Quênia e Ruanda assinam acordo histórico para importação de combustível via Mombaça

O Quênia e Ruanda assinaram um acordo histórico pelo qual o Quênia passará a gerenciar as importações de petróleo a granel de Ruanda por meio do Porto de Mombaça e da Kenya Pipeline Company.

O acordo foi assinado na segunda-feira, 29 de junho de 2026, durante uma cerimônia presidida pelo Secretário de Gabinete de Energia e Petróleo, Opiyo Wandayi. Os dois países assinaram um Memorando de Entendimento, um Acordo Tripartite e um Acordo de Transporte e Armazenamento para operacionalizar o novo arranjo de importação de combustível.

O acordo abre totalmente o Corredor Norte para Ruanda para a importação de produtos petrolíferos refinados a granel sob seu arranjo de governo para governo. A previsão é de que o volume de combustível em trânsito para Ruanda cresça de aproximadamente 50.000 metros cúbicos para mais de 500.000 metros cúbicos anualmente.

Ruanda importa todos os seus produtos petrolíferos refinados e, anteriormente, dependia principalmente do Porto de Dar es Salaam. A primeira carga de Ruanda sob o novo arranjo deve atracar no Porto de Mombaça em setembro.

Artigos relacionados

Kenyan petrol station with fuel queues contrasting pipeline company's assurance of sufficient stocks amid shortage reports.
Imagem gerada por IA

Kenya Pipeline assures sufficient fuel amid shortage reports

Reportado por IA Imagem gerada por IA

The Kenya Pipeline Company has assured the public of sufficient fuel stocks at all its terminals to meet national demand, despite reports of shortages in at least 13 counties. The Kenya Transporters Association warns of a looming logistics crisis due to rationing and withdrawn credit facilities. Energy Cabinet Secretary Opiyo Wandayi has been summoned to parliament over a related fuel scandal.

Energy and Petroleum Cabinet Secretary Opiyo Wandayi has announced plans to establish long-term fuel reserves to shield Kenya from supply shocks. He made the remarks after appearing before a parliamentary committee on Monday, April 13, 2026. The country currently lacks formal reserves and depends on continuous imports.

Reportado por IA

Kenya's National Treasury has signed two technical assistance agreements with France worth Ksh227 million to boost water infrastructure and clean energy projects. The deals were finalised in Nairobi shortly after French President Emmanuel Macron concluded his visit.

The Treasury has updated on the proposed 461-kilometre Nairobi-Mombasa Expressway, confirming its advancement into the Public Private Partnership (PPP) procurement phase. The Kenya National Highways Authority (KeNHA) will serve as the contracting authority, with the transaction advisor proposal report set for official publication on April 30.

Reportado por IA

President William Ruto has explained why Kenyans pay higher fuel prices than neighbours like Tanzania and Uganda. He attributed the difference to Kenya's status as a middle-income country and heavy investments in road infrastructure. Ruto spoke during a church service in Karen on Sunday.

The government has completed four days of oil spill training in Lamu this week as it prepares for commercial oil production expected by December 2026.

Reportado por IA

Energy and Petroleum Cabinet Secretary Opiyo Wandayi led the groundbreaking for the South Lokichar Oil Project in Turkana County. He assured that the first crude oil shipment will leave Mombasa before year-end. Local leaders and residents demanded greater transparency in the project's implementation.

 

 

 

Este site usa cookies

Usamos cookies para análise para melhorar nosso site. Leia nossa política de privacidade para mais informações.
Recusar