By Nicholas Bariyo

KAMPALA Uganda--France's Total SA (TOT) is pressing the Ugandan government to approve the construction of a crude export pipeline ahead of the planned development of the country's vast oil reserves in the Lake Albertine Rift Basin, a company spokeswoman told Dow Jones Newswires Monday.

Total's top executives, led by its president for Africa Jacques Marraud, met Uganda's long-serving leader, Yoweri Museveni, in Kampala earlier this month in a bid to persuade him to break the impasse over the construction of a refinery and crude pipe line, according to Ahlem Friga-Noy, Total's spokeswoman in Uganda.

The development underscores Total's growing frustration with the Ugandan government, more than a year after the company acquired a stake in the country's oil assets.

"The discussion raised the issue of the refinery and the crude export pipeline. Total underlined to the President its understanding of the need for a refinery... and restated its view that this refinery should be combined with an export crude pipeline" Ms. Friga-Noy said. "We are hopeful that parties will soon reach a convergence of views."

A presidential spokeswoman confirmed the meeting, but declined to delve into details. Total has indicated that its $12 billion project with the U.K.'s Tullow Oil PLC (TLW.LN) and China's Cnooc Ltd. (CEO) to develop the oil fields in the country is in danger of stalling unless Uganda approves the construction of a pipeline to export crude to overseas markets through the East African coast.

Mr. Museveni has insisted that Uganda will not export crude oil. The government wants companies to construct an up to 180,000 barrels-a-day refinery to refine most of the crude locally to maximize benefits from the resource. But Total and its partners have been pushing for the construction of a smaller refinery to supply only the local market, creating a stand-off which continues to push back the planned date of oil production.

Last month, Total Chief Executive Officer Christophe de Margerie told analysts in London that everything in Uganda is "ready to start" apart from the issue of the crude pipeline. Tullow, Total and Cnooc want to quickly recoup billions of dollars they expect to spend in the country and are considering investing at least $5 billion in pipelines to the East African coast.

But Mr. Museveni is also under pressure to translate the newfound oil wealth into jobs. Uganda said on Monday that cumulative investments in oil exploration in the country had reached $1.7 billion, leading to the discovery of at least 3.5 billion barrels of crude reserves.

Write to Nicholas Bariyo at nicholas.bariyo@dowjones.com

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