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Total announces ‘significant’ offshore South Africa gas find

A picture taken on September 6, 2018 in Secunda shows the SASOL Secunda CTL that uses coal liquefaction to produce petroleum-like synthetic crude oil from coal. - Thousands of Trade union Solidarity members gathered at Sasol's Secunda plant as part of a shutdown against a black empowerment scheme at the chemical giant. The union says the purpose of the shutdown is to highlight to management that white workers are angry and frustrated by their exclusion from the Khanyisa Scheme which Sasol said would initially benefit all staff. However, phase two of the scheme will focus on black employees who have been disadvantaged by the country's apartheid history. (Photo by GIANLUIGI GUERCIA / AFP)

French energy giant Total announced Thursday it had found “significant” gas off the southern coast of South Africa, a discovery expected to boost the nation’s struggling economy.

“Total has made a significant gas condensate discovery on the Brulpadda prospects,… in the Outeniqua Basin, 175 kilometres off the southern coast of South Africa,” it said in a statement.

Total’s CEO Patrick Pouyanne said the potential quantities “could be around one billion barrels of global resources, gas and condensate light oil”.

“So it could be quite big, it’s probably quite big,” he told journalists in Paris.

“Having said that this region is quite difficult to operate, with huge waves, so the weather is not very easy,” he said of the block with water depths ranging from 200 to 1,800 metres (650 to 5,900 feet).

South Africa’s Mineral Resources Minister Gwede Mantashe welcomed the news of the discovery as “potentially a major boost” for the economy which grew less than one percent last year

“It is exciting for our country. We welcome it as we continue to seek investment to grow our economy,” the minister said.

The news came just hours before President Ramaphosa delivers a state-of-the-nation address, his final one before crucial elections due in May this year.

Mining analyst Makwe Masilela said said the discovery was “positive” for South Africa, which is desperately seeking foreign direct investment and to cut down on gas imports from neighbouring Mozambique.

“Foreign direct investment is something we are seriously looking for as a country,” he told AFP on the sidelines of a mining investment conference.

“With this discovery, Total has opened a new world-class gas and oil play and is well positioned to test several follow-on prospects on the same block., ” said Kevin McLachlan, Senior Vice President Exploration at Total.

Total holds a 45 percent stake in the block, alongside Qatari, Canadian and South African firms.

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