisation of identified opportunities.
Emma Mugisha, the Stanbic Bank executive director said the signing of these agreements couldn’t have come at a better time when government has just signed the final investment decision on EACOP, opening the stage to opportunities worth billions of shillings; while all this is exciting news
"It is important for local investors to be guided by research to help them make informed investment decisions. We are therefore pleased to be part of the solution and looking forward to helping Ugandans get the most of the agriculture sector opportunities linked to the oil and gas economy," Mugisha said.
Ernest Rubondo, PAU executive director, said once completed, the study will be a very useful item in their policy tool-kit, adding that as the regulator, they are always looking out for ideas that ensure greater local participation in the oil and gas sector.
"The supply of foodstuffs is one area where local farmers can become key players. However, this will require them to commercialise their farming methods, particularly by getting together and forming partnerships amongst themselves to benefit from economies of scale that enable higher output to meet the expected high demand," he said.