Personalities Urge to Stop Total’s East Africa Project

A group of personalities calls in a tribune "to stop" the oil megaproject of the group TotalEnergies in Uganda and Tanzania.

Partagez:

A group of political figures, scientists and NGO leaders called Monday in a tribune “to stop” the oil megaproject of the group TotalEnergies in Uganda and Tanzania, which would precipitate, according to them, “climate change and its procession of deadly disasters”.

In February, TotalEnergies announced a $10 billion investment agreement with Uganda, Tanzania and China’s CNOOC, including the construction of a 1,400-kilometer pipeline (the East African Crude Oil Pipeline – EACOP) linking the Lake
This is the first time that a project has been carried out from St. Albert, in western Uganda, to the Tanzanian coast.

In a report published last week, two French associations warned of the “unacceptable” human, climatic and environmental costs in Uganda and Tanzania of this project of the French group Total.

As TotalEnergies prepares to begin drilling in one of Uganda’s most beautiful natural parks, according to this article published in the newspaper Le Monde, the signatories urge people to say “no to Total’s giant pipeline in East Africa.

Among the signatories are dozens of personalities including European and French MPs, Ugandan and Tanzanian NGOs, the coordinator of the international coalition “StopEacop” Omar Elmawi, the president of the Belgian Socialist Party Paul Magnette, the first secretary of the
French Socialist Party Olivier Faure, representatives of Youth For Climate Paris, Greenpeace France, France Nature Environnement, Friends of the Earth France.

The president of the commission of the European Union’s bishops’ conferences, Cardinal Jean-Claude Hollerich, is also a signatory, as well as several climate scientists – including French geographer and meteorologist Jean Jouzel – and French sailor and author Isabelle Autissier.

“In Europe, as in the rest of the world, the summer of 2022 was a deadly summer,” the forum notes. “But while millions of us want to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, others continue to want to extract more and more oil,” she continued, adding: “It is in northern Uganda that TotalEnergies wants to start drilling in December to supply crude oil to what would be the longest heated pipeline in the world.

This infrastructure “threatens the access to water and food security of more than 40 million people”, denounces the tribune. “If we can’t stop this project, it’s up to 34 million
tons of CO2 that would be emitted each year for 25 or 30 years and would precipitate climate change and its procession of deadly disasters,” she warns.

The signatories call on “TotalEnergies and its shareholders to immediately abandon the Eacop project” and on the European Union “to finally put into practice the idea of a financial support plan for countries that give up exploiting their fossil fuel reserves and invest in renewable energies.

According to the 2025 report on global energy access, despite notable progress in renewable energy, insufficient targeted financing continues to hinder electricity and clean cooking access, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa.
While advanced economies maintain global energy leadership, China and the United States have significantly progressed in the security and sustainability of their energy systems, according to the World Economic Forum's annual report.
On the sidelines of the US–Africa summit in Luanda, Algiers and Luanda consolidate their energy collaboration to better exploit their oil, gas, and mining potential, targeting a common strategy in regional and international markets.
The UK's Climate Change Committee is urging the government to quickly reduce electricity costs to facilitate the adoption of heat pumps and electric vehicles, judged too slow to achieve the set climate targets.
The European Commission will extend until the end of 2030 an expanded state-aid framework, allowing capitals to fund low-carbon technologies and nuclear power to preserve competitiveness against China and the United States.
Japan's grid operator forecasts an energy shortfall of up to 89 GW by 2050 due to rising demand from semiconductor manufacturing, electric vehicles, and artificial intelligence technologies.
Energy-intensive European industries will be eligible for temporary state aid to mitigate high electricity prices, according to a new regulatory framework proposed by the European Commission under the "Clean Industrial Deal."
Mauritius seeks international investors to swiftly build a floating power plant of around 100 MW, aiming to secure the national energy supply by January 2026 and address current production shortfalls.
Madrid announces immediate energy storage measures while Lisbon secures its electrical grid, responding to the historic outage that affected the entire Iberian Peninsula in late April.
Indonesia has unveiled its new national energy plan, projecting an increase of 69.5 GW in electricity capacity over ten years, largely funded by independent producers, to address rapidly rising domestic demand.
French Minister Agnès Pannier-Runacher condemns the parliamentary moratorium on new renewable energy installations, warning of the potential loss of 150,000 industrial jobs and increased energy dependence on foreign countries.
The European battery regulation, fully effective from August 18, significantly alters industrial requirements related to electric cars and bicycles, imposing strict rules on recycling, supply chains, and transparency for companies.
The European Parliament calls on the Commission to strengthen energy infrastructure and accelerate the implementation of the Clean Industrial Deal to enhance the continent's energy flexibility and security amid increased market volatility.
The European Commission unveils an ambitious plan to modernize electricity grids and introduces the Clean Industrial Deal, mobilizing hundreds of billions of euros to strengthen the continent's industrial and energy autonomy.
In the United States, regulated electric grid operators hold a decisive advantage in connecting new data centres to the grid, now representing 134 GW of projects, according to a Wood Mackenzie report published on June 19.
The French National Assembly approves a specific target of 200 TWh renewable electricity production by 2030 within a legislative text extensively debated about the future national energy mix.
In 2024, US CO₂ emissions remain stable at 5.1bn tonnes, as the Trump administration prepares hydrocarbon-friendly energy policies, raising questions about the future evolution of the American market.
The early publication of France's energy decree triggers strong parliamentary reactions, as the government aims to rapidly secure investments in nuclear and other energy sectors.
Seven weeks after the major Iberian power outage, Spain identifies technical network failures, while the European Investment Bank approves major funding to strengthen the interconnection with France.
The European Union has announced a detailed schedule aiming to definitively halt Russian gas imports by the end of 2027, anticipating internal legal and commercial challenges to overcome.