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PDF Format - Sonangol EP
SONANGOL UNIVERSO Universo ISSUE 46 | JUNE 2015 www.universo-magazine.com Angolan oil drilling at 100 ISSUE 46 – JUNE 2015 INTERNATIONAL UPSTREAM CULTURE CUBA: ANGOLA’S ENDURING ALLY BP’S OPERATIONS IN ANGOLA IMAGES OF THE ANGOLAN PEOPLE Angop OVERVIEW Universo is the international magazine of Sonangol President Francisco de Lemos José Maria Executive administrators: Anabela Soares de Brito da Fonseca, Ana Joaquina Van-Dúnem Alves da Costa, Fernandes Gaspar Bernardo Mateus, Fernando Joaquim Roberto, Mateus Sebastião Francisco Neto, Paulino Fernando Carvalho Jerónimo Non-executive administrators: Albina Assis Africano, José Gime, André Lelo, José Paiva Shutterstock Sonangol Department for Communication & Image Director Mateus Cristóvão Benza Corporate Communications Assistants Nadiejda Santos, Paula Almeida, Hélder Sirgado, Kimesso Kissoka Publisher: Sheila O’Callaghan STEP CHANGE IN DEVELOPMENT Editor: John Kolodziejski Managing Editor: Mauro Perillo Art Director: Tony Hill Sub Editor: Brian MacReamoinn Proofreading: Gail Nelson-Bonebrake Circulation & Production Manager: Matthew Alexander Production Assistant: Sebnem Brown A ngola’s thirteenth year of peace, celebrated on April 4, marks a step change in the nation’s development. The previous dozen years were a period of reconstruction, of putting the country’s infrastructure to rights: renovating port facilities; completing, in February, a total rebuild of its three east– Project Consultant: Nathalie MacCarthy west railways; modernising all airports; and, most importantly, Group President: John Charles Gasser reconnecting the capital city, Luanda, by highway to its provincial capitals spread across a huge territory. Now, the foundations of economic development have been Universo is produced by Impact Media Custom Publishing. The views expressed in the publication are not necessarily those of Sonangol or the publishers. Reproduction in whole or in part without prior permission is prohibited. This magazine is distributed to a closed circulation. To receive a free copy: [email protected] Circulation: 15,000 Davenport House, 16 Pepper Street, London E14 9RP United Kingdom Tel + 44 20 7510 9595 | Fax +44 20 7510 9596 [email protected] www.universo-magazine.com www.sonangol.co.ao [email protected] Front cover: Hulton Archive/Getty Images Universo is printed on FSC approved stock 2 SONANGOL UNIVERSO laid, and the next step is to use them to provide the exchange of goods and services that can enhance Angolans’ standard of living and quality of life. An excellent example of this is the inauguration of Luanda’s first modern purpose-built long-distance national bus terminal by Macon Transportes in May. The new terminal operates 80 outbound journeys and has the capacity to receive 7,000 passengers coming and going each day to all but one of Angola’s 18 provinces. The buses also operate a much-needed nationwide parcel delivery service. The fruits of development, long dreamed of through many difficult decades, are now becoming a much-appreciated reality. John Kolodziejski Editor Malocha CONTENTS 4 3 A roundup of national and international news concerning NEWS BRIEFING Sonangol and Angola. 10 14 3 THOUGHT FOR FOOD: ANGOLA AT MILAN EXPO Angolan cuisine in the spotlight. 14 3 SPECIAL AWARD FOR SPECIAL ZONE 18 18 3 FACES OF A NATION Shutterstock Luanda-Bengo industrial scheme gains recognition for quality. Exhibition shows the variety of Angola’s indigenous peoples. 3 24 SOUTHERN ANGOLA: GREAT EXPECTATIONS The tremendous economic potential of Namibe, Huíla, Cunene and Cuando Cubango provinces. 32 3 BP 24 BLOSSOMING PARTNERSHIP The special relationship between Sonangol and BP Angola. 3 The remarkable progress of Angolan oil exploration. 44 3 A CENTURY OF OIL DRILLING 1915–2015 CUBA: ANGOLA’S ENDURING ALLY Education and health underpin four decades of Shutterstock 42 32 44 bilateral co-operation. SONANGOL UNIVERSO 3 NEWS BRIEFING WEALTH FUND INVESTS $1.4 BILLION 3 Angola’s Sovereign Wealth Fund (FSDEA) is making investments totalling $1.4 billion available at home and elsewhere in Africa. The mining, forestry and agriculture sectors will receive $250 million each, while a healthcare fund will benefit from a $400 million injection. The fund is also setting aside a further $250 million to provide credit for entrepreneurs who do not have access to traditional debt funding. FSDEA chief José Filomeno dos Santos said the financial help aims to ease Angola’s fiscal dependence on oil revenues at a time of weak energy markets. “Given the current difficult fiscal context, these investments are extremely opportune because they can support the economic development required to reduce state reliance on crude oil revenues,” he pointed out. Angolan GDP set to rise THIRD LARGEST BRIDGE BUILT 3 Angola opened its third largest bridge in Namibe province in April. Local governor Rui Falcão recently inaugurated the bridge, spanning the River Curoca. It connects the city of Namibe, the provincial capital, to the major 3 Angola’s gross domestic product (GDP) is expected to grow this year at a rate of 4.5 per cent and then slow fishing industry town of Tômbua, 97km away. Construction of the 800-metre-long, 11-metre-wide bridge took to 3.9 per cent in 2016, according to the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) recent World Economic 20 months, and can bear loads of up to 100 tonnes. report said. The IMF also noted that inflation in the country could increase from 7.3 per cent in 2014 to 8.4 per cent this year as a result of falling world oil prices. 4 SONANGOL UNIVERSO Angop Outlook. Last year Angola’s GDP grew 4.2 per cent, the NEWS BRIEFING CINGUVU FIELD ON STREAM 3 Sonangol operating partner, Italy’s Eni, has begun oil output at of oil. Further discoveries there will be hooked up to the existing the second field in the West Hub Development Project. Cinguvu production infrastructures. started production two weeks ahead of schedule and is located in “This is another important step within the innovative hub- Block 15/06, about 350km northwest of Luanda and 130km west of building strategy at the base of our success in Block 15/06 in Soyo. The first field on stream was Sangos last November. Sangos Angola,” said Eni CEO Claudio Descalzi. The Cinguvu field came and Cinguvu together currently produce 60,000 bpd and are on stream on time and on budget, he added, and confirmed scheduled to be joined by a third field, Mpungi, by the end of 2015. the company’s “excellent track record in terms of efficiency, West Hub comprises the Sangos, Cinguvu, Mpungi, Mpungi technology and innovation.” North and Vandumbu fields situated in water depths between Eni operates Block 15/06 with a 35 per cent stake, and 1,000 and 1,500 metres. The wells are connected to FPSO N’Goma Sonangol EP is the concessionaire. Sonangol P&P also owns which has a processing capacity of 100,000 bpd. a 35 per cent share, while Angola-based SSI Fifteen Ltd has a Eni has estimated Block 15/06 holds over 3 billion barrels 25 per cent stake and Falcon Oil Holding Angola 5 per cent. VP at Bandung summit Angop SBM Offshore FPSO N’Goma fitting out at Sumbe Vice president Manuel Vicente with his Zambian counterpart Inonge Wina 3 Angola’s vice president, Manuel Domingos Vicente, representing President dos Santos, attended the ceremony marking the 60th anniversary of the signing of the ‘Bandung Declaration’ in Indonesia. Bandung, 150 km from the capital, Jakarta, hosted world leaders at the commemoration after they attended the Asia/Africa Summit held April 22-23. Attendees included prominent African and Asian leaders such as the president of China, Xi Jinping and Iran’s president Hassan Rouhani. SONANGOL UNIVERSO 5 Puma Energy’s new mooring system Angola’s big buoy 3 Puma Energy opened one of the world’s largest more environmentally-friendly tanker loading and berthing. conventional buoy mooring systems (CBMs) in Luanda Bay on Pierre Eladari, CEO of Puma Energy, said that this CBM April 21. The fuel-loading buoy anchored offshore serves as a facility in Luanda would provide security of supply to and strategic mooring point for Africa and allows a wide range of from Angola as well as the rest of Africa. carriers to berth while loading or offloading oil products. The CBM is located next to Puma Energy’s Fishing Port Terminal in the bay, which Puma is currently extending and when completed will have a total storage capacity of 276,000 m3. The new system is part of the government’s long-term strategic objective to improve the country’s infrastructure. Puma Energy first came to Angola in 2004 as a partner for Sonangol, and today operates four businesses there: The CBM can accommodate vessels up to 225,000 Pumangol Retail, a petrol station network; Pumangol tonnes and drafts of 19.3 metres. It has a product transfer B2B, a fuel wholesaler; Pumangol Bunkering, supplying rate of 4,000 m per hour. The mooring buoys are fitted with fuel for vessels, and AngoBetumes, for bitumen storage navigational aids to assist with more effective, safer and and distribution. 3 ANGOLA–DRC JOINT VENTURE 3 Angola and the Democratic Republic of a deep-sea oil exploration area covering The project has an estimated cost of the Congo’s (DRC) joint oil project in Block 700 sq km centred on the Lianzi field, which $2 billion. 14 is set to start up this year and is expected straddles their maritime border. It has to reach 36,000 bpd, said Angolan oil estimated reserves of 70 million barrels. (15.75 per cent) and includes Total E&P Congo minister José Maria Botelho de Vasconcelos “There is oil on the Angolan side, as well (26.75 per cent), Cabinda Gulf Oil Company during a visit by Congolese President Denis as on the Congo side, and a decision was Ltd (15.5 per cent), Sonangol (10 per cent), Sassou Nguesso to its neighbour at the end made for a joint operation in which funding TotalFinaElf (10 per cent), Eni (10 per cent), of March. will be split 50-50,” Botelho de Vasconcelos Société Nationale des Pétroles du Congo (7.5 said. The agreement dates back to 2011. per cent) and Galp Energia (4.5 per cent). The two countries are jointly developing 6 The consortium is operated by Chevron US SONANGOL UNIVERSO Puma Energy NEWS BRIEFING NEWS BRIEFING Huge diamond found in Angola SONANGOL WINS BENGUELA FAIR PRIZE 3 Sonangol won the prize for best Angolan participant at the 2015 Benguela International Fair held May 13-17. Subsidiaries Sonangol Distribuidora, SonAir, 3 An exceptional diamond weighing 63.05 carats has been found at the Sonagás and SIIND represented the company at the Lulo mine in Angola. The mine is located in Lunda Norte province and fifth edition of the fair at the Ombaka National Stadium. is a joint venture between Australian company Lucapa Diamond and The fair was attended by 200 exhibitors from Angola and the Angolan government. abroad, with 10 companies coming fom Portugal alone. The Lulo concession is a source of Type IIa diamonds, which Lupaca says are “the world’s rarest and most valuable gems”. This category of precious stone accounts for less than 1 per cent of total supply and contains the world’s most famous large, white, flawless diamonds. Angola is the world’s fourth largest diamond producer by value Lucapa and sixth by volume. ANGOLA AND ECUADOR MOVE CLOSER 3 Angola’s foreign minister, Georges Rebelo Chikoti, and his Ecuadoran counterpart, Ricardo Armando Patinõ Aroca, signed three agreements paving the way to greater cooperation on May 19. During the South American foreign minister’s two Sonangol signs quality deal with Total day visit to Angola, he sealed agreements that could 3 Sonangol Academia, the educational arm of Sonangol EP, has signed facilitate cooperation in the oil sector, and also university a cooperation agreement with Total E&P aimed at improving technical training for Angolan students, especially in information training and certification in its School of Safety. The school, based at technology, in the South American country. Cacuaco just north of Luanda, provides training in health, safety and the Minister Aroca also held working visits with Angola’s environment for workers operating in the oil sector. oil minister Botelho de Vasconcelos, Sonangol board Baltazar Miguel, Sonangol Academia’s board president, and Jean- president Francisco de Lemos Maria, Environment Michel Lavergne, head of Total E&P Angola, signed the agreement on minister Maria de Fátima Monteiro Jardim and the behalf of the two organisations on May 16. Governor of Luanda, Francisco Graciano Domingos. SONANGOL UNIVERSO 7 Brazuk Ltd President awards best cities Luanda’s new InterContinental Hotel SURGE IN HOTEL ACCOMMODATION Panoramic view of Accra 3 The winners of President José Eduardo dos Santos’ first African Mayor Awards for excellence in leadership and achievements in urban development have been announced. 3 Angola will have another 2,000 hotel rooms by the end The cities chosen were Accra, Ghana (a $200,000 prize in the ‘Best of 2015, promised the State Secretary for Hotels and Large City’ category), Kinondoni, Tanzania ($100,000 for best medium city) Tourism Paulino Baptista Domingos while speaking in and Praia, Cape Verde ($50,000 for best small city). Luena, Moxico province, during the inauguration of the Hotel Kawissa. The presentation took place during the Second Africa Urban Infrastructure Investment Forum held on March 29-30, 2015, in Luanda. The extra capacity will arise from the opening of 25 Speaking at the ceremony, the organiser and publisher of African new hotels, including the 390-room InterContinental Business magazine, Omar Ben Yedder, said that the African Mayor Awards Hotel under construction in Luanda and the Hotel recognise, celebrate and reward city leaders or governors who are helping Palanca Negra in Malange, with 146 rooms. transform Africa’s growing metropolises. Domingos said the new hotel units would make it possible to create thousands of new jobs in a sector that “The winning cities tonight are being led by individuals who are showing essential leadership qualities as they help build cities that work,” he said. “And we will need more exemplary leadership, good governance and of Hotels and Tourism currently has 14,000 rooms innovative thinking, while paying close attention to our culture and way of registered, spread over 185 hotels, 88 tourist villages, living when dreaming of the cities of tomorrow. Our leaders need to be close 14 apartment hotels and six inns. to the people, and our winners tonight are demonstrating these qualities.” NEW TERMINAL COMPLEX OPENS 3 President José Eduardo dos Santos has inaugurated a commuter boat and tourist terminal located alongside the new Slavery Museum complex in the Benfica district of Luanda. The opening ceremony formed part of the April 4 Peace and National Reconciliation Day celebrations. The terminal has a floating dock which can accommodate two catamarans, each capable of carrying 136 people. The new facility can handle over 200 passengers and will help to reduce commuter traffic jams from Luanda’s southern suburbs. 8 SONANGOL UNIVERSO Angop already employs more than 202,000 people. The Ministry Shutterstock NEWS BRIEFING NEWS BRIEFING KIZOMBA PHASE 2 STARTS UP 3 Sonangol and Esso Exploration Angola (Block 15) commenced Phase 2 of the Kizomba Satellites project on May 4. The new oil production area consists of the Kakocha, Bavuka and Mondo Sul fields in Block 15. Initial oil output began at Mondo Sul at a rate of 10,000 barrels per day (bpd). This will rise to 70,000 bpd when Kakocha and Bavuka come on stream. The three new operational fields are located in deepwater at depths between 750 and 1,100 metres and contain reserves totalling around 190 billion barrels. The project features a substantial amount of locally-manufactured equipment. Nearly all the deck modules and subsea assembly took place at construction yards in Soyo, Dande, Luanda and Lobito. Esso Exploration Angola (Block 15) Ltd is the block’s operator with a 40 per cent stake. Its partners are BP Exploration (Angola) Ltd (26.67 per cent), Eni Angola Exploration BV (20 per cent) and Statoil Angola Block 15 AS (13.33 per cent), while Sonangol is the concessionaire. FPSO Kizomba FIGURED OUT 4.5% latest IMF forecast of Angolan GDP growth for this year 100 years of oil drilling in Angola ANGOLA IN NUMBERS 63.05 carats size of giant diamond found at Lulo mine 2,000 extra new hotel rooms in 2015 $1.4 billion investment by Angola’s sovereign wealth fund at home and in the rest of Africa SONANGOL UNIVERSO 9 CULTURE THOUGHT FOR FOOD: ANGOLA AT MILAN EXPO 10 SONANGOL UNIVERSO T The striking three-storey Angola he Angola Pavilion at the Pavilion at Expo Milano 2015 international exhibition Expo Milano 2015 was officially opened by the general commissioner of the country’s delegation, Albina Assis Africano, a non-executive Sonangol EP board member. Angola’s Secretary of State for Co-operation, Ângela Bragança, cut the ribbon, and Angola’s ambassadors to Italy, Greece and Switzerland were also present. Representatives of 145 countries and 50 heads of state and government attended the opening ceremony of the expo on May 1, hosted by Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi. The event is expected to receive more than 29 million visitors by the time it ends on October 31. The theme of Expo Milano 2015 is ‘Feeding the Planet, Energy for Life’. The organisers have described the showcase as a means to reflect upon and seek solutions to the contradictions of the world, in which some 870 million people suffered from undernourishment in 2010-12, while around 2.8 million died from obesity-related diseases in the same period. Angola’s participation in this important debate is titled ‘Food and Culture: Education for Innovation’. The pavilion is stimulating a wider examination of Angolan culture through its varied culinary riches as well as the rituals and traditions associated with them. It has engaged visitors and revealed different aspects of the country’s culture with all its indigenous and assimilated influences. The exhibition showcases and explains which foods provide Angola’s nutrition and how people currently use them. It also looks at their future use and the development of a healthier and more Vincenzo Lombardo/Getty Images sustainable lifestyle. “It’s an opportunity to educate our SONANGOL UNIVERSO 11 ExpoAngola CULTURE “It’s an opportunity to educate our younger generation to have a healthy diet” – Albina Assis Africano younger generation to have a healthy third. There are two restaurants on the beer, which was a great success at the diet,” said Albina Assis Africano. top floor; one offering national dishes to previous expo staged in South Korea, has the general public and a second smaller once again been popular with the public. “What we want to do is re-educate from the starting point of what we have, area, which acts as a laboratory to create show young people that we can make a ‘New Angolan Cuisine’, a fusion of Angolan handicraft, music recordings and good dishes and present them as well as various foods prepared in co-operation merchandising items; part of the area those from Europe,” she explained. with guest chefs and served to visitors. also offers some of the nation’s home- The idea has been to show the full range grown teas, coffees and dried fruits. The striking Angola Pavilion covers three levels and has a giant baobab tree reaching from the ground floor to the of Angolan gastronomy. The country’s very own Cuca In addition, there is a bazaar selling At the pavilion, there is also a section reserved for children, where they can Ernesto Ruscio/Getty Images Entertainment paint and play using educational items Record crowds attending the Expo under the care of Angolan TV presenter Alice Berenguel. This year Angola’s exhibition area is larger than at any previous events, covering 300 square metres. Assis Africano – a veteran of international expos with vast experience – said it had taken two years of planning and hard work to organise and complete the structure. The educational aspect of the country’s pavilion has involved creating awareness of what is nourishing, while the innovation dimension has entailed encouraging best practice in preparing indigenous foods. This includes appreciating traditional wisdom and custom regarding foods that modern 12 SONANGOL UNIVERSO Matteo Valle/Getty Images Entertainment (Left) Angola’s ambassador to Italy, Florêncio de Almeida, alongside Albina Assis Africano CULTURE ANGOLA’S INTERNATIONAL EXPO HISTORY 1.Angola’s first Expo was at the Seville World Exhibition, Spain 1992 2. Lisbon International Exhibition, Portugal 1998 3. Expo Aichi, Japan 2005 4. Expo Zaragoza, Spain 2008 5. Expo Shanghai, China 2010 6. Expo Yeosu, South Korea 2012 7. Expo Milan, Italy 2015 research has subsequently shown to be healthy and sustainable. Innovation has meant utilising new technologies and highend science for greater holistic development. The Angolan contribution to Expo Milano 2015 has also placed particular emphasis on the role of women in the transmitting of knowledge and in food supply chains. The display pointed out that women play a very important part in the production and preparation of food, and are influential in the cultural processes of maternity, family management, hygiene, health, safety, home economy and education. The pavilion’s theme ‘Food and Culture: Education for Innovation’ conveys the message that the nation is growing and developing its own methods of food safety and control. Visitors have an interactive experience that highlights these efforts and their relevance within the wider context of Angola, giving them a broad idea of the country and its geography, cultural heritage, history and diversity. In addition, attendees can enjoy shows, entertainment and cultural performances by Angolan groups, both within the pavilion and on outdoor expo stages at the Milan site. SONANGOL UNIVERSO 13 Malocha INDUSTRY SPECIAL AWARD FOR SPECIAL ZONE 14 SONANGOL UNIVERSO Luanda-Bengo ZEE at Viana A ngola’s Luanda–Bengo Special Economic Zone (ZEE) received a Gold award at the 17th edition of the Century International Quality ERA convention held in Geneva on March 21–22. It was given in recognition of the quality, innovation and excellence in personnel, resources, equipment and services at the ZEE. The awards ceremony, arranged by the Madrid-based organisation Business Initiative Directions, was attended by companies from the world of business, professionals in economics, the arts and corporate communications, quality experts as well as academics and diplomats. Previous winners have included global retail giant Walmart, steel colossus ArcelorMittal and Angolan diamond company Endiama. Carla Silvestre, quality director of the Angolan ZEE, said that the award would give the project’s clients greater confidence since it came from an international body. It showed that quality played a leading role, she explained, and hence the achievement would serve to boost development of the zone and encourage it to strive for even greater customer satisfaction. The Luanda–Bengo ZEE is a purposebuilt industrial condominium, supplied with power, telecommunications, storage, water supply and waste disposal facilities, along The achievement would serve to boost development of the zone and encourage it to strive for even greater customer satisfaction SONANGOL UNIVERSO 15 Carla Silvestre, quality director of the Angolan ZEE Malocha INDUSTRY with other central support services. Companies established there have the added advantage of “A step forward on the long road to re-industrialise our country,” was how Malocha key locations. Angop having a logistical infrastructure and occupying President José Eduardo dos Santos described the Luanda–Bengo ZEE at Viana during the official inauguration of the first eight industries there in 2011. President dos Santos said then that the aim of the industrial parks was to replace or reduce imports, stimulate domestic production and increase employment by creating a link between products from the factories and plans for 200,000 homes in Angola. There are now 26 industrial concerns in operation in the zone. Eventually a grand total of 73 outfits will be installed there, providing more than 14,000 jobs and generating several thousand others indirectly. Companies located in the ZEE are able to stimulate production, competitiveness and innovation, as well as create jobs. The zone consists of seven industry reserves, six agricultural reserves and eight mining reserves located in the towns of Viana, Cacuaco, Dande and Ambriz, close to the capital Luanda. Sonangol’s industrial investments arm, Sonangol Investimentos Industriais (SIIND) was “It’s a step forward on the long road to re-industrialise our country” given the mission of fostering the Luanda-Bengo ZEE by promoting, developing and co-ordinating the management of industrial projects in the area back in October 2010. 16 SONANGOL UNIVERSO – President José Eduardo dos Santos Shutterstock INDUSTRY COMPANIES ESTABLISHED IN THE LUANDA-BENGO ZEE Angolacabos: Angtor: taps water pumps Shutterstock asphalt BTMT: Bombágua: Galvanang: low-and medium-current electrical material chemicals Inducabos: Inducarpin: Indugalv: cables and wires furniture making galvanisation Indupackage: Indupame: Induplás: packaging metal buildings plastic bags Induplastic: Indutubos: high-density plastic pipes Indutive: plastic sanitary and kitchen accessories and paint containers paints and varnishes Mangotal: Infer: Shutterstock Betonar: fibre optic cables for telecommunications metals metallic towers, telecommunications and electricity pylons Mecametal: Ninhoflex: metal components mattresses Pivangola: farm irrigation equipment Matelectrica: low-voltage electrical material Pipeline: PVC and polyethylene pipes and joints Telhafal: Transplás: metal roofing plastic packaging Univitro: Vedatela: construction glass metal fencing SONANGOL UNIVERSO 17 CULTURE Ovanyaneca woman 18 SONANGOL UNIVERSO FACES OF A NATION A fascinating photographic exhibition sponsored by Sonangol explores the diversity of Angola’s native peoples. Universo admires the striking images By Lula Ahrens The Origins team on the road SONANGOL UNIVERSO 19 (Left) Ovimbundo women CULTURE “The Angolan woman has considerable weight within Angolan communities. She plays a central role both within the family and at work,” he told Universo. Photographing the women, however, was not straightforward. “It was a process of approximation. We contacted the local administrations and sobas [the villages’ traditional leaders] first before talking with the women themselves. “Next, we had to gain their trust before they opened up about their lives and families. When I finally took their shots, the women were very proud of the results.” Also crucial to the project’s A success was investigative journalist The making of... and translator Carla Prudente, who is remain largely a mystery to The idea of a book about the Origins a specialist in cultural anthropology the wider public. In an attempt project came from the Zwela Group, one and speaks various native Angolan to shed more light on their decisive of Africa’s largest media companies. languages, mainly those of the south. role in the development of Angolan Sonangol has generously backed the She is the daughter of an evangelical society, Sonangol has sponsored a publication of the 77-page volume, which pastor and grew up speaking Umbundu major photographic exhibition – Origins: contains some 141 photographs, almost in Angola’s southern region. The Peoples of Angola – as well as an exclusively of women from Angola’s accompanying book. indigenous ethnic groups. ngola’s many native peoples The Origins project is fundamentally Prudente works as a reporter at Rádio Nacional de Angola. A well-known Francisco Prata, director of personality, she appears regularly in a tribute to traditional Angolan women. photography at Muxima Filmes, shot all talk shows such as Janela Aberta (Open It aims to explain the anthropological, the images. Prata is Angolan by birth, but Window) and Dia a Dia (Day by Day) on linguistic and geographical significance has lived in Brazil and Portugal, where he Angolan national TV. She was the only of the symbols of their physical identity. worked as a photographer in the fashion female member of the Origins team office. The project covers a great variety of and PR industries. ethno-linguistic groups. He returned to According to Sonangol, the Angola for a short- enterprise is intended “to preserve term project in Angolan culture and to contribute 2006–08. After Zwela to the development and mutual commissioned understanding between Angola’s him for other various native tribes.” The Origins assignments, exhibition opened at the Sonangol he decided to headquarters gallery space in the spring permanently return of 2015. Future exhibitions at other to his mother venues are currently being planned. country in 2013. 20 SONANGOL UNIVERSO ETHNO-LINGUISTIC GROUPS IN THE ORIGINS PROJECT Ambundu Besangana Ambundu Kimbundu Bakongo Cokwe Ibinda Ovahelelo Muhakavona Ovahelelo Muhimba Ovahelelo Mukuvale Ovahelelo Mundimba Ovambó Kwanyama Ovanyaneca Ovimbundo Vangangela CULTURE Exhibition opening at Sonangol HQ “The Origins project was a challenge did not speak a language, we hired an and philosophy facilitated the contact- that I embraced,” she said. “I already had interpreter. But in terms of knowledge of making process tremendously. It is all numerous contacts thanks to a calendar the history and origins of the northern about respecting the other’s culture, in Angolan national languages that I had people, I was well-versed.” which is crucial. Respect always has to produced, but I had never before carried The content of the project evolved be the first step.” out a project of such magnitude. The over time. “The initial aim was to calendar focused mainly on southern photograph members of various Angolan Clearer understanding Angola, while for the Origins project we peoples and explain the symbolism of “It has been a great pleasure for me to had to cover the entire country. their clothes and jewellery. We then explain to readers what is behind the progressed towards a deeper perspective: pictures,” Prudente said, “especially in universe,” she said. “Communicating “Angola’s interior is like a different pre-colonial history, religion and cases where general perceptions do not with the people there is not easy, due symbols of power, among other things. match reality. People for instance often to our differences in the perception Africa has a lot of symbolism. Everything confuse the Mukuvale in Namibe with of the world around us. This project has a meaning.” the Mumwila in Huíla. They both herd was a major learning curve for me, Her father’s experience in the cattle, and women from both tribes show especially in the north where I did not Angolan hinterland helped her a great their breasts. But there are important have as much experience. Whenever I deal. “Knowledge of Bantu moral values differences between the two.” The illustrated book accompanying the Origins exhibition (Origens in Portuguese) SONANGOL UNIVERSO 21 CULTURE The look of Cabinda 22 SONANGOL UNIVERSO CULTURE Ovahelelo Mukuvale mother and child She concentrated on the jewellery is impossible. First of all, in terms and clothing worn by Angola’s native of distance, when you travel in the women. “Their jewels show whether Angolan interior, people will keep they have passed the initiation ritual, telling you that your destination is whether they are married, single, a ‘close’ when in fact it is 200km away. mother, from which family they are from In addition, our deadline was and so on. The way they dress explains extremely tight. And thirdly, we faced a everything they are, so that they receive huge lack of written scientific material the treatment they deserve.” on Angola’s natives. An important general misconception “We did not cover all the peoples clarified in the book concerns the baring of the north, due to lack of time. We of women’s breasts. would have needed six months, not “Contrary to what is generally 50 days, to fully execute this project. thought, the exposure of their breasts Angola’s tribes are geographically very does not indicate that they are difficult to access, especially in the available. This habit is not meant to rainy season. The people of the south conquer members of the opposite sex. have greater cultural wealth, so we It is a way of demanding respect.” decided to concentrate more on them.” The meaning of the exposure of girls’ hips is an even less understood phenomenon. “Girls who walk The team often had to rely on human messengers instead of phones. “All contacts were established via around with bare hips have not yet local administrations, never directly,” passed the initiation ritual,” Prudente Prudente said. “That is a safety explained. “This ritual symbolises measure, a relic of the civil war. The a girl’s physical transition into a administrations had not been notified woman. If a girl has not yet passed in advance by the project organisers. that ritual, then she cannot yet be That, too, was our responsibility. conquered by a man. If a man tries “At times, due to the tight deadline, to conquer her anyway, he will I was forced to write in a car bumping be punished, in some cases even up and down. We travelled for almost expelled from the tribe.” 50 days without any rest. It was crazy, Team spirit Prata and Prudente were asked by but we had a great team and we supported each other in all respects.” “It was hard work, with lots of Zwela to cover the whole of Angola, a walking,” Prata recalled. “We drove 1,246,700 sq km country, in less than 50 under the toughest circumstances. days. It was a virtually impossible task, Think nine hours of driving over both admitted. bumpy dirt roads every day. Thank God For Prudente, the logistics were there was great team spirit. Had we not a major challenge. “To gather all the had that, we would never have been information within 40 to 50 days able to make it.” SONANGOL UNIVERSO 23 PROVINCES Serra da Leba escarpment SOUTHERN ANGOLA: GREAT EXPECTATIONS 24 SONANGOL UNIVERSO Kostadin Luchansky Thanks to new and rebuilt infrastructure, southern Angola is on the cusp of a period of accelerated development. Universo takes a tour of the four provinces T he general perception of Angola’s clients; however, the next major transformation of southern provinces – Namibe, Huilá, the region will occur when long-dormant mining Cunene and Cuando Cubango – is of huge, operations in Huilá province are revived. underpopulated expanses of dry lands where semi-nomadic peoples wander with little regard Namibe province for international frontiers. While this is partly true, Namibe’s main asset is its port, from where cargo is the region also contains highly fertile areas with currently mostly transported along impressive new abundant waters and substantial mineral reserves. highways serving the whole of southern Angola. These sources of potential economic wealth, along The city of Namibe is the largest centre of with stunning tourist attractions, are now more population (282,056) in the province as well as accessible thanks to massive state investment in its economic and administrative hub. The desert new road networks, airports and rebuilt railways. surrounding the city means there are pristine Southern Angola’s key axis of development beaches nearby. This has inspired a long-term is the totally revamped and re-equipped rail line plan to expand tourism, build a marina and attract which links the port of Namibe to Menongue, 907km investment in seafront residential development due east in Cuando Cubango province. Since its and make Namibe a ‘New Dubai’. Thus far all that completion in August 2012, the railway has provided is visible of this ambitious goal is a newly laid-out some passenger services and carried cargoes of beach promenade, but the potential is clear. The recently rebuilt Yuri Gagarin Airport Brazuk Ltd ornamental granite and vital fuel for Sonangol Lubango’s new railway station SONANGOL UNIVERSO 25 Shutterstock PROVINCES showed that Namibe was capable of handling large numbers of visitors when it hosted an international roller hockey championship in 2013. New hotels and a purpose-built sports venue seating over 3,000 made the event a success. Namibe city is also within striking distance of desert attractions such as the Iona National Park, which has zebras, ostriches, gazelles and cheetahs as well as the ancient huge desert plant Welwitschia mirabilis. The region’s rich wildlife is a growing tourist attraction The desert coast forms part of the great Namib Desert which stretches 1,600km from Namibe across neighbouring Namibia to South Africa. It offers sports fishing and diving in The province of Namibe also has great solar and wind isolated, unspoilt locations. energy potential, and a 100MW wind power park (near Located 97km south of Namibe, Tômbua is the province’s Tômbua) is being developed. second most important city. Its economy is based on the Heading directly east from Namibe, the desert road and rich fish and crustacean stocks of the South Atlantic ocean. railway meet the dramatically steep Serra da Leba escarpment, Angola’s Ministry of Fisheries in conjunction with private home to the emblematic ‘Zigzag’ highway which climbs it. Both companies has invested heavily in new boats, equipment Namibe and neighbouring Huilá claim the provincial border and fish and seafood processing. A tuna and sardine cannery tourist attraction as their own. absorbed $122 million of spending in 2014. The fishing industry’s revival also includes provision of a fish market, cold Huilá province storage and a fleet of refrigerated trucks for transportation The ascent of the Serra da Leba marks a clear climatic throughout Angola and beyond. To enhance training in the transition from the Namib Desert below to the greener, fresher, sector, the government plans to inaugurate a fishing academy more fertile Huilá plateau. Huilá has long enjoyed a reputation in 2016. throughout Angola for its healthy climate and its abundant Tômbua lands around 50,000 tonnes of fish and crustaceans produce, with strawberries being the best-known. every year. The local fishing industry is largely artisan, made The provincial capital, Lubango, is home to Angola’s second up of many co-operatives and their families. Fishermen most important industrial concentration after Luanda and traditionally cure and salt large amounts of the catch in the sun. is a key route hub north and south as well as east and west. POPULATION DENSITY PROVINCE 2,354,398 5,002 Cuando Cubango 510,000 199,049 Cunene 965,288 87,342 53,000,000 130,395 Huilá (for comparison) England 26 SONANGOL UNIVERSO NAMIBE CUNENE HUILÁ ENGLAND POPULATION DENSITY PER SQ KM 375 57,091 250 471,613 Namibe CUANDO CUBANGO 125 AREA, SQ KM 0 POPULATION Shutterstock Shutterstock Ornamental stone is one of the province’s booming Shutterstock PROVINCES industries, and 40 companies quarry and polish black granite at Chibia, Gambos and Quipungo, compared with just 12 in 2002. The stone is a muchprized export, and Huilá sells pink, grey, black and brown granites to India, China, Spain, Portugal, Italy, Germany and Canada as well as tiles to Zambia, Namibia and South Africa. Huilá’s water resources are also renowned in Angola and there is a thriving bottled mineral water company serving the whole country. The same water for the popular Nocal beer. The Namibe–Menongue railway continues from Shutterstock supplies a modern Coca-Cola plant and the brewery Lubango to agribusiness centre Matala, where it intersects the River Cunene as it flows from north to south. Huilá’s temperate climate and fertile soil have made it a magnet for investment. The province also has extensive cattle farming. Matala’s centrepiece is the recently refurbished 40MW dam and reservoir, the focal point of a 350kmlong section of a river with potential to irrigate 350,000 hectares (3,500 sq km) of land. New food-processing facilities include a 12,500 tonne/year tomato canning plant, and storage facilities have been built to optimise the use of Kostadin Luchansky Kostadin Luchansky Lubango: famed for its strawberries SONANGOL UNIVERSO 27 Luanda N Gove Dam 50 Km Chipindo Caconda 50 miles Quilengues Quipungo Coca-Cola plant, Nocal brewery (Quarrying) Lubango rr a Le ba Iona National Park (Iron ore, Manganese) Bicuar National Park Chibemba Missimbo go Techamutete / Mpopo (Gold) (Granite) Mupa National Park Xagongo Epupa/Baynes Calueque Dam Baynes Dam (proposed) Longa (Granite) Virei en e Cun (Iron ore, Manganese) Ruacana Falls Mark Clydesdale (BZO) Wind hoek Aquedu ct CUNENE Ondjiva o ng ba Cu (Reserve) Kassinga Chibia NAMIBE Namibe Desert Cuchi an Se da Cubango Menongue Jamba Ganjelas Mineral Water Bottling Plant (Fishing) Matala Dam en e Cun Cu b Namibe Tômbua HUÍLA (Gold) ANGOLA NAMIBIA farmland and stimulate output well above subsistence levels. of $500 million per annum. The project includes an on-site Huge grain silos mark the skyline at Matala and provide food processing plant and a long-term plan to build a steelworks. security, an insurance policy against the severe droughts that still afflict parts of southern Angola. Angola has also invested around $600 million in gold exploration at two sites near Jamba, Mpopo and Chipindo. Two dams on the Cunene north of Matala are also under consideration: Jamba Ya Oma and Jamba Ya Mina, with a total Cuando Cubango province capacity of around 200MW. Angola’s second largest province has as its capital Menongue, Just south of Lubango is Ganjelas near Chibia, another the terminus of the railway from Namibe. While the region has smaller agribusiness complex also based on a dam, irrigation substantial mineral resources attracting investor interest, such and power plant. Both Matala and Ganjelas enjoy excellent as copper, diamonds, iron, mercury, gold, quartz and uranium, road and rail links to Lubango and elsewhere. it is the tourism potential of its vast wilderness, especially in the Okavango area in its far southwest borderlands, that Iron and gold Further along the Namibe–Menongue railway are Jamba captures the public imagination. Cuando Cubango is investing $350 million in tourism and Kassinga, in Huilá’s mineral belt. This is the most with an eye to developing its share of the Kavango–Zambezi significant economic area and thus was the rationale behind Transfrontier Conservation Area (KAZA). This is an building the railway from the coast. Here, 300km due east of intergovernmental project to create a wildlife sanctuary across Lubango, preparations are underway to restart iron ore and huge swathes of land where Angola, Botswana, Namibia, manganese mining. Zambia and Zimbabwe converge. The 440,000 sq km park, an There are proven iron ore deposits of 400 million tonnes, area the size of Sweden, could eventually emulate the high- with reserves likely to be 10 times that amount. When previously spending tourism success of the Pantanal swampland reserve worked in the 1970s, mine output was worth the equivalent which borders three countries in South America. 28 SONANGOL UNIVERSO Cuíto Cuanavale ZAMBIA ANGOLA PROVINCES Hydropower, Irrigation Wind power Forestry, Ecotourism Agribusiness, cattle rearing Mining, Quarrying Fruit, cereals, vegetables National capital Provincial capital Town, village Road Rail d an Cu River PROVINCE o ANGOLA Luanda ANGOLA 0 Cataí 400 km 200 miles HUÍLA NAM Kavango–Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area (KAZA) IB E 0 CUNENE CUANDOCUBANGO Shutterstock Okavango Kostadin Luchansky CUANDO-CUBANGO KAZA is home to the world’s biggest elephant population – around 250,000 – and a wealth of other endangered plant and animal species. Angola is responsible for 90,000 sq km of the reserve. Public and private investors are investing $570 million in mining, according to the deputy governor for economic affairs, Ernesto Kiteculo. The provincial government is also investing $1.375 billion in long term farming projects to increase local food supply. The Longa area will specialise in rice and vegetables – its first harvest, thanks to Chinese co-operation, was Kiteculo said there was also much work to be done in rebuilding 4,000km of roads and bridges, and this would need $3 billion. Shutterstock 1,300 tonnes – and the Missombo region will grow vegetables. Cunene and Cuando Cubango were the provinces most affected by the long war with apartheid-era South Africa in terms of infrastructure damage, and there remains a massive legacy in landmines whose removal is likely to take until 2025. In 2014, Menongue’s Comandante Kwenha airport was rebuilt providing a welcome boost to both tourists and investors. Cunene province Cunene is the only one of Angola’s four southern provinces not to be connected to the railway, but there are plans to extend a branch from Lubango through its capital Ondjiva and on to join the network in neighbouring Namibia. SONANGOL UNIVERSO 29 Shutterstock SUBSIDIARY PROVINCES The KAZA project is home to the world’s largest elephant population Most economic activity in the province is informal and farming is mainly subsistence, as is fishing on the River Cunene Cunene’s economy is largely on the River Cunene. There is some Energy is also a pinch point. Cunene uses diesel generators to supply 6MW and it imports another 6MW from Namibia. Angola and Namibia have long had joint projects dating back to before independence for developing power and irrigation dams on the River Cunene that forms part of their border. A feasibility study was completed on the $1.37 billion 600MW Baynes Dam in November 2014. In common with the rest of the influenced by its position on Angola’s cattle-rearing carried out by several region, Cunene has many tourist southern border. Ondjiva lies just 40km semi-nomadic peoples, some of whom attractions that are now benefiting from Namibia and is at the convergence live as hunter-gatherers. from the country’s improved transport of the country’s two major (and muchimproved) north–south highways. There is vigorous trade on the border as large Cunene has iron and copper deposits but has as yet no plans to exploit them. Water is scarce, but a huge network and people’s greater willingness to travel. Among the highlights are the dramatic 124-metre-high Ruacana Falls, numbers of truckers from Namibia and improvement was made to Ondjiva’s the Mupa National Park and the largest South Africa stop en route to markets domestic supply in 2014 when a 100km baobab tree in Africa. in Angola. aqueduct from the River Cunene was connected to the capital. There are also The road ahead province is informal, and farming plans to develop irrigated agriculture Southern Angola has come a long way is mainly subsistence, as is fishing along the river at Manquete and Calueque. since peace was re-established 13 years Most economic activity in the 30 SONANGOL UNIVERSO SUBSIDIARY PROVINCES Angola’s emblematic baobob trees Kostadin Luchansky Kostadin Luchansky HEIGHT OF A PERSON A young Muckawana boy ago; extensive road rebuilding has meant that overland long-distance travel has now resumed and the opportunities for commerce and tourism have boomed. All this can be measured by the massive increase in hotel accommodation throughout the country and also by the surprising appearance of the distinctive, exuberantly necklaced and bangled Mumuíla women of the Nyaneka peoples, now seen as far away as Luanda from their native rural homes in Huilá. The significant economic explosion will come with the restart of large-scale mining in Huilá’s mineral belt, but meanwhile there will be a steady increase in crossborder trade and co-operation, not least in the development of the KAZA wildlife project. SONANGOL UNIVERSO 31 BLOSSOMING PARTNERSHIP International oil and gas major BP is one of Sonangol’s most important partners. Universo profiles the company’s operations in Angola 32 SONANGOL UNIVERSO BP’s new Luanda HQ UPSTREAM B P (formerly British Petroleum) has invested $27 billion in Angola since starting operations there in the 1990s, according to local vice-president, Paulo Pizarro. Over the next 10–15 years, the firm aims to add a further $15 billion towards its exploration and development efforts in the country. “These are large investments whose return, naturally, will be over the long term, and that’s why our strategy in Angola involves a larger and more ample contribution to the socioeconomic development of the country,” Pizarro explained. “We would like to be seen as a company that contributes to socioeconomic development, not only through the production of oil and of the payment of taxes, but also through the jobs that we create,” he added. Apart from the hundreds of Angolans that BP directly employs, it has also helped stimulate the creation of over 15,000 jobs in goods and services related to its operations. One of the world’s largest oil and gas outfits, BP has a workforce of over 84,000 people in some 80 countries. The company undertakes exploration and production activities in 18 of those countries, including Angola, which accounts for around 10 per cent of its daily global net output of 2.1 million barrels of oil and gas. In 2014, BP globally registered an operating cash flow of $32.8 billion and a profit of $12.1 billion. BP is the largest net oil producer in Angola, ahead of Total, Chevron and ExxonMobil, the company told Universo. BP Angola history Although BP has had a presence in Brazuk Ltd Angola since the 1970s, it was only in SONANGOL UNIVERSO 33 UPSTREAM 1995 that the company got involved in the upstream, initially through Amoco, with its exploration licence in Block 18. BP’s Angolan oil production dates back to 2007. Current oil projects stem from the prospecting licences acquired for “We would like to be seen as a company that contributes to socioeconomic development” deepwater and ultra-deepwater blocks in the Congo Basin following the merger with Amoco in the 1990s. In 2011 the company invested in a further five deep- and ultra-deepwater – Paulo Pizarro, BP Angola vice-president blocks in the Kwanza and Benguela basins. These cemented its position as a leading player in Angola with prospecting the world’s imagination because of its in Angola. It led to the building of two interests in nine blocks covering a scale. At around 2,000 metres below new plants in Luanda; one for wellhead massive total area of 32,650 sq km. sea level, the oil development project machining and the other for assembling BP now sees the Angola region as is one of the deepest in Africa and one ‘Christmas trees’ (wellhead units, each one of the jewels in its exploration and of the largest interconnected subsea consisting of a set of valves). production portfolio. structures in the world. Located in the deepwater in the The enterprise also stimulated the development of a marine supply base Key operations northeastern part of Block 31, PSVM’s and multi-jointing facility at Porto BP has production-sharing agreements production started up in December 2012. Amboim, 260km south of the capital. with Sonangol in the Lower Congo Basin, It is currently around 170,000 bpd. Other sites in Angola also played a role, where it operates its most important offshore blocks, 18 and 31. The Greater Plutónio project in Block The multi-billion dollar PSVM project with BP contractors manufacturing has a floating production, storage and metal structures and equipment in offloading vessel (FPSO) at its heart and Luanda and Lobito. 18 was its first operated deepwater connects to over 77,000 tonnes of subsea development in Angola. This block equipment which stretches 28km from is over 301,000 bpd from Blocks 18 represents an area of 5,000 sq km at north to south. and 31, the company also holds non- depths varying from 1,200 to 1,600 During construction in 2010, the While BP Angola’s own gross average operating stakes in two prolific blocks, metres and contains five fields, all project employed 10,000 people in 16 15 and 17, run respectively by Esso named after chemical elements: Gálio countries and in 12 fabrication yards Exploration Angola and Total. (gallium), Cromo (chromium), Cobalto (cobalt), Paládio (palladium) and Plutónio (plutonium). Production began in October 2007 and currently stands at around 160,000 barrels per day (bpd). Block 18 also supplies associated gas to the Angola LNG (liquefied natural gas) plant at Soyo. ANGOLA’S INTERNATIONAL OIL MAJOR LOADINGS, 2014* Total..................................................................................... 580,000 Chevron................................................................................ 365,000 The second major venture is in Block ExxonMobil........................................................................... 329,000 31, which comprises the Plutão, Saturno, BP......................................................................................... 301,000 Vênus and Marte fields, named after planets and collectively known as PSVM. This installation has captured 34 SONANGOL UNIVERSO Source: Angolan Ministry of Finance *barrels of oil per day UPSTREAM BP BP OPERATED BLOCKS Block 18 Greater Plutónio development BP 50%, Sonangol Sinopec International (SSI) 50% Water depth3 1,200-1,600 metres Fields3 Cobalto, Plutónio, Paládio, Cromo and Gálio Future fields3 Césio (caesium), Platina (platinum) and Chumbo (lead) Crude stream3 Plutónio Loading point3 FPSO Plutónio Daily output3 170,000 bpd* Block 31 PSVM development BP 26.67%, Sonangol EP 25%, Sonangol P&P 20%, Statoil 13.33%, SSI Thirty-One Ltd 15% Water depth3 greater than 2,000 metres Fields3 Plutão, Saturno, Vênus, Marte Crude stream3 Saturno Loading point3 FPSO PSVM Daily output3 170,000 bpd* Source: Angolan Ministry of Finance BP *barrels of oil per day SONANGOL UNIVERSO 35 BP BP UPSTREAM THE PSVM PRODUCTION SYSTEM In addition, it owns a 13.6 per cent share in the Soyo succession plans, coaching and knowledge transfer. This is enabling Angola LNG facility, which is set to resume operations later Angolans to build their professional competency and take on the this year. roles of technicians, engineers and senior leadership positions The firm operates two other blocks (19 and 24) in the within the organisation. Kwanza and Benguela basins where oil production has yet to commence. Production-sharing contracts for these Made in Angola blocks were signed in December 2011. BP is committed to supporting the development and enhancing Altogether there are five non-operating partnerships the capability of Angolan companies. BP spent $565 million in in Blocks 15, 17, 20, 25 and 26. When BP took a 40 per cent stake in Block 26, it gained access to five new offshore blocks in the Kwanza and Benguela basins, totalling 24,240 sq km in area. The potential of these acquisitions lies in BLOCKS IN EXPLORATION PHASE their geology, which is thought to mirror that of Brazil’s hydrocarbon-rich pre-salt region. Block 19 Angolanisation BP 50%, Sonangol P&P 40%, China Sonangol 10% Water depth: 500–1,800 metres There is close co-operation with the government in its policy of Angolanisation, and to this end more than 79 per cent of the 1,000 staff that BP employs in Angola are nationals. The company is committed to developing local employment through training staff, implementing rigorous 36 SONANGOL UNIVERSO Block 24 BP 50%, Sonangol P&P 50% Water depth: 600–1,800 metres Greening the desert UPSTREAM BP NON-OPERATED ASSETS Block 15 Esso Exploration Angola (operator) 40%, BP 26.67%, Eni 20%, Statoil 13.33% 2013 on promoting local content in helping develop jointventure partners and suppliers’ capacity to provide increased numbers of products and services in Angola. A consequence of this is a boost to the socioeconomic development of the country. The PSVM project has one of the highest levels of local input, accounting for about 20 per cent. Several components have been manufactured or assembled in Angolan fabrication yards at Soyo, Dande, Luanda and Porto Amboim. These include pipelines, Christmas trees, manifolds, jumpers, buoyancy tanks, umbilicals and wellheads. The company in the community BP supports several educational projects in Angola and has strategic partnerships with universities, schools and local NGOs. Engagement with Angolan society at every level has resulted in firm relationships with key stakeholders, such as community and church leaders, government, academics and others to reach mutually beneficial outcomes. The oil company’s sustainable development and community investment programme focuses on education, enterprise development, enhancing institutional capacity and social inclusion. Water depth3 650–1,400 metres Fields3 Kizomba A (Hungo, Chocalho, Marimba Norte), Kizomba B (Kissanje, Dikanza), Kizomba C (Mondo, Saxi Batuque), Kizomba Satellites 1 (Clochas, Mavacola), Kizomba Satellites 2 (Kakocha, Bavuca, Mondo Sul) Daily output3 320,000 bpd* Block 17 Total E&P (operator) 40%, Esso Exploration Angola 20%, BP 16.67%, Statoil 23.33% Water depth3 600–1,500 metres Fields3 Girassol, Jasmin, Rosa, Dália and Pazflor (Acácia, Hortênsia, Perpétua, Zínia) CLOV (Cravo, Lírio, Orquídea, Violeta) Daily output3 580,000 bpd* Source: Angolan Ministry of Finance *barrels of oil per day SONANGOL UNIVERSO 37 UPSTREAM BP ANGOLA TIMELINE 1970s Initial Amoco involvement in Angola 1996 Amoco acquires Block 18 rights 1999 BP assumes operator position in Block 31 2006 FPSO Greater Plutónio built First oil Greater Plutónio. 2007 Agreement to take part in Angola LNG project FPSO PSVM with its distinctive turret 2008 BP makes 16th discovery in ultradeepwater Block 31. Approval given for Block 31 development A BP-funded postgraduate programme for a master’s of law degree (LLM) in Oil and Gas, and also a master’s degree in Oil and 2011 BP and Sonangol sign new productionsharing agreement as operators of Blocks 19 and 24, with interests in Blocks 20, 25 and 26 Gas Business Development, in partnership with the Faculty of Law of Agostinho Neto University, launched in April 2007, has so far produced over 100 graduates. Backing has also been provided for the engineering and science faculties at the university. The school support programme includes improving children’s access and study conditions in schools across the 2012 First oil from FPSO PSVM in Block 31 country, as demand for education far outweighs supply given Angola’s youthful population. There are also initiatives to stimulate young people’s interest in mathematics and sciences. In enterprise development, BP assists rural cooperatives that have evolved from the Greater Plutonio micro- 2013 FPSO PSVM reaches plateau output First cargo delivered from Angola LNG credit project. In partnership with local NGOs, the firm supports conservation, farming, water and sanitation initiatives for rural communities in Cunene province, Southern 38 SONANGOL UNIVERSO UPSTREAM DULCE HENRIQUES Dulce Henriques is a Benguelaborn chartered engineer now working at BP’s offices in Luanda. She attended the polytechnic in her hometown before going on to study for a degree in Lisbon. Her choice of an engineering career was influenced by a secondary school teacher who told her 25 years ago that computers would be the future. She was considering doing biology but instead opted for electronics, the subject nearest to computing in Benguela at that time. After winning a scholarship, to Portugal she graduated in Electronics and Telecommunications from ISEL (Instituto Superior de Engenharia de Lisboa). “It was the natural choice,” she explained. Henriques later specialised in instruments and control on joining BP. By the end of 2011, she had been promoted to projects and modifications manager. “This was a big leap in my career, as there were many technical aspects to this job and also a lot of administration, as I had two offshore teams reporting to me, plus procurement issues and the management of a subcontract company. So I was at full stretch in managing these extra aspects, at the same time as having a baby. Responsibilities included a project portfolio ranging from $200,000 to $15 million – and certainly wasn’t boring! “Things are always changing and you need to adapt, which has Angola, a region often affected by extreme climate taught me to manage. There were only three people in the team when I change (droughts and floods). The programme started; now there are 20. It was a very interesting role and I learnt a lot. competed for the Sirius Award and won the Global “I can’t complain with what I have achieved so far. Since March Partnership Award in recognition of its impact on the 2015, I have moved into my second management role. I’m now communities and its value in establishing sound and the Discipline Engineering manager for BP. So I have dreams to effective partnerships. accomplish more,” she added. Funding has also helped other rural co-operatives, This engineer is happy in her current role. “I like working in mainly run by women, in Benguela province with a a mixed environment with people from across the world and with focus on improved farming and irrigation techniques different experiences, and when we are struggling, we come together. and the development of local markets. There is a variety of teams and people doing multiple things, so it’s The Green Namibe project aims to fight the desertification of that province through planting trees and using modern irrigation. The project is always good to learn and interact with each other.“ She also has no problems working in a predominantly male industry. “I wouldn’t say it’s easy, but I’m not shy and consider myself a creating a micro-climate while providing agricultural tough cookie,” adding she would definitely recommend a career in the students and their professors with valuable practical oil industry to any young Angolan women. experience and research material. SONANGOL UNIVERSO 39 UPSTREAM BP DINAYAME MENDES 40 SONANGOL UNIVERSO UPSTREAM Dinayame Mendes, a process engineer on the Greater Plutónio project, joined BP as a trainee technician in 2006. Born in Uíge in 1984, the daughter of a Baptist church pastor, she spent two and a half years in Hull in the UK on an apprenticeship, mostly at the Dimlington Gas Terminal, part of the North Sea gas system. While there, she received awards of Overseas Student of the Year 2007 from the Hull Association of Engineers and Student of the Year 2008 (Engineering Industries Association of Humberside). She was also named 2008 gold medallist by the Worshipful Company of Tallow Chandlers, an ancient English guild which once regulated the fats and oils trade, but now supports education and training in the energy sector. Mendes was chosen to join BP’s production chemist team in 2008 and undertook a year-long training assignment with Nalco in Sugarland, Texas. She then joined the Greater Plutónio support team as production chemist, overseeing chemicals management services, and then as production technologist. After completing a BSc (Hons) in Environmental Science with the Open University in 2011, she joined the Challenge Programme in Process Engineering, taking on the role of assistant operations engineer on the FPSO PSVM working on a 28-day rotation basis. “It was a unique experience to be part of hook-up, commissioning and start-up of production of the largest subsea development project in the world,” she said. Next she became a part of the Area Engineering Support Team in October 2013, where her role was to provide process engineering support to the Greater Plutónio project and “consistently and efficiently deliver safe, reliable and compliant operations.” She is continuing her further education with an MSc in Process Systems Engineering at Cranfield University, UK and hopes to complete it in September 2016. “I like the diversity of challenges I encounter in my job. It exposes me to learning from and interacting with a multidisciplinary team,” she told Universo. In her leisure time, she enjoys travelling. She does, however, recognise the downside of being away from family and friends and missing out on important events. Mendes is one of the growing number of Angolan women working in the oil industry. “There are not as many as I would like to see. Particularly in operations and engineering roles, there are not so many women.” Her first experience of working in a male-dominated environment was at an onshore gas terminal in East Yorkshire, and there were a lot of barriers to overcome. One was the robust language of her male work colleagues. So when she went offshore, she more or less knew what it would be like. “I was acquainted with the environment. As anywhere else where the job is traditionally seen as ‘male’, being a woman, I had to work harder than my male peers to prove that I could do things. Fortunately I also happened to find some good people who supported me, gave me the opportunity and valued my contribution to the success of the team.” “I like the diversity of challenges I encounter in my job. It exposes me to learning from and interacting with a multidisciplinary team” – Dinayame Mendes, Process Engineer, Greater Plutónio project SONANGOL UNIVERSO 41 ANNIVERSARY A CENTURY OF OIL DRILLING 1915-2015 I n 2015, Angola celebrates 100 years subsequently but were abandoned by Petrofina made an onshore discovery since oil was first drilled in its June 1916 owing to a collapse in their just south of Luanda. Angola’s oil output territory. The very first successful oil pipe-work structure. was minimal until drilling began in well was sunk in the Dande river valley, shallow offshore waters in the late 1960s. around 20km west of Caxito (Bengo Oil strike Production offshore began in 1969, and province) and 40km north of Luanda. Finally the industry pioneers struck that marked Angola’s take-off as an oil- There was very good reason to choose lucky. They drilled the Dande-4 well producing nation. this prospecting area, because oil in the from August 14, 1916, through to form of asphalt, also known as bitumen, September 19, 1917, reaching a depth of 100,000 bpd, and this amount doubled in was in evidence on the surface, where it 857 metres and producing 6 barrels per 2001. A mere four years later, production had for centuries been seeping through day (bpd) of heavy oil. The old wellhead reached 1 million bpd as drilling moved the rock structures and then hardening. is still visible to this day, as it has been into deep waters. The area is known to geologists today as preserved by the oil slowly oozing out the Libongos oil seeps. and covering it. This has protected it very first drilling operation took place, from tropical heat and rainfall. Angola now produces nearly 1.8 million The drilling of Angola’s first well, Dande-1, began on March 25, 1915, and Angola’s early drilling campaigns terminated in July the same year. It lasted until June 1927. They totalled 13 proved to be dry, but the clay extracted wells altogether but were deemed not gave off the strong aroma of oil. This worth developing. was enough to give the explorers heart. Another two wells were drilled 42 SONANGOL UNIVERSO Oil exploration only seriously resumed in the 1950s, when Belgian firm By 1984, the country was tapping Today, a hundred years since the bpd and drills more than 80 per cent of this is drilled in deepwater. Universo would like to thank Canadian geologist Tako Koning for researching this item and providing data Shutterstock ANNIVERSARY 2011 2001 Girassol producing at rate of 200,000 bpd 1975 1955 1700s 30 barrels of bitumen shipped to Lisbon and Rio de Janeiro for caulking ships 1915 First well drilled. Portugal’s Companhia de Pesquisas Mineiras (PEMA) drills Dande-1 near Barra do Dande First commercial oil find at Benfica by Belgium’s Petrofina 1956 Oil production starts in Angola 1968 Gulf oil makes first offshore oil discovery in Malongo field (Cabinda) 1969 1916 Very first oil flow. Dande-4 well tested and produces 6 bpd 1915 Offshore oil production begins Texaco finds Essungo oil field. First discovery in Block 2 2004 1996 2007 Elf Petroleum detects Girassol field in deepwater Lower Congo Basin at water depth of 1,300 metres Angola oil output reaches 1 million bpd Sanha condensate project in Chevron Block 0 starts up 2008 Angola oil production averages 1.9 million bpd Total and partners achieve 1 billion barrels cumulative oil from deepwater Block 17 2011 Sonangol awards 11 pre-salt blocks in deepwater Kwanza Basin 2012 Maersk Oil makes first deepwater pre-salt oil discovery in Kwanza Basin. Cobalt also announces positive pre-salt result 2012 2009 ExxonMobil and partners reach 1 billion barrels cumulative oil production from deepwater Block 15 Chevron and partners hit 4 billion barrels cumulative oil mark in Block 0 2015 Angola celebrates the hundreth anniversary of oil drilling 2015 bpd: barrels of oil per day SONANGOL UNIVERSO 43 Shutterstock Shutterstock INTERNATIONAL Views of Havana 44 SONANGOL UNIVERSO Shutterstock Shutterstock ANGOLA’S ENDURING ALLY Cuba is one of modern Angola’s longest-standing and most practical allies. Universo looks at how this trans-Atlantic relationship has bloomed SONANGOL UNIVERSO 45 Shutterstock INTERNATIONAL Havana: the island’s capital city T he Caribbean island of Cuba signed 40 years ago,” he recalled during dependence on international co-operation has a special rapport with a visit by Cuba’s first vice president, in education and health. That is what Angola, having played a decisive Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez, to Angola Cuba’s aim is,” she explained. supporting role in the latter’s struggle in March. Indeed, four decades later for independence in 1975. The generosity the island nation continues to provide health, because these areas are probably of spirit displayed by the Cuban people solid support for Angola’s economic what the Cuban government is strongest displayed in the heroic process and in development, specifically in the health in, and human resources are our the subsequent reconstruction of the and education sectors. greatest riches.” country captured the imagination of many observers around the world. Angola’s minister of state and head According to Cuba’s ambassador to “It’s always about education and As part of the co-operation in Angola, Gisela Beatriz García Rivera, there healthcare, Angola is using Cuban are over 4,000 Cubans working in the products to fight malaria by eliminating of the president’s office, Edeltrudes country. Around 42 per cent of these are in its vectors. da Costa, emphasised the enormous the health sector and 40 per cent in further sacrifices that Cubans made fighting education, while a reciprocal agreement factories in Angola for biocides and alongside Angolans to help safeguard enables 2,841 students who have grants to biofertilisers, and in transferring independence and territorial integrity. study in the Caribbean country, mostly at technology, because we have experience a high educational level. in this field. We have put forward “They were years of great historical transcendence that will never be “Our main focus is on training local “We are interested in building a proposal. Now we need to look at forgotten. It isn’t by chance that our personnel so that Angola can become finance, and see how we can do it,” the General Co-operation Agreement was self-reliant and, in time, come to end its ambassador said. 46 SONANGOL UNIVERSO Shutterstock INTERNATIONAL “It’s always about education and health, because these areas are probably what the Cuban government is strongest in” – Gisela Beatriz García Rivera, Cuba’s ambassador to Angola Another potential way for the two nations to work together is in the joint production of medicines, an area in which Cuba has considerable experience. Indeed, it already exports many drugs to Angola. Power to the people Apart from areas related to health and education, trade between Angola and Cuba is not very substantial. “It’s true that our trade should increase and we can, for example, start with oil. Sonangol is prospecting in Cuba to find oil, and this could be a promising area,” said Ambassador García Rivera. “It’s in our interest to learn much with Sonangol, because it has great experience in drilling offshore. It’s a company that’s CUBA: SOCIOECONOMIC INDICATORS Infant mortality 4.7 deaths per 1,000 live births (comparison: UK 4.4, USA 6.2, Mexico 12.6, Brazil 19.2) Life expectancy 78.2 years (UK 80.4, USA 79.6, Mexico 75.4, Brazil 73.3) Health expenditure 8.6% of GDP (UK 9.4%, USA 17.9%, Mexico 6.1%, Brazil 9.3%) a friend, with a great deal of knowledge of how the oil sector works, an area in which we want to enter,” she pointed out. “We have some experience of drilling oil in Cuba, but not to the level that Sonangol has.” Doctors 6.72 per 1,000 population (UK 2.78, USA 2.45, Mexico 2.1, Brazil 1.89) During his diplomatic and economic mission to Angola, Vice President Díaz-Canel Bermúdez made a point of visiting Sonangol’s Sonils oil industry logistics base in Luanda. Together with Minister Edeltrudes da Costa, he reviewed Education spending 12.8% of GDP* UK 6.2%**, USA 5.2%**, Mexico 5.1%**, Brazil 5.8%*) co-operation in health, education, construction, energy and water, and transport among other matters. They discussed the possibility that Cuba may take part in rural electrification in Angola, building power lines and Literacy 99.8% (age 15 and over) (Mexico 94.2%, Brazil 91.3%) substations to support development in the countryside. Angola’s power generation is expected to be boosted shortly with the completion of two huge dam projects. The upgraded *2010 **2011 (Sources: World Bank, UNICEF) Cambambe dam should produce a total of 960MW, up from SONANGOL UNIVERSO 47 INTERNATIONAL MEDICINES WITHOUT BORDERS In the many years since the Cuban revolution of 1959, This selfless action over Ebola so shamed the rest of the detractors of the island nation have labelled it as an 'exporter' world “that British and US politicians have felt obliged to offer of revolution. This perception stemmed from its active backing congratulations. John Kerry [US Secretary of State] described for the oppressed around the world, which Cubans see as the contribution of the state the US has been trying to overthrow their revolutionary internationalist duty. Indeed, it was such for half a century as ‘impressive’,” the newspaper reported. a mission that led to Che Guevara’s death in Bolivia in 1967, Cuban humanitarianism actions in Haiti and the Kasmir having some years previously visited the Congo where he met earthquake also drew attention in 2005. In May 2015, Cuba’s Angola’s first president, Agostinho Neto. altruism was again on show with its practical aid to victims of Nowadays, Cuba’s international profile derives from its the huge Nepal earthquake. equally heroic medical aid all around the globe. There are now 50,000 Cuban doctors and nurses working in The country led the world in responding to the Ebola 60 developing countries, The Guardian noted. As well as saving emergency in West Africa last year and drew widespread millions of lives, Cuban doctors have carried out 3 million free admiration, even from its critics. eye operations in 33 countries. The paper quoted Che Guevara’s According to British newspaper The Guardian, the Cubans “answered that call before it was made. It was first on the daughter Aleida, who is like her father a doctor, and who herself has served in Africa. Ebola frontline and has sent the largest contingent of doctors and nurses.” Cuban doctors were on the ground first and came “We are Afro-Latin Americans and we’ll take our solidarity to the children of that continent.” prepared for the long haul. Industry Oil, nickel, cobalt, pharmaceuticals, tobacco, construction, steel, cement, farming machinery, sugar Economic sectors Agriculture.....................................................3.8% Industry..........................................................22.3% Services.........................................................73.9% (CIA World Factbook 2013 est.) 48 SONANGOL UNIVERSO Shutterstock Agriculture Sugar, tobacco, citrus, coffee, rice Shutterstock Population........................ 11.3 million Capital .............................. Havana (population 2.1 million) Land area.......................... 109,820 square kilometres (comparison: Angola 1,246,700 sq km, Texas 692,241 sq km, England 130,395 sq km) Shutterstock CUBA DATA Shutterstock INTERNATIONAL 180MW, at the end of 2015, and the interferon, EGF (epidermal growth massive new Laúca Dam will add factor) for burns, PPG (policosanol) for another 2,067MW starting in 2017. treating hyperlipidemia, Melagenina for vitiligo, Heberkinasa (streptokinase) for Biotech Cuba thrombosis in cardiovascular disease, Cuba’s dependence on sugar, tobacco and monoclonal antibodies. research is very intense, and scientists commitment to developing its education hope to develop an effective HIV and health services, it should come as vaccine in addition to producing anti- no surprise that the leading edge of the HIV medications. Regarding bacterial emerging ‘knowledge economy’ has a vaccines, the University of Havana’s strong medical connection. Synthetic Antigens Laboratory recently announced that the Hemophilus had its beginnings in 1973, according to influenza type B synthetic vaccine was to American doctor, Byron L. Barksdale, be produced locally. owner of the Havana Bay Company. That Courtesy of the Cuban Embassy, Luanda and, given the government’s long-time Biotechnology (biotech) in Cuba Cuba’s ambassador at the Faculty of Medicine, Lubango In particular, HIV/AIDS viral Dr Barksdale explained that Cuba year, scientists and physicians, including holds the position that patents should Dr. R. Lee Clark (who died in 1994) from not be enforced and poor nations and MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, individuals should not have to pay for Texas, made a trip to Havana and held ‘expensive’ medications manufactured discussions about new frontiers in by multinational “for profit” biotech, especially its possible use in pharmaceutical corporations. Cuban doctors at work in Angola Courtesy of the Cuban Embassy, Luanda and other commodities is waning, Biotech Cuba Doctors are Cuba’s greatest export viral infections such as dengue. Cancer vaccine scientists went to Finland to learn how to According to technology magazine make the drug interferon from white blood Wired, Cuba is also on course to develop cells. They subsequently visited Houston a promising therapeutic vaccine and also traveled to Eastern European against lung cancer. In April, New York countries and the former USSR to glean Governor Andrew Cuomo visited the as much information as they could about island’s capitaland helped facilitate the new biotech procedures and techniques. finalisation of an agreement between the Today, Cuba has had considerable Shutterstock Taking the lead from Dr Clark, Cuban Roswell Park Cancer Institute and Cuba’s success in the following areas: vaccines Centre for Molecular Immunology to (Type B meningococcal meningitis), develop the vaccine Cimavax and begin Courtesy of the Cuban Embassy, Luanda Ambassador Gisela Beatriz García Rivera visits a Benguela medical centre SONANGOL UNIVERSO 49 INTERNATIONAL clinical trials in the US. The hope is that American researchers ANGOLA - CUBA will allow Cimavax to undergo further testing and that it will obtain the Food and Drug Administration’s approval. “The chance to evaluate a vaccine like this is a very exciting 1965 Cuban international mission provides military assistance to MPLA in exile in Congo Brazzaville prospect,” Candace Johnson, CEO of Roswell Park, told Wired. Part of her excitement is because so far research on the vaccine shows that it has low toxicity and is relatively cheap to produce and store. Researchers in Cuba worked on Cimavax for 25 years before 1975 Cuban forces help repel apartheid South Africa’s attack on Angola. With Cuban aid, Angola becomes secure base for liberation movements such as Namibia’s Swapo and South Africa’s ANC the Ministry of Health there made it available to the public in 2011, the magazine reported. A phase II trial from 2008 showed that lung cancer patients who received the vaccine lived an average of four to six months longer. Japan and some European countries are also trialling the drug. 1988 Wired attributed the priority given to biotech and medical Agreement of withdrawal of apartheid troops from Namibia. Cuban troops leave Angola research in Cuba to an outbreak of dengue fever in 1981 which affected 350,000 Cubans. 1990 Namibia gains independence from South African control. Nelson Mandela freed from prison on February 11 Forty years of friendship Reflecting on the upcoming 40th anniversary of Angolan independence, Ambassador Garcia Rivera said, “We view these 40 years with much joy and satisfaction because we see that Angola is developing. It’s an independent country which is getting 1994 Mandela elected president of South Africa in April increasingly stronger. With great economic growth and every year it is increasing its influence in the international, regional, and world community. “All this makes us happy. Happy to have been with Angola during the most complicated times in its history, and happy to see Che Guevara, an inspiration to Cuban internationalists the country advance with all its difficulties and contradictions, as all countries have, but a country that each day is stronger, advancing with firm steps.” In a move aimed at strenthening economic relations with Cuba, Angola’s vice president, Manuel Domingos Vicente, visited the Caribbean island in late May. While there, Vicente laid a wreath at the mausoleum in Havana’s Colon Cemetery, paying tribute to the 2,000 Cuban internationalists who fell during their mission in Angola, laying a wreath at the mausoleum in Havana’s Colon Cemetery. Over a quarter of a million Cubans have served in Angola as soldiers, teachers, doctors, construction workers since independence in 1975. Vice president Vicente said he could not miss visiting the monument and expressed his gratitude for Cuba’s support in preserving Angola’s sovereignty. Angolan-Cuban relations are set to reach a new high. On May 21, Angola’s ambassdor in Havana, José César Augusto Kiluanje, announced that Sonangol was likely to start drilling for oil in 50 SONANGOL UNIVERSO Shutterstock Cuba’s territorial waters in 2016. INTERNATIONAL RAFAEL MORACÉN LIMONTA – CUBAN AND ANGOLAN HERO Angola’s relations with Cuba actually date back to before worked alongside the future president, Agostinho Neto, who independence in 1975, a process in which the Caribbean country at one time treated him for malaria. Moracén fought against was eventually to take a key part. Cuban assistance to the MPLA Portuguese colonial troops when they attacked the MPLA began in 1965 when the Angolan liberation movement had its camp and he also took part in some ambushes. He left Africa headquarters in neighbouring Congo Brazzaville. in July 1967. One of those Cubans involved was General Rafael Moracén In November 1975, he returned to Angola, initially as head of Limonta. His military career largely reflects not only Angola’s a tank regiment, and was posted to Cabinda province, where he transformation into an independent country and now a vibrant saw action. He later performed a key role in Angola’s defence fast-growing economy, but also the development of the against apartheid South Africa and in 1977 organised the revolution in his own homeland. security of President Neto and that of President José Eduardo Born a semi-literate son of a farm worker and a maid in Palma Soriano, Santiago de Cuba, in 1939, he worked as a shoeshine at the age of 14 and then a cane-cutter. Inspired by the 1953 attack on the Moncada Barracks, he joined Cuba’s guerrilla fighters in the Sierra Maestra in 1958. In 1965 he found himself in Africa, having volunteered with There, for his services, President Fidel Castro awarded him the ‘Hero of the Republic of Cuba’ medal in 1989. In 2014, while he was serving as military attaché at the Cuban Embassy in Angola, General Moracen was awarded Angolan nationality and promoted to Lieutenant-General in Angola, aged 75, by President dos Santos. Angop five others to be a military advisor in colonial Angola, where he dos Santos until 1982, before returning home. SONANGOL UNIVERSO 51