Mining industry of Chad

[1] Natron deposits were located around the shore of Lake Chad and the wadis of Kanem Prefecture,[1] and near the oasis of Faya-Largeau.

[1] Exploration in 1985 by the Exxon-led consortium discovered potentially large deposits near Doba in the southern region of Chad.

[1] Further efforts were suspended in 1986 when world oil prices continued to drop, although the consortium maintained a liaison office in N'Djamena in 1988.

[1] Those plans lapsed during the conflicts of the late 1970s and early 1980s but were revived in 1986 by the government with the support of the World Bank.

[1] The plans, which anticipated operations to begin in the early 1990s, included well development in the Sédigi field, a pipeline to N'Djamena, a refinery with a 2,000- to 5,000 barrels per day (790 m3/d) capacity, and the transformation or acquisition of power-generating equipment in the capital to burn the refinery's residual fuel oil.