A Uganda-Tanzania petroleum pipeline project majority-owned by TotalEnergies SE has secured the first tranche of external syndicated financing. The group of backers include regional banks African Export Import Bank, Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd., Stanbic Bank Uganda Ltd., KCB Bank Uganda and Islamic Corporation for the Development of the Private Sector (ICD), the project joint venture EACOP Ltd. said in an online statement. EACOP did not disclose any amount. The East African Crude Oil Pipeline will transport up to 246,000 barrels a day from the Lake Albert oilfields in Uganda to the port of Tanga, Tanzania, for export to the global market, according to EACOP. The funding “demonstrates the support of financial institutions on this transformative regional infrastructure”, it said. Construction was more than 50 percent complete at the end of last year, EACOP said, noting over 8,000 Ugandan and Tanzanian citizens are employed for the project. Construction started last year and is expected to take 2 years to complete, according to EACOP. Besides a 1,443-kilometer (896.63 miles), 24-inch buried pipeline, the project will also install 6 pumping stations, 2 pressure reduction stations and a marine export terminal with a 3-megawatt solar plant, according to EACOP. Early last year TotalEnergies, which owns 62 percent of EACOP, said it had commissioned an assessment of its land acquisition process for the pipeline project and an associated oil development project, following allegations by an interfaith organization that the French energy giant failed to protect hundreds of graves. “As the land acquisition process draws to a close, this mission will evaluate the land acquisition procedures implemented, the conditions for consultation, compensation and relocation of the populations concerned, and the grievance handling mechanism”, TotalEnergies said in a press release January 4, 2024. “It will also assess the actions taken by TotalEnergies EP Uganda and