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Uganda's growth averages 8% per year over the past five years, boosted by oil

The Finance Ministry said that Uganda's economy will grow at an average of 8% per year over the next five-year period, mainly due to investments in the petroleum sector and other sectors, such as transportation.

The Ministry of Finance, citing Finance minister Matia Kasaija, said that the start-up of crude oil production is expected around mid-2026. This will push the growth to double digits for the fiscal year 2026/27.

Last year, the International Monetary Fund predicted that Uganda's economic growth would reach double digits due to oil production. It is the first forecast of this kind by the government.

Kasaija said this while presenting the budget strategy for the fiscal year that begins in July of next year.

The economic growth for the year 2026, ending in June, is expected to be 7%.

Minister said that the following year the government would prioritize investments in oil, gas, transportation infrastructure, electric power and industrial parks, among other sectors.

East Africa is estimated to have 6.5 billion barrels in crude oil reserves located in the Albertine Rift Basin.

China National Offshore Oil Corporation and France's TotalEnergies, two developers of offshore oil fields, are drilling wells and building an export pipeline in preparation for the planned start of production. (Reporting by Elias Biryabarema; Editing by George Obulutsa, Alexandra Hudson)

(source: Reuters)