Nigeria: NSIA To Provide $24Million For Solar Power Naija Programme
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Ghana: Tullow Ghana Signs MoU With Ghana Navy To Provide Security For Jubilee And TEN Oil Fields
The Deputy Managing Director, Cynthia Lumor said, “The Jubilee partners’ commitment to supporting the retooling of the Ghana Navy is mutually beneficial to both parties.
“This partnership will ensure the protection of the Ghanaian waters by providing security services in the TEN and Jubilee fields and along the coast of Ghana. We believe that this will further strengthen the relationship between Tullow Ghana and the Ghana Navy.”
Chief of the Naval Staff, Rear Admiral Issah Yakubu commended the Jubilee partners for the collaboration, saying: “Tullow Ghana and the Jubilee partners have demonstrated commitment to sustainable production by this collaboration.
“The Ghana Navy will ensure that we fulfill our contractual obligations to ensure a secured maritime space for the safe operation of the TEN and Jubilee fields.”
Source: https://energynewsafrica.com Kenya: Fuel Prices Remain Unchanged Despite Drop In Landed Cost
Judgement Debt: Khawar Qureshi QC Calls For Capacity Building For African Lawyers
Nigeria: Power Producers Lose US$3.93 Billion In Seven Years Over Unutilised Electricity
Power producers in the Republic of Nigeria lost at least N1.632 trillion (US$3,939,269,539.20) between 2015 and 2021 over the lack of full evacuation of generated electricity on the national grid causing stranded power of 27,204 Megawatts (MW).
According to the Daily Trust report, data from the Association of Power Generation Companies (APGC) showed that about 25 active GenCos had over 15,000 megawatts (MW) of stranded generation capacity at the end of 2021.
Given the breakdown of the figure, Daily Trust noted that the GenCos had 63,339.02MW of available power generation within the seven years, however, just 32,778.98MW of power was generated and evacuated through the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) network to the Distribution Companies (DisCos) network for supply to consumers.
This means there was a balance of 27,204.5MW, representing about 30 per cent of available capacity which was stranded during the seven years.
This stranded power translated to N1.632 trillion market losses during the period, the data showed.
The analysis of the data on yearly revenue losses showed that from 2015 to 2021, the highest loss of N273.32 billion was recorded in 2016 when the GenCos could not deliver 3,828MW to the grid even when it had 7,040MW capacity.
The second highest stranded power was recorded in 2020 when the GenCos recorded a N266.1 billion loss over 3,742MW stranded power from an overall 7,793MW generation capacity.
In 2018, N264 billion was lost due to 3,699MW stranded power; the power generation companies then lost N256.9 billion in 2019 when they could not get 3,599MW of electricity to the consumers due to transmission and distribution network challenges.
Another N236.4 billion was lost in 2017 as the GenCos recorded 3,312MW stranded power while 3,010MW stranded electricity caused a loss of N214.9 billion in 2015.
The least of the stranded power and its losses were recorded just in 2021 when 2,248.5MW could not be delivered to the grid due to the grid hiccups causing a loss of N120.2 billion, which is about half of the revenue lost in each of the previous six years.
Commenting on the weak transmission and distribution network, a power sector expert, Dr Joy Ogaji, in an outlook report for this year, held that: “Reliability has been discovered to be a function of infrastructure and proper metering guarantees accurate billing. While some stakeholders have opined that the illiquid state of the NESI is the core challenge, we believe the liquidity crisis is not the problem, but a key symptom of the problem and can be solved.
“Hence, we expect an increased focus on the provision of required infrastructure as well as ensuring infrastructural handshake between the TransCo (TCN) and the DisCos,” she noted.
Source: https://energynewsafrica.com
Ghana: Fuel Price Hits Ghc7 Per Litre (Updated)
Emissions Set To Rise With Global Power Demand – IEA
Global electricity demand rose by 6% or 1,500 terawatt hours (TWh) in 2021, the largest percentage gain since the recovery from a global financial crisis in 2010 and the largest total rise on record, the agency said in its annual report on the electricity sector.
China accounted for about half of the increase in global electricity demand last year with a 10% rise.
However, global electricity demand is expected to slow in the next few years as energy efficiency measures take effect and economic recovery slows.
It is forecast to increase by 2.7% on average to 2024, though the effects of the coronavirus pandemic and high energy prices are still uncertain, the report said.
South East Asia is expected to see the strongest electricity demand, growing by an average 5% between 2022 and 2024, followed by the Asia Pacific region, which includes China, at around 4% over that period, slightly below pre-pandemic levels.
Demand in North America and Latin America, is seen rising by around 1% over 2022-2024, with the largest percentage gains in Mexico and Canada at 3-4% a year.
Europe is set to register 1.7% growth in 2022 and then stay flat in 2023 and 2024.
Expected power demand growth in terawatt hours by region
EMISSIONS
Power sector carbon dioxide emissions climbed 7% to a record high in 2021 after falling the previous two years.
Although slower electricity demand growth and the rise of low-carbon generation should limit emissions growth to less than 1% per year between 2022 and 2024, emissions need to fall sharply to meet net zero targets by 2050, the report said.
To fulfill its role in de-carbonizing the energy system, the electricity sector needed big improvements in energy efficiency and low-carbon supply, IEA said.
Fossil fuel generation is set to stagnate over the next three years while renewables are expected to grow 8% per year through 2024, and account for over 90% of total demand growth over that period.
Commenting on the report, David Jones, the global lead for independent climate think tank Ember said: “Failure to build enough new clean electricity to keep up with demand will slow the phase-out of coal-fired and gas-fired electricity; a mistake we cannot afford to make for the climate.”
On the electricity supply side, most of the growth to 2024 is expected in China, accounting for around half of the net total increase, followed by India at 12%, Europe at 7% and the United States at 4%.
Last year, a surge in consumption, combined with a reduced natural gas and coal supply, resulted in volatile power prices and negative effects on power generators, retailers and end- users in China, Europe and India, the IEA said.
The IEA’s price index for major wholesale electricity markets in 2021 nearly doubled compared to 2020, up 64% from the average over 2016 to 2020. In Europe, fourth quarter 2021 prices were over four times the 2015-2020 average.
“Sharp spikes in electricity prices in recent times have been causing hardship for many households and businesses around the world and risk becoming a driver of social and political tensions,” said IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol.
The IEA did not provide detail on where price volatility might be most concentrated over the next few years.
Source: Reuters
Ghana: GNPC Battles ACEP…Denies Setting Up Jubilee Oil Holdings In Cayman Islands
Source: https://energynewsafrica.com
Ghana: ACEP Blows GNPC CEO, Board Chair’s Cover For Using Tax Haven Company To Take Up 7% Acquisition In Jubilee & TEN Fields
Africa Centre for Energy Policy (ACEP), an energy think tank in the Republic of Ghana, has uncovered a deliberate plan by the CEO of Ghana National Petroleum Corporation and Board Chairman, which they believe could result in Ghana being short-changed.
Late last year, the West African nation’s national oil company, GNPC, acquired a seven per cent stake in the Jubilee and TEN oil fields at the cost of US$199 million from Kosmos Energy following the latter’s US$750 million acquisition of Occidental Petroleum (OXY) interest.
In an official communication announcing the acquisition, the company told Ghanaians that the interest acquired would be transferred to GNPC’s subsidiary, the GNPC Exploration and Production Company (GNPC Explorco).
“With this acquisition, GNPC Explorco will become part of the contractor group for the two blocks, together with Tullow, Petro SA and Kosmos (who also bought an additional interest in the two blocks),” the company said in the statement.
However, addressing a press conference in Accra, capital of Ghana, Policy Lead for Petroleum and Conventional Energy, Kodzo Yaotse disclosed that GNPC has set up an offshore company in Cayman Islands, in North America, to receive the seven per cent commercial interest in the blocks.
He said ACEP’s search discovered that a company called Jubilee Oil Holdings registered in Caymans Island with Dr KK Sarpong, CEO of GNPC and Mr Freddie Blay, board chairman of GNPC as directors have been assigned the seven per cent stake acquired from Kosmos Energy in the OXY transaction.

Mr Yaotse indicated that Jubilee Oil Holdings was registered on 21st September 2021.
He described this move as questionable.
He said Ghana stands the chance of losing tax revenue if this is not reversed.
“It is intriguing why GNPC has instead decided to create a subsidiary in a tax haven even if it needed a new subsidiary. Companies hide in tax havens for two popular reasons: secrecy and tax avoidance. Which of the two motivates GNPC?” he quizzed.
Touching on financing of the seven per cent stake, Yaotse described it as worrying that GNPC has not been able to communicate to Ghanaians how it intends to finance the acquisition.
Relying on a report by Africa Intelligence in October 2021, Yaotse said the report noted that the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA), by extension the Finance Ministry, intends to lend the tax settlement amount from the Oxy transaction to GNPC to offset the acquisition cost of the seven per cent interest with no recourse to the Petroleum Revenue Management Act (PRMA), Act 815 as amended.
According to him, ACEP is in support of an acquisition of the seven per cent interest in the Jubilee and the TEN fields, however, “the right processes must be followed in respect of Ghanaian laws and proper corporate governance practices that project GNPC among its peers on accountability benchmarks.
“How the corporation has become broke from a strong cash position in the early years of oil production is a major subject for government attention…the corporation must find ways to fit into a philosophy that will advance the overall national interest rather than an attempt to evade the dictates of the Petroleum Revenue Management Act (PRMA) with convoluted schemes such as the new efforts to relocate asserts in Ghana to the Cayman Islands,” he added.
Recommendations
Proposing what the think tank believes is the solution to the controversy surrounding the transaction, Mr Yaotse urged the GNPC to seek parliamentary approval to ring-fence the seven per cent interest to guarantee a loan for a short period of 3-5 years to allow GNPC to use revenue from the acquired interest to amortise the loan.
He further recommended that the GNPC holds the interest locally, either directly or through Explore.
Energynewsafrica.com’s source within the corporation indicates that the company is preparing to respond to the claims by the think tank.
Source: https://energynewsafrica.com
Senate Votes Against Nord Stream Sanctions
U.S. Sanctions On Nord Stream 2 Upset European LawmakersSource: Oilprice.com
Ghana Starts Construction Of STEM Academy
President Akufo-Addo reiterated the government’s commitment to tweaking the educational system for the desired level of socio-economic transformation.
He also used the occasion to commend the Education Minister for his efforts in the formulation of the STEM policy.
“I am delighted that the school dedicated principally to the teaching and learning of Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) is being brought under the presidency of Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo. I thank all stakeholders especially my erudite Minister of Education and Member of Parliament for Bosomtwi, the Honourable Dr Yaw Osei Adutwum, for the conception of this brilliant idea and for working out to bring it into fruition,” Akufo-Addo said.
Source: https://energynewsafrica.com
Nigeria: Gov’t Allocates US$195 Million To Improve Power Sector
Source: https://energynewsafrica.com
Kenya: Power Supply Restored In Kenya After Nationwide Blackout
— The Kenya Power & Lighting Company Plc. (@KenyaPower) January 11, 2022


