Chad is one of the , , and, increasingly, most volatile countries in Africa. A , allegedly orchestrated by Boko Haram, killing 36 and injuring 50, highlights the perilous challenges of doing business in this located in the heart of the Sahel.

Whatever its challenges, though, Chad has oil. Over the years, the “who’s who” of oil majors have tried and largely failed to exploit Chad’s oil reserves due largely to poor infrastructure, instability, and corruption. Enter CNPC. China’s National Petroleum Corporation has a well-earned reputation of doing business in the world’s most volatile regions where few of its rivals dare to go. From to to Chad, CNPC is seemingly fearless.

After a between CNPC and the government, that included the withdrawal of CNPC’s operating license and massive fines for environmental violations, the two sides now seem eager to move forward. President Idriss Deby where he met with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping as evidence of this new reconciliation.

While Chadian oil production is by the end of 2015, making it the seventh largest producer in sub-Saharan Africa, that amount is relatively small for a company as large as CNPC. So why does CNPC and the Chinese government at large take on so much risk for a comparatively small return?

is an independent journalist and former BBC correspondent who has reportedly extensively from Chad and throughout the Sahel region. She is also the author of a new book that, among other things, examines China’s oil strategy in this part of the world.

Celeste joins Eric and Cobus to talk about CNPC’s strategy in Chad and what it means for the region as a whole.

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