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Sovereign fund for Mozambique’s estimated US$96 billion LNG riches takes shape

Revenue expected to provide economic lifeline for republic plagued by debt scandal, Islamic State-linked insurgency, natural disasters and Covid-19.

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Revenue expected to provide economic lifeline for republic plagued by debt scandal, Islamic State-linked insurgency, natural disasters and Covid-19.

ARTICLE BY

PUBLISHED

READING TIME

Less than 1 minute Minutes

Mozambique has trimmed the proportion of revenue it intends to direct toward a sovereign wealth fund that is being set up to help manage an estimated US$96 billion expected to flow from its fledgling liquefied natural gas (LNG) industry, a draft law shows.

The state will channel 40 per cent of total oil and gas revenue to the fund for the first 15 years, and 50 per cent thereafter, according to a copy of the unpublished bill seen by Bloomberg.

A 2020 outline of how the fund would work stated that the gas revenue would be evenly split between the government and the fund for the first two decades, whereupon the fund’s share would increase to 80 per cent.

The government plans to submit the proposed legislation to parliament by the end of December, according to the finance ministry.

The southeast African nation is poised to become an LNG exporter.

Mozambique is emerging from years of economic turmoil caused by a sovereign debt scandal, a rampaging Islamic State-linked insurgency, natural disasters and the Covid-19 pandemic.

The establishment of the wealth fund is a key part of a deal the government reached this year with the International Monetary Fund, which froze a previous funding package in 2016 because of the debt scandal.

The draft law contains additional detail on how the fund will be run and structured.

The finance ministry will be in charge of establishing an advisory board comprised of independent finance experts, and preparing its investment policy.

The central bank will manage its operations, while lawmakers will provide oversight together with an independent committee that will include members from civil society.

Banco de Moçambique estimated two years ago that the nation would earn US$96 billion over the life of the LNG projects planned by companies including TotalEnergies SE and ExxonMobil along the county’s northern coastline.

Violence from an Islamic State-affiliated group has since held up progress on the two biggest projects. Only the smallest LNG export facility led by Eni SpA is on schedule and should start producing within weeks.

Mozambican President Filipe Nyusi has stressed that the nation needs to manage expectations around the projects. Significant revenues will only come after 2024, he said in August.

According to the draft bill, the fund is prohibited from making investments in oil and gas; if annual oil and gas revenues are lower than projected, the state will still receive its forecast allocation; the central bank must manage the fund through an autonomous unit and can hire external managers and the Banco de Moçambique will earn a management fee not exceeding 0.1 per cent of the fund’s capital and must be approved by the finance minister.

 

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