British oil firm Soco to begin seismic testing in Congo’s Virunga Park

April 23, 2014 | Company Operations, Congo

Kinshasa, DR Congo | – British oil company Soco International will start seismic tests this weekend in Democratic Republic of Congo’s Lake Edward, an executive said on Wednesday, despite campaigners’ attempts to block exploration in a world heritage site.

Conservation group WWF has called on Soco to withdraw from its blocks in UNESCO-protected Virunga national park, saying oil exploration is incompatible with world heritage status and would damage the most bio-diverse park in Africa.

“The start date for seismic testing has been planned for April 26 and will take about a month,” said the executive in Soco’s management in Congo, who asked not to be identified.

In October, WWF made a complaint to the British government, saying Soco had violated the business guidelines laid out by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). In February, the British government’s department responsible for overseeing the OECD guidelines offered to mediate between the two parties.

WWF has warned that exploration teams could introduce invasive plant life to the park or disrupt its underground water systems with drilling, with implications for wildlife and habitats.

The executive said Soco would employ the same seismic surveying company and techniques as London-listed Tullow Oil on the Ugandan side of Lake Albert, around 170 miles (106 miles) north of Lake Edward.

SOCO would also use an environmentally sensitive technique of placing the recorders on the lake bed, the executive added.

Democratic Republic of Congo’s environment and oil ministers have said they wished to establish the value of the oil in Virunga before deciding whether to exploit it. WWF argues the park is worth more to Congo and indeed Africa as a world heritage site than as an oil source.

The poverty-stricken country – whose development has been hindered by mismanagement, corruption and violence – is aiming to increase oil production from just 25,000 barrels per day by exploiting reserves under its soil in the east and offshore in the west.

Reuters.