Ghana: Bui Power Authority Goes In Commercial Sugarcane Plantation To Improve Livelihoods Of Settlers In Bui Enclave

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Ghana’s second largest state power generation company, Bui Power Authority, has taken another giant step to improve the economic well-being and livelihoods of residents within the Bui enclave in the Bono and Savannah Regions. In line with the Authority’s mandate of developing irrigation projects, and more so in championing the government’s ‘One District, One Factory (1D1F)’ industrialization agenda, the Chief Executive Officer of BPA, Samuel Kofi Dzamesi, in 2021, led the Authority to enter into a partnership with Bui Sugar Limited for the establishment of a sugarcane plantation and processing plant within the Bui Hydroelectric Project acquired lands. The partnership will lead to the cultivation of 6,940 hectares of sugarcane as raw materials for the factory. So far, the company has planted 130 hectares of sugarcane plantation out of a total of 6,940 hectares of land. Located in the Fawoman community in the Banda District of the Bono Region, the project has, so far, employed 120 workers from the neighbouring communities. It is expected that the current workforce would increase to 500 as the project progresses. The 6,940 hectares of sugarcane plantation, upon completion, would be the largest sugarcane plantation in Ghana. The processing plant is expected to process about 60,000 tons of sugar annually and will be developed into four phases which would eventually result in a total population capacity of about 100,000 metric tons annually. During his visit to the plantation site recently with some Management Team and staff of BPA, the CEO of the Authority, Samuel Kofi Dzamesi, was highly impressed with the progress of works, as in just nine months, about 130 hectares of land have been cultivated and more lands are being prepared for cultivation. He commended the developer for the zeal and commitment shown towards the project and applauded them for engaging about 120 workers (from the neighbouring communities) at this initial stage. Mr. Dzamesi assured the developer, Bui Sugar Factory, of BPA’s continuous support by creating the enabling environment for the factory and plantation to thrive. He also took the opportunity to invite other investors and businesses to set their operations within the Bui enclave to develop the area for them to make the needed returns on their investments. BPA was established by an Act of Parliament, Act 740, with the mandate to construct a dam at the Bui gorge and utilise about 184,371 hectares of land for the dam’s operations, development of irrigation projects and for development of the Bui Township.     Source: https://energynewsafrica.com

South Africa Does Need Some Gas In The Energy Mix – Just Not The Kind Gwede Mantashe Wants(Opinion)

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By: Neil Thomas Stacey & Celestin Sempuga     Of the multitude of crises facing South Africa at the moment, the energy crisis probably receives the most coverage; “load shedding” is a swear word among South Africans. Other problems, however, are more likely to be top of mind for those directly affected by them. Millions of South Africans still lack access to basic safe sanitation and, to make matters worse, it is reported that roughly half of the country’s sewerage works fail to treat sewage properly while some 40% are in critical condition. On the opposite end of the digestive tract, South Africans also face soaring food prices, driven in part by record fertiliser prices as the Ukraine conflict affects global supply. If only there were some way to turn sewage into energy and fertiliser, we could tackle all three crises in one fell swoop. Fortunately, there is. Anaerobic digestion is a process that uses micro-organisms to break down biomass to produce biogas, a mixture of methane and CO2, as a source of energy. The solid matter and dissolved minerals that are left over, referred to as digestate, are a valuable fertiliser rich in phosphate, potassium and trace minerals, while the urea content of urine supplies nitrates. Biodigestion is a well understood technology, and has been implemented all over the world at various scales. China is considered the world leader in biodigestion, producing some 15 billion m3 of biogas per year, equivalent to around 200GWh per day, which is around 40% of South Africa’s daily electricity use. The majority of this is produced in small-scale digesters, mainly household- or community-scale units. It is estimated that there are almost 50 million biodigesters operating throughout China, and no wonder; China has employed various different subsidy schemes to encourage their adoption since the 1970s and everything needed to set up a biodigester can be easily bought through Alibaba, on a reasonable budget. This widespread personal adoption illustrates the simplicity and robustness of the technology. A small biodigester does not require heavy or expensive equipment to build, nor advanced technical skills to operate. The micro-organisms that do the digestion can be supplied by simply adding some cow-dung at startup. The low-tech, low-cost nature of biodigesters makes them an excellent fit for under-resourced communities in South Africa. They are also a good match for South Africa’s energy requirements. At present, we do not lack total capacity; what we lack is peak capacity to meet surges in demand in the morning and evening, when large amounts of power are used for cooking, water-heating and household heating. These applications can all be met directly by using biogas, mitigating those surges in demand without the infrastructure requirements (and inefficiencies) of electricity generation and distribution. Biogas is produced from materials which currently break down into CO2 anyway, resulting in net zero emissions of CO2 emissions when biogas is used for energy. Biodigesters have been trialed at dozens of schools throughout South Africa, and that is an excellent use-case. In most implementations, the digestate is used on-site as fertiliser for vegetable gardens and so the projects supply sanitation as well as food and even the gas supply for cooking that food. South Africa also has an established biodigester on a much larger scale: the Bronkhorstspruit Biogas Plant has been operational since 2015, using livestock waste to provide some 4MW to BMW South Africa’s Rosslyn plant while producing around 20,000 tons of fertiliser per year. Biodigesters are a cheap, low-tech route to community self-sufficiency, provided their initial costs are covered and the necessary training to operate them is provided. China has taken the route of offering grants and subsidies since the 1970s, so that’s a proven formula that one would hope South Africa’s national government would replicate. However, biodigestion is a model for decentralisation of services and devolution of powers and revenue, and therefore politically unpopular as it takes power out of the hands of government. Different funding approaches will be needed if South Africa is to use biogas as an instrument for providing energy, sanitation and food while reducing CO2 emissions. Fortunately, good ideas don’t always need government money. Biodigestion results in multiple sources of revenue, making it a good destination for private sector investment. Biodigesters can be supplemented with household vegetable waste and even garden waste, alleviating other demands for rubbish disposal while also making sorting plastic waste easier. This suggests that rebates on municipal levies for waste disposal and sanitation would be feasible as a funding mechanism, requiring just the buy-in of local municipalities and/or metros rather than national or provincial government. South Africa also happens to have multitudes of reasonably well-funded small-to-medium communities with high population density, perfectly suited for biodigesters and the associated infrastructure. The trouble is, they just don’t think of themselves as communities. There is a tendency to assume that proposals for community-scale technologies are intended for rural schools and townships, but they are all at least equally applicable to sectional-title housing developments. In many instances they are far more applicable there, because those developments can afford to make additional capital investments that will pay back returns after several years, and it is also far easier for them to allocate full-time employees to tasks that don’t easily draw volunteers. A middle-class housing complex is a largely novel but seemingly ideal context for seamless biogas integration. Vertically-stacked apartments can easily share water-heating infrastructure and combined sewage feeds to a biodigester. Household sorting of kitchen waste is not a challenging task, so simply having a shared separate bin for residents to dispose of digestible kitchen waste is not onerous on that scale. Most complexes and housing estates are also regularly attended to by garden services that could collect plant waste for digestion with no trouble at all. In most cases, a biodigester would actually save on disposal costs. Under-resourced areas may be where biodigesters are needed most, but rolling them out to the middle-class first, to develop the business model, may prove to be the most viable strategy. Ideally, revenue from those projects could even be used to subsidise rollout elsewhere. Neil Thomas Stacey lectures on waste-water management at Wits University. Celestin Sempuga is head of the Process Synthesis Research Group at UNISA’s Florida Campus, and has been installing biodigesters at rural schools. Both authors indicated they have no conflicts of interest.    

EU Gears Up To Tax Fossil Fuel Companies Amid Energy Crisis

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The European Union is preparing to propose a plan that would force fossil fuel companies taking in windfall profits from surging oil and gas prices to submit financial contributions to offset soaring household energy bills, a draft document circulating around Brussels indicates.   The European Commission is expected to release the details of the draft proposal this week, which would then require a majority vote from the 27-member bloc.  The draft, sighted by Reuters, is also said to include bailouts for power firms that are at risk of collapse amid an intensifying energy crisis.  Funds to be required from fossil fuels companies are dubbed a “solidarity contribution” by the draft document, and would target oil, gas, coal and refining companies based on “taxable surplus profits made in the fiscal year 2022”.  “The solidarity contributions are justified by the fact that such companies make unpredictable surplus profits,” the draft said, as reported by Reuters, adding that the profits “do not correspond to any regular profit that these entities would or could have expected to obtain in normal circumstances”. Bloomberg, which has also seen the draft, reports that the document referred to financial contributions from fossil fuels companies as an “exceptional and temporary” levy.  The bill has a higher chance of gaining approval as it requires a majority vote rather than a unanimous one.  If approved, the bill would install a minimum rate for a “solidarity contribution” from fossil fuels companies, while each EU member state could increase that rate, though not decrease it.  The draft also indicates that the EU is gearing up to propose a mandatory power cut across the bloc, which is being interpreted as a move towards energy rationing as a stop-gap measure to avoid the spiraling of an energy crisis that has now been exacerbated by Russia’s cutoff of gas flows through Nord Stream 1.  The power cut targets in the draft proposal, as seen by Bloomberg, seek to cut overall consumption, as well as to lower demand during selected peak hours during weekdays.  The draft also discussed a cap on “excessive” revenue of non-fossil fuel power generating companies.   Source: Oilprice.com

Kenya: KenGen Signs Deal With Toshiba Over Geothermal Partnership

Kenya Electricity Generation Company (KenGen) has signed a partnership agreement with Japan’s Toshiba Energy Systems & Solutions Corporation (Toshiba ESS). The deal is to collaborate on exploring geothermal energy in several countries. The agreement signed on the sidelines of the 8th Tokyo International Conference on African Development (Ticad-8) provides for an operation and maintenance (O&M) services partnership for geothermal power plants in developing countries, including East African countries, “through the combination of KenGen’s and Toshiba ESS’s expertise and networks,” the two companies said in a joint statement. With 799 MWe in operation, Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) is Africa’s leading producer of geothermal energy. Although its geothermal plants are located solely in Kenya, the company is already beginning to export its expertise in developing geothermal projects in East Africa, including Djibouti and Ethiopia.      

Ghana:NPA Goes After 45 OMCs For Pocketing Almost Gh¢68 Million Primary Distribution Margin Fund

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Ghana’s petroleum downstream regulator, National Petroleum Authority (NPA), has issued a warning notice to 45 Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs) that are indebted to Primary Distribution Margin Fund. The Authority gave the companies up to 30th September 2022 to settle their indebtedness or have their shareholders’ and directors’ names published. Energynewsafrica.com understands the companies owe the state about Gh¢68 million. It is not known how many years the companies have owed the Primary Distribution Margin Fund, which is one of the tax components on petroleum products. It is charged on every litre of petrol and diesel and it’s collected by the Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs). It is used to offset cost incurred in moving petroleum products from the coastal depots to the in land depots. In a notice issued by the NPA on Monday, it said the authority would be compelled to use all lawful means to retrieve the monies owed if they failed to settle their indebtedness. Among the 45 companies mentioned in the NPA statement are Apex Petroleum Ghana Limited, Santol Energy Limited, Hak Oil, Life Petroleum Company Limited, Rich Oil Company Limited, Petro Afrique Ghana Limited, and Champion Oil Company Limited. Below is the full list of defaulting OMCs 
  1. Apex Petroleum Ghana Limited
  2. Avos Oil Company Limited
  3. Bisvel Petroleum Services
  4. Black Rock Energy Limited
  5. Capstone Oil Limited
  6. Champion Oil Company Limited
  7. Deep Petroleum Limited
  8. Deliman & Co Limited
  9. G& G Oil Limited
  10. Glee Oil Limited
  11. Golden Petroleum Limited
  12. Hak Oil
  13. Havilah Oil Ghana Limited
  14. Hossana Oil Company Limited
  15. Humano Energy Limited
  16. Jas Petroleum Limited
  17. Karela Oil And Gas Limited
  18. Life Petroleum Company Limited
  19. Lillygold Energy Resources Limited
20 Maiga & Hhm Company Limited
  1. Mba Global Petroleum Limited
  2. Mm Energy Limited
  3. Nuru Oil Company Limited
  4. Orient Energy Limited
  5. Oval Energy Company Limited
  6. P&0 Energy Company Limited
  7. Perfect Petroleum Company Limited
  8. Peta Energy Limited
  9. Petro Afrique Ghana Limited
  10. Q8 Oil (Gh) Company Limited
  11. Rich Oil Company Limited
  12. Rodo Oil Limited
  13. Royal Roses Oil Company Limited
  14. Safety Petroleum Limited
  15. Santol Energy Limited
  16. Sawiz Petroleum Company Limited
  17. Sephem Oil Company Limited
  18. Sky Petroleum Limited
  19. Spirits Petroleum Limited
  20. Titan Petroleum Limited
  21. Union Oil Ghana Limited
  22. Unique Oil Company Limited
  23. Universal Oil Company Limited
  24. Warren Oil Company Limited
  25. Zoe Petroleum Limited
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Ghana: Tullow Sued For Allegedly Violating Local & Participation Law

Tullow Ghana Limited, a subsidiary of London- based Tullow Oil Plc, has been sued by a Ghanaian group of oil and gas service providers. Tullow Ghana Limited is the lead operator of Ghana’s Jubilee Oil Field. The group, Ghana Oil and Gas Service Providers Association (GOGSPA), in a motion filed at the Accra High Court (Commercial Division), is seeking the order of the court to restrain Tullow Ghana Limited, its agents assign and any person acting under their instructions from violating the Local Content and Local Participation, (Amendment) Regulations 2021 (LI 2435) in the award of petroleum contracts in Ghana pending the determination of the suit. The plaintiff said the decision to sue followed many complaints that services reserved for indigenous Ghanaian companies under the laws in the upstream oil and gas sector were being taken away and awarded to foreign venture companies. The plaintiff said it raised the concerns of the indigenous companies with Tullow in a petition in June 2022, highlighting that any award of contract reserved for indigenous Ghanaian companies to foreign joint venture companies after February 17, 2022, would violate the existing laws regulating the award of petroleum contracts reserved for local businesses. The plaintiff said the action of the defendant, if not restrained by the court, would lead to the mass unemployment of skilled Ghanaians in the upstream oil industry.     The plaintiff, therefore, prayed for a declaration that the award of petroleum contracts for the provision of goods and services exclusively reserved for indigenous Ghanaian companies under the Petroleum (Local Content and Local Participation Regulations) LI 2204 (as amended) by Petroleum (Local Content and Local Participation) (Amendment) Regulations 2021 (LI 2435) to Joint Venture Companies in Ghana by the defendant is Illegal. The plaintiff also wanted a declaration that the award of any petroleum contracts for the provision of goods and services reserved exclusively for indigenous Ghanaian companies under Petroleum (Local Content and Local Participation Regulations) LI 2204 (as amended) by Petroleum (Local Content and Local Participation) (Amendment) Regulations 2021 (LI 2435) to joint venture companies in Ghana by the defendant is null and void. The plaintiff seeks an order from the court directing the defendant to cancel every contract awarded for the provision of goods and services in contravention of the provisions of Petroleum (Local Content and Local Participation Regulations) LI 2204 (as amended) by Petroleum (Local Content and Local Participation) (Amendment) Regulations 2021 (LI 2435) “Damages in favour of the plaintiff against the defendant,” the plaintiff said. The group is seeking a perpetual injunction restraining the defendant, whether personally, through their agents, servants or privies or any person acting under their express or implied instruction from awarding any Petroleum contract in contravention of Petroleum (Local Content and Local Participation Regulations) LI 2204 (as amended) by Petroleum (Local Content and Local Participation) (Amendment) Regulations 2021 (LI 2435) and other laws regulating the awards of petroleum contracts in Ghana. However, in a statement issued by the defendant, Tullow said from 2010 to date, it has awarded over 4000 contracts to indigenous companies, in addition to almost 3,000 contracts awarded to joint venture companies which include indigenous participation. “Out of the total contracts awarded valued at $16.83Bn between 2010 and 2021, $11.24Bn worth of those contracts were awarded local Ghanaian participation,” the statement said. It continued that “over the years, Tullow Ghana has been consistent in steadily increasing contracts awarded to indigenous companies and has no desire to replace indigenous Ghanaian companies with foreign companies. “On the contrary, between 2014 to 2021 when LI 2204 was passed, Tullow Ghana tripled its indigenous contract award spend to up to $1.47Bn compared to $500m in 2014.” Tullow Ghana assured all stakeholders of its commitment to work with and develop the capacity of local Ghanaians to participate in the oil and gas industry, consistent with our contractual obligations and applicable law. Tullow Ghana said it does not intend to prejudice the ongoing legal proceedings and therefore no further statements will be issued at this time.
Africa’s Oil Nations Push Against Global Drive To Shun Oil And Gas
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Ghana: GNPC CEO Must Be A Scientist-Suggests Apaalse

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A former Chief Director of the Ministry of Energy, Lawrence Apaalse, has observed that the primary reason why Ghana’s national oil company (GNPC) has failed to live up to the expectation of Ghanaians over the years is the neglect of appointing authorities to appoint scientists or someone with technical expertise as CEO to manage the affairs of the corporation. He argued that since GNPC is a scientific institution, there is the need to appoint people with technical acumen to head it to bear fruitful results. “I think you need a scientist to run a scientific institution,” Mr Apaalse strongly suggested. The corporation has often been lambasted by the public for making wrongful decisions. Speaking in an exclusive interview with energynewsafrica.com, Mr Apaalse said over the past years, only people with business orientation have been allowed to direct the affairs of GNPC and this has resulted in multiple failures. He cited the Sankofa Gold Mines which was doing badly but when it was given to Mr Theophilus Ahwireng during the President Kufuor era, he turned the company around within a year, adding that “this should be the standardised practice. “Several non-scientists were managing the Sankofa Gold Mines that was being run by GNPC. The company was always in debt. At one point during President Kufuor’s era, they appointed Theophilus Ahwireng to go and see what he could do. And within a year, the company was making a profit. They paid their debts, and the workers were very happy. After a while, Mr Theophilus was moved to the Petroleum Commission and today, Sankofa Gold Mines is in a mess again. So it’s one-man factor. So if you send someone who has just done business administration, he is just doing the business aspect, but the scientist would follow steps to achieve results,” he argued. Mr. Apaalse lamented that it was only during Dr. Amos Ofori Quaah’s short spell which resulted in a positive dividend for the GPNPC. Dr. Quaah is a Geophysicist who started work with GNPC in 1985 and was appointed CEO in 2001 but resigned in 2002. Mr Apaalse noted that the current acting CEO of GNPC and his deputies, together with the board, are not scientists. He called for a blend of scientists and business-oriented Chief Executives to help resuscitate the corporation. “Look at the board. They have a complete board managing a scientific institution without a scientist among them,” he lamented. Donate To Support Independent Journalism In these perilous times, a truth-seeking portal like the Energy News Africa is essential. We have no shareholders or billionaire owner, meaning our journalism is free from commercial and political influence – this makes us different.  Support energynewsafrica.com with any amount by donating to the account below.  Thank you  GT Bank Account Number: 208126002110  Account Name Energy News Africa Ltd. Or Contact +233243782655 Email:[email protected]       Source: https://energynewsafrica.com

Kenya: Motorists Likely To Buy Petrol Above Sh200 Per Litre

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Motorists in Kenya are likely to buy a litre of petrol at a high of Sh215 ($1.79) from September 14 if the fuel subsidy is finally scrapped. Also compounding the situation and which might see oil companies say no to any further subsidy is the high debt owed them. This is expected to be the first headache for President William Ruto, who will be sworn in on Tuesday.  Economic analyst Jerry Mugera believes stabilising fuel prices will be Ruto’s first major assignment considering a spike will have a huge spiral effect on inflation which hit 8.5 per cent in a recent monthly review. ”Voters will be expecting a miracle from Ruto. I bet he is alive to this fact,” Mugera said. In the third review of the International Monitory Fund (IMF) $2.34 billion loan, Kenya committed to end the fuel subsidy before October. The subsidy has been used to cushion consumers from high global prices.  The international lender is against the initiative that has cut retail fuel prices by over Sh20 per litre for almost a year now.  The Energy and Petroleum Authority of Kenya (EPRA) retained fuel prices in the last review as the government utilised the Petroleum Development Levy (PDL) to cushion consumers. Until September 14, a litre of Petrol will retail at Sh159.12, Kerosene at Sh127.9 4 and diesel at Sh140 Without the subsidy, prices in the last review would have increased to Sh214.13 for diesel, Sh206.17 for petrol and Sh 202.11 for Kerosene. The National Treasury had diverted Sh18.1 billion meant for the stabilisation of fuel prices to fund energy and infrastructure projects.     Source: https://energynewsafrica.com

UK Lifts Shale Gas Fracing Ban In Hopes Of Boosting Fuel Supply

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New British Prime Minister Liz Truss has lifted a ban on drilling for shale gas, an effort to boost domestic energy supply that will have to overcome the same obstacles that stymied the industry for the past decade.  The lifting of the moratorium on so-called fracing was part of a package of measures announced on Thursday to tackle soaring energy prices that are hammering households and businesses. Even with the renewed government support, the shale gas industry still faces an uncertain road, with significant opposition from local communities and challenges related to the country’s geology.   Earlier this year, the UK’s meager fracing industry faced its last rites. Cuadrilla Resources Ltd., the company behind the country’s first major shale gas discovery in 2011, was poised to plug and permanently abandon two exploration wells in Lancashire. But Russia’s invasion of Ukraine handed the firm a reprieve as the regulator withdrew the order to close the wells and the government of former Prime Minister Boris Johnson considered whether to allow a restart of drilling. “It is vital we take steps to increase our domestic energy supply,” Truss said in parliament. “We will end the moratorium on extracting our huge reserves of shale that could get gas flowing in as soon as six months where there is local support for it.” That local support may be hard to find, given the vehement local opposition that has accompanied any attempts to drill for shale gas in the past decade. Residents worried about the risk of earthquakes or the disruption from fleets of trucks carrying equipment and workers, plus campaigners opposed on climate grounds, have frequently halted the industry’s operations. Only 17% of people in the UK support fracing, according to a government survey conducted last year.  “Before the fracing moratorium, the industry had ten years of the government ‘going all out for shale’ and giving them all the support denied to onshore wind,” said Georgia Whitaker, oil and gas campaigner for Greenpeace UK. “In that time, the fracers produced no energy for the UK, but managed to create two holes in a muddy field, traffic, noise, earthquakes and enormous controversy.” The geology of Britain’s rocks also make a US-style boom unlikely.  “We’ve got the wrong kind of shale in the UK,” said Jon Gluyas, director of Durham University’s energy institute. “We will get some shale gas out, but it won’t scale in the same way” as the US, he said.  There are a few key differences between the rocks below Britain and those in America’s Permian Basin. The best performing shale reservoirs in the US are found in rocks that are largely silica-based. That allows for the drilling of sturdy wells that will last a long time. In the UK, the ground is made of clay that won’t hold a fracture for as long.  Also, the rock in the US is uniform over large tracts of land, but in the UK can vary widely below the surface, making it impossible to replicate techniques quickly and ramp up production, he said.  A better solution for boosting UK gas production may lies in the North Sea, where industry has been extracting energy for decades and there are still plenty of resources left, Gluyas said.  Truss said her government will proceed with an offer of new North Sea exploration licenses announced earlier this year, with more than 100 new permits available.   The focus on fracing and licensing shows the Truss government’s focus on increasing supply, rather than limiting demand by funding energy-saving measures like home insulation. “There is a real danger of the government serving up a red herring with local communities likely to oppose fracing rigs while focus is diverted from efficiency and renewables,” said Jess Ralston, senior analyst at the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit. “All the experts and even the industry agree more UK gas won’t bring down British bills.” Earlier this year when he was business secretary in Johnson’s government, Chancellor of the Exchequer Kwasi Kwarteng said fracing wouldn’t solve the energy crisis.  “Even if we lifted the fracing moratorium tomorrow, it would take up to a decade to extract sufficient volumes — and it would come at a high cost for communities and our precious countryside,” Kwarteng wrote in the Mail on Sunday newspaper in March. “No amount of shale gas from hundreds of wells dotted across rural England would be enough to lower the European price any time soon.”     Source: Bloomberg

Central African Nations Sign Deal To Create Energy Hubs

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Central African countries signed a deal last Thursday to create a regional oil and gas pipeline network and hub infrastructures which backers say will strengthen energy supply and reduce dependence on imports of refined products. The project aims to construct three multinational oil and gas pipeline systems of around 6,500 km, storage depots, liquefied natural gas terminals, at least three refineries and gas-fired power plants linking 11 countries by 2030, according to report by Reuters. The countries, including Equatorial Guinea, Cameroon, Gabon, Chad, Angola, Democratic Republic of Congo and Congo Republic are all oil producers or have vast untapped oil and gas reserves but are dependent on refined products imports. Most of them have little or no refining capacity and have been struggling with fuel and power shortages, made worse by the Ukraine crisis. Gabriel Mbaga Obiang Lima, Minister of Mines and Hydrocarbons of OPEC member Equatorial Guinea, told the forum ahead of the signing ceremony in Cameroon that the project was crucial to tackle energy poverty in the region. He said the project was inspired by West Africa’s gas pipeline linking Nigeria, Benin, Togo and Ghana, and the European model where Rotterdam serves as a refining and distributing hub for several countries. “It will not be cheap, or easy, but if it is done as a collaboration, it will work,” he said, adding that the network will help get rid of trucks crisscrossing countries and boost the regional oil and gas market taking products where needed. The memorandum of understanding for the project signed on Thursday by the African Petroleum Producers’ Organization (APPO), one of the backers, and the Central Africa Business Energy Forum, will pave the way for feasibility studies. Omar Farouk Ibrahim, Secretary General of APPO said the project was one of the most ambitious energy infrastructure projects whose completion has the potential to dramatically change the economies of participating countries.    

Ghana: Get Prepared For Opportunities Nuclear Construction Offers- Dr Yamoah Tells AGI

The Executive Director of Nuclear Power Ghana (NPG) says his outfit is confident industries in the country would take bold investment-driven steps to partner with the efforts of the government as the country embark on the phase II activities of the nuclear power programme to prepare to commence construction in phase III. According to him, the NPG is currently drafting a report on the preferred site for the West African nation’s first nuclear power plant for regulatory review and approval. It is not yet known which nuclear technology Ghana will opt for, modular or large reactor, but this portal is aware that NPG has submitted a report to the Ministry of Energy to be forwarded to cabinet on which technology the country should adopt. Recently, Ghana’s President Nana Akufo-Addo made a bold statement by officially approving Ghana’s quest to include nuclear power in the energy mix. Speaking at the Ghana Industrial Summit hosted by the Association of Ghana Industries (AGI) in Accra recently, Dr.  Stephen Yamoah highlighted the benefits of nuclear power. He expressed the view that modern affordable and sustainable energy services are a powerful engine of economic and social development, and no country has managed to develop much beyond a subsistence economy without ensuring, at least, minimum access to energy services for a broad section of its population. “Nuclear energy is a mature and proven low-carbon source of electricity, with over 60-year track record of providing reliable and safe operation,” he said. He continued, “Nuclear creates an opportunity for us to create jobs that would be decent and sustainable. Nuclear provides an opportunity for careers, not just jobs. A successful Nuclear Power Programme/Project in Ghana would develop skills, create sustainable jobs and create wealth.” According to the NPG boss, advanced innovation and technological advancement have made nuclear power plants safer than in the past. Dr. Yamoah reiterated the need for Ghana’s industry to take deliberate steps to position themselves for opportunities in the nuclear project saying: “Are we in the right position, are we ready, or can we be ready, or position ourselves as an industry, to take on the opportunities that the Nuclear industry brings to strengthen our growth and the economy?” He further noted that it was essential for the industry to position itself and prepare for nuclear localisation. He suggested that it could be done with or without local companies forming international strategic partnerships and apply it to fields such as Engineering and Procurement, Manufacturing, Construction and Construction management. Dr.  Yamoah pointed out that the nuclear Power Project demanded very high standards, which is the challenge that must be overcome. “Unfortunately, with Nuclear, there’s no other way around it. The necessary skills and certifications must be acquired and would be essential if industry aims at being part of the success story,” he advised. Rationalising his argument about the nuclear localisation programme, he noted that, that was a very important issue which did not only give Ghanaian companies financial benefits if they prepared themselves to take advantage of the supply chain but it also required a master plan. Dr. Yamoah, therefore, tasked industrial players to engage and align asserting the conviction that they at NPG were of the view that Ghana’s industry had limited capacity and capability so, there was the need to work hard together and promptly argue that it was the way to go as there is no option to win this energy Industrialisation war. Dr. Yamoah further suggested that Ghana needed a nuclear industry readiness programme in advance before the first Nuclear Power Plant is expected on the grid. According to him, players in the industry needed to be fully aligned and orientated before they put in tenders for any nuclear work. “We are of the firm belief that our partnership with AGI would be sustained and would lead to both horizontal and vertical alignment for sustainable growth,” he emphasised.
Ghana: President Akufo-Addo Officially Approves Inclusion Of Nuclear Power In Ghana’s Energy Mix
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EU Energy Ministers Divided Over Capping Russian Gas Price Amid ‘Energy War’  

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European Union member states Energy Ministers are divided over whether to cap Russian gas prices, as they met to work out steps to shield citizens and businesses from sky-high energy bills. At least 10 of the Energy Ministers from the EU members including Italy, Greece and Poland are reported to have opposed the bloc’s slapping of a price cap on Russian gas over concerns that Russian Leader Vladimir Putin might retaliate with a complete halt of gas supply to the whole Europe. Oilprice.com which carried the news cited a report by Financial Times as the EU member states energy ministers meet on Friday, September 9, 2022, to discuss measures to ease the burden of energy crisis on consumers. Friday’s ministerial talks aim to whittle down options for further discussion, rather than reaching a final decision on ways to tackle a crisis fueled by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. But many said agreement and action needed to be swift. “We are in an energy war with Russia,” Czech Industry Minister Jozef Sikela said in a report filed by Reuters. Minister Jozef Sikela further, said: “We have to send a clear signal that we would do whatever it takes to support our households, our economies.” Energy bills, already surging as demand for gas recovered from the COVID-19 pandemic, have rocketed higher since the Ukraine war. As Russia has reduced gas deliveries to Europe following the imposition of Western sanctions, EU governments have scrambled to limit the resulting energy price shock. An EU proposal to cap Russian gas prices has so far failed to win support from a majority of countries, with Russia threatening to completely cut off the dwindling supplies that have continued to flow if such a step is taken. Baltic States are among those backing the idea, saying it would deprive Moscow of cash to fund military action in Ukraine. “Russia has said if you want our gas, take down the sanctions. It is blackmail. We cannot back down, we have to be united, we have to have the political will to help Ukraine win,” Estonian Economic Affairs Minister Riina Sikkut said. But central and eastern European states, many of them more reliant than others on Russian fuel, fear losing all their supplies, while some question whether a cap would have much impact on reducing prices when deliveries are so low. “If price restrictions were to be imposed exclusively on Russian gas, that would evidently lead to an immediate cut-off in Russian gas supplies. It does not take a Nobel Prize to recognise that,” Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto said. German Economy Minister Robert Habeck said EU ministers should give Brussels the green light to prepare legislation to decouple the gas price from the price consumers pay for power from other energy carriers. The European Commission this week said it would propose a measure to claw back revenues from non-gas power generators and spend the cash on cutting consumer bills. According to Reuters, a draft of the Commission proposal, would cap at 200 euros ($201.74) per megawatt hour of revenues non-gas producer receive. It would apply to wind, nuclear and coal generators. European power prices are typically set by gas plants, so the cap would aim to skim off excess profits made in recent months by non-gas producers that have lower running costs but have still been able to sell their power at soaring prices. “The measures the Commission has recommended in taking some of those excess profits and recycling them back into the households makes sense,” Irish Environment Minister Eamon Ryan said. But France, home to Europe’s biggest nuclear power fleet, questioned whether the same limit should be applied to all non-gas generators. Donate To Support Independent Journalism In these perilous times, a truth-seeking portal like the Energy News Africa is essential. We have no shareholders or billionaire owner, meaning our journalism is free from commercial and political influence – this makes us different.  Support energynewsafrica.com with any amount by donating to the account below.  Thank you  GT Bank Account Number: 208126002110 Account Name Energy News Africa Ltd. Or Contact +233243782655 Email:[email protected]       Source: https://energynewsafrica.com      

Nigeria Seeks EU Investment In Africa’s Huge Gas Deposits

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Nigeria has advised Europe to provide the appropriate policy framework for their banks to facilitate their investment Africa’s in oil and gas sector. The West African nation’s Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Timipre Sylva, gave the advice at the Gastech Conference in Milan, Italy. “Europe should significantly back investment in gas and provide a policy framework that enables European banks to invest in hydrocarbons across Africa,” he said. Focusing on gas production in Africa is “a no-brainer”, Timipre Sylva said, with 600 million people living without electricity in Africa and 740 billion feet, 22.2 billion meters of gas reserves on the continent. Increased gas production would also help the continent’s 900 million people who live without access to clean cooking fuels, provide massive job opportunities and allow the emergence of a new alternative supplier for Europe, a “win-win for Europe and Africa”, he said. And it is in Europe’s own interest “to reduce discriminatory investment rules that the banks are doing”, Sylva said. The Minister said that he had previously told European officials that they “must provide the appropriate policy framework for your banks, so that they can invest in oil and gas”.   The EU’s energy taxonomy, set to come into force in January 2023, is a voluntary tool and a signpost for private investors towards climate neutrality. But investment from large European banks in oil and gas fell in 2021, unlike their north American counterparts. Speaking from a similar position Ghana’s Energy Minister, Dr. Matthew Opoku Prempeh also called for more investment. “Africa has been chronically under-invested,” he said. “No country should be told to stay where it is,” he added. The issue of European investment in African hydrocarbons had previously risen to the fore during European Commission president Ursula von Der Leyen’s visit to Senegal in February. Senegalese President Macky Sall said that cutting off funding for new gas exploration would be a “fatal blow” for emerging African countries. Also, Indian oil and gas Minister, Hardeep Singh Puri welcomed the shift in the popular narrative away from the “ideological hang-up about not using or not extracting the gas reserves you have”. “Gas is a clean fuel, if you have it why don’t you use it,” he said. He added that it is time to “step on the gas on all the plants, whether it is wind, solar, innovations, compressed biogas”.
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Nigeria: Oil And Gas Workers Hint Of Nationwide Strike Over Crude Theft

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Oil and gas workers in the Federal Republic of Nigeria have threatened to embark on a nationwide strike over rising cases of oil theft and pipeline vandalism.  The workers under the umbrella body-PENGASSAN at a press conference addressed by the President Festus Osifo, said government must gather political will to chase out oil thieves vandalising the nation’s pipelines. According to them, the oil theft has crumbled Nigeria’s economy, insisting the union will no longer sit back and watch. The Union’s President said, beginning Thursday, they will organise rallies in Lagos, Port Harcourt, Warri, Kaduna and Abuja to show its anger over the menace. He lamented that due to oil theft, Nigeria can no longer meet the OPEC quota of 1.8 million barrels per day, even as the country struggles to produce a million barrels. Osifo said the union had dialogued with critical stakeholders, agencies of government and service chiefs on how to curb the menace. He said series of meetings had not yielded desired result because cartels are feasting on the economy.  “This is a menace that is overtaking the country. This is the reason Nigeria keeps borrowing to finance the national budget. Enough is enough! We have to add our voices to the current struggle. It is not going to be a one-off thing. Companies are shutting down; our members are losing their jobs in services and production companies,” Mr Osifo said as reported by orientalng.com. He urged service chiefs to hold officers manning pipelines accountable, stressing that anyone who compromises should be made to face the law.   Donate To Support Independent Journalism In these perilous times, a truth-seeking portal like the Energy News Africa is essential. We have no shareholders or billionaire owner, meaning our journalism is free from commercial and political influence – this makes us different.  Support energynewsafrica.com with any amount by donating to the account below.  Thank you  GT Bank Account Number: 208126002110  Account Name Energy News Africa Ltd. Or Contact +233243782655 Email:[email protected]     Source: https://energynewsafrica.com