The previous system was open to all retailers in Kenya, with the winner supplying the industry for two months and paying for the cargo in hard currency within five days of delivery. The government is targeting Gulf-based oil exporters like UAE's ADNOC and Saudi Aramco, said Moses Kuria, the minister of trade, in a TV interview. "We are trying to restructure the way we transact oil between GCC and Kenya so we can ease the pressure on our foreign exchange rate," he told CNN Arabic.
Local oil firms were not immediately available for comment.
Kenya's useable foreign exchange reserves have shrunk to less than enough to cover four months of imports of all kinds, which is a statutory requirement. They stand at $6.60 billion or 3.69 months worth of import cover.
Oil prices account for a significant part as international benchmark Brent is above $80 a barrel, even though it has dropped from a peak of $139 in March last year. Other African nations have also been grappling with foreign exchange shortages. Ghana is negotiating gold for oil deals, traders said. (Reporting by Duncan Miriri; Editing by Louise Heavens and Bernadette Baum)
Reuters Messaging: duncan.miriri.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net))