An analysis of whether Mozambique can gain greater participation in the natural gas value chain

The African continent possesses a wealth of natural mineral resources. Arguments have been put forward that these natural mineral resources can be one of the potential solutions to unlocking the challenge of underdevelopment and pervasive poverty in many African countries. Understanding how African...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bangure, Kudzanayi
Other Authors: Goldman, Ian
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Commerce 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32587
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-325872021-01-22T05:21:38Z An analysis of whether Mozambique can gain greater participation in the natural gas value chain Bangure, Kudzanayi Goldman, Ian Development Policy and Practice The African continent possesses a wealth of natural mineral resources. Arguments have been put forward that these natural mineral resources can be one of the potential solutions to unlocking the challenge of underdevelopment and pervasive poverty in many African countries. Understanding how African countries can gain greater benefit from these mineral resources was the emphasis of this dissertation. Focus was placed specifically on the Mozambique natural gas sector. A case study methodology was employed with the purpose of determining whether Mozambique could gain greater participation in its natural gas value chain. Empirical and theoretical literature around mineral resources management including leading theories such as the resource curse were reviewed as key points of departure. A detailed analysis of historic natural gas projects executed in Mozambique, the legislative framework, contracts, and institutional and capacity demands then followed as a core part of the analysis. Finally, the study leaned on in-depth interviews with industry experts to understand the legal, policy, and technical barriers that could hinder Mozambique from gaining greater participation in the natural gas value chain. Key findings of the study pointed to the inadequacies of existing laws and contract provisions to deliver the vision of greater participation, barriers to entry such as high upfront capital requirements, and internal institutional and technical capacity gaps exemplified by the reliance on external technical assistance from partners such the World Bank. The study concluded that greater participation in the natural gas value chain could not be achieved through Mozambique legislating its way into upstream and midstream activities alone, rather, a progressive approach to gain greater participation was required, initially starting with increased participation in downstream activities through domestic gas to unlock industrialisation. 2021-01-20T08:59:45Z 2021-01-20T08:59:45Z 2020_ 2020-12-23T09:38:08Z Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32587 eng application/pdf Faculty of Commerce Graduate School of Development Policy and Practice
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Development Policy and Practice
spellingShingle Development Policy and Practice
Bangure, Kudzanayi
An analysis of whether Mozambique can gain greater participation in the natural gas value chain
description The African continent possesses a wealth of natural mineral resources. Arguments have been put forward that these natural mineral resources can be one of the potential solutions to unlocking the challenge of underdevelopment and pervasive poverty in many African countries. Understanding how African countries can gain greater benefit from these mineral resources was the emphasis of this dissertation. Focus was placed specifically on the Mozambique natural gas sector. A case study methodology was employed with the purpose of determining whether Mozambique could gain greater participation in its natural gas value chain. Empirical and theoretical literature around mineral resources management including leading theories such as the resource curse were reviewed as key points of departure. A detailed analysis of historic natural gas projects executed in Mozambique, the legislative framework, contracts, and institutional and capacity demands then followed as a core part of the analysis. Finally, the study leaned on in-depth interviews with industry experts to understand the legal, policy, and technical barriers that could hinder Mozambique from gaining greater participation in the natural gas value chain. Key findings of the study pointed to the inadequacies of existing laws and contract provisions to deliver the vision of greater participation, barriers to entry such as high upfront capital requirements, and internal institutional and technical capacity gaps exemplified by the reliance on external technical assistance from partners such the World Bank. The study concluded that greater participation in the natural gas value chain could not be achieved through Mozambique legislating its way into upstream and midstream activities alone, rather, a progressive approach to gain greater participation was required, initially starting with increased participation in downstream activities through domestic gas to unlock industrialisation.
author2 Goldman, Ian
author_facet Goldman, Ian
Bangure, Kudzanayi
author Bangure, Kudzanayi
author_sort Bangure, Kudzanayi
title An analysis of whether Mozambique can gain greater participation in the natural gas value chain
title_short An analysis of whether Mozambique can gain greater participation in the natural gas value chain
title_full An analysis of whether Mozambique can gain greater participation in the natural gas value chain
title_fullStr An analysis of whether Mozambique can gain greater participation in the natural gas value chain
title_full_unstemmed An analysis of whether Mozambique can gain greater participation in the natural gas value chain
title_sort analysis of whether mozambique can gain greater participation in the natural gas value chain
publisher Faculty of Commerce
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32587
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