Nigeria: Federal Gov’t Will Require $4bn To Provide Clean Energy Annually –Jedy-AgbaHe is also to carry the mission to ensure that countries continue to comply with oil prices in the international market as members of OPEC. In line with this, he also met with H.E. Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, Equatorial Guinea’s Head of state who reassured the country’s commitment to cooperating with OPEC, maintaining its production levels. Attending the meeting from the Equatorial Guinea delegation were Robustiano Eyugue, Director of Hydrocarbons; Oscar García Director of State Company; Jacinto Nguema Owono, Director of Local Content; Juan Antonio, Director of Sonagas and Serapio, Deputy Director of Sonagas. “The African Energy Chamber salutes the commitments made by the ministers,” said Leoncio Amada Nze, President of the Cemac region for the African Energy Chamber. “We believe it is only through regional collaboration will paramount issues such as OPEC compliance, piracy and the monetization of gas for domestic and international export, will meaningful growth become a reality,” he added. Source: www.energynewsafrica.com
Nigeria, Equatorial Guinea Ministers For Mineral Resources Hold Bilateral Meeting
The Minister for Mines and Hydrocarbons of Equatorial Guinea H.E. Gabriel Mbaga Obiang Lima has met with H.E. Timipre Sylva, Minister of Petroleum Resources of Nigeria at the presidential palace in Malabo intending to strengthen bilateral relations between the two countries.
The meeting included a signing of a memorandum of understanding (MoU) which will consolidate new opportunities for the hydrocarbons sector for both countries and, allow the counterparts to collaborate on maritime piracy protection strategies as security remains a major concern for energy infrastructure, with attacks reaching record highs in the Gulf of Guinea.
The ministers also agreed to expedite joint cross-border cooperation for the supply of gas from Nigeria to Equatorial Guinea which will also be an opportunity for Equatorial Guinea’s energy sector to see an additional step to its local content development plans.
This agreement once again signals that energy cooperation between neighbours on the continent can unlock tremendous value for African nations, in particular, in the Gulf of Guinea where there is great potential for collaborations.
This trip comes after H.E. Sylva was appointed by the Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) as a Special Envoy to some participating countries in the Declaration of Cooperation.
As part of his appointment, H.E. Sylva is tasked with communicating the principles of fairness, transparency and equity in Gabon, Congo Brazzaville and South Sudan, which are also key stops on the road trip.
OPEC Secretary General Urges Oil Producing Nations To Create Friendly Climate For Investors
The Secretary General of Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), H.E Mohammad Sanusi Barkindo, is urging oil producing countries to create investment friendly climate to encourage investors.
The oil industry, he noted, is faced with underinvestment and “this was exacerbated by the Covid-19 pandemic.
“Over the course of 2020, investments declined by 30 percent. We need to work towards creating an investment friendly climate,” he said.
He was speaking at the 11th IEA-IEF-OPEC Symposium on Energy Outlooks, via video conference.
The OPEC scribe said: “At the 14th edition of our OPEC World Oil Outlook, which was launched on October 8 of last year, stated global primary energy demand is forecast to continue growing in the medium and long term, rising by a hefty 25 percent by 2045.
“Oil will remain the largest contributor to the energy mix in 2045 at 28 percent,” he stated.
To meet this future demand in the global oil sector, he said would need cumulative investment of $12.6 trillion in the upstream, midstream and downstream through to 2045.
“These investments are essential for both producers and consumers,” he added.
While there are grounds for optimism that 2021 would be the year of recovery for the oil industry, Mr Barkinso indicated that there are many uncertainties ahead.
“As the IMF recently stated, much now depends on the outcome of this race between a mutating virus and vaccines to end the pandemic, and on the ability of policies to provide effective support until that happens. There remains tremendous uncertainty and prospects vary greatly across countries.
“Furthermore, other factors can have a disruptive impact on the energy industry. As the extreme weather in Texas has shown, we cannot take energy security for granted, even in a country like the US.”
An Arctic blast has disrupted electricity supply and demand has surged to record heights.
Oil and gas production has plummeted by a third and five million people across the country face the freeze without heat or power.
Source: www.energynewsafrica.com
Nigeria: Gas Expansion Project To Lift 100M People Out Of Poverty—Minister
Nigeria’s Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Chief Timipre Sylva has expressed the hope that the country’s National Gas Expansion Programme would lift over 100 million Nigerians out of poverty.
According to him, the gas programme was “a practical demonstration of President Muhammadu Buhari’s commitment to lifting 100 million Nigerians out of poverty by using gas value chain as catalyst for social and economic development in Nigeria.”
The Minister said, “The programme has its main objective to reinforce and expand gas supply as well as stimulate demand in Nigeria through effective and efficient mobilisation and utilisation of all available assets, resources and infrastructure in the country.
“The programme is geared towards the implementation of Mr President’s June 12, 2019, promise to take hundred million Nigerians out of poverty within the current decade by ensuring that locally produced, available, accessible and affordable fuel is sufficiently supplied across the country”.
Mr Sylva, who was speaking during the inauguration of the NGEP in Ekiti Southwest Nigeria, said the country is richly endowed with mineral resources, specifically, hydrocarbons, crude oil and natural gas with proven gas reserves of over 200 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, which, he said had presented the country with opportunity to use gas as a catalyst for social economy renaissance.
Ekiti State Governor, Dr Kayode Fayemi lauded Buhari’s dedication to implement programmes directed at improving the lives of the people through job creation, social security schemes, stimulating the economy and attending to security challenges in the nation.
Mr Fayemi said that his administration would continue to be key in life-lifting programmes of the Buhari-led administration to improve the standard of living of the people of the State.
He said, “While we are in full support of the Federal Government in the implementation of NGEP in the state, our ultimate goal is to connect the state directly with gas supply via either Ajaokuta in Kogi State or Ore in Ondo State; the two points that offer our state the best opportunity for connection. We, therefore, plead with private sector players and the ministry to assist us in this venture.”
Source:www.energynewsafrica.com
Angola’s 65 Years Of Oil History Has Been Good For Angola Despite Some Challenges (Opinion)
By Andres Vega, International Associate at Centurion Law Group.
Angolan lawmakers last week approved the revision of current legislation, allowing for oil and gas pre-exploration studies to be carried out in some areas previously designated as natural reserves.
The government however stressed, that this law was by no means a relaxation of the stringent environmental provisions required for oil exploration in Angola that already exist. According to H.E Diamantino Pedro Azevedo, Minister of Mineral Resources and Petroleum, less than 3% of the zones previously designated as protected are likely to be affected by this provision. Angola’s constitution and applicable presidential decrees all mandate that oil and gas exploration only be carried out in a manner that is environmentally friendly. The proposed new law secured a majority of over 70% in Angola’s parliament.
The adoption of the new law by such a strong majority, despite earlier concerns, is an acknowledgement of the role oil has played in bringing prosperity to Angola. It is also an endorsement of the sectors’ regulator, the Agência Nacional de Petróleo, Gás e Biocombustíveis (ANPG), which is charged with ensuring that the highest environmental standards are adhered to during oil and gas exploration and production.
Following the achievement of independence from Portugal in 1975, and a protracted civil war that went on for decades, Angola has been able to rebuilt its infrastructure, improve institutional capacity, governance, public financial management systems, human development indicators and living conditions of its 31.8 million population in record time. Coupled with a pragmatic and business friendly approach to governance under the administration of President João Lourenço, private sector-led oil growth is expected to continue playing a powerful role in fuelling long-term national development.
From first oil production at the Benfica-2 well in 1956 to the deep-water discovery of the Girassol field in Block 17 in 1996, Angola has risen to become sub-Saharan Africa’s second-largest crude producer, after Nigeria. Producing 1.4 million barrels per day pre-COVID-19, with a peak production of over two million barrels per day in 2010, oil accounts for close to 90% of domestic exports. Around one-third of Angola’s GDP is rooted in the oil industry, while crude oil, natural gas and refined oil account for almost all national exports, with the value of crude oil exports totalling USD 35.5 billion in 2018.
As a result, crude oil production has had a sizeable impact on GDP and per capita wealth. In fact, Angola is home to one of the fastest-growing economies in sub-Saharan Africa and has witnessed a meteoric rise in socioeconomic development aligned with the expansion of its energy industry. In the 20-year period between 1999 and 2019, Angola’s GDP grew by 1,344%, reaching a peak of $145 billion in 2014, in line with the global crude oil bull market. Per capita wealth has seen a similar trajectory over the same period, growing by 619% and reaching $2,791 in 2019 pre-COVID-19, as well as peaking at $5,408 in 2014.
Importantly, the rise in government revenue has enabled the provision of enhanced public services, including health care, education, critical infrastructure and utilities. Angola’s Ministry of Education, in partnership with UNESCO, developed a National Strategy on Literacy and School Recovery aimed at rebuilding the national education system following the end of the civil war and improving literacy rates across the country, which currently stands at 77% for adults, significantly higher than the sub-Saharan average of 65%. In recent years, with the help of oil revenue, the Government has opened five new universities, 45 health worker training schools and a myriad of health clinics. The establishment of private health services and facilities by International Oil Companies for their employees has also been a key factor in the improvement of healthcare, with many Angolans benefiting from these provisions.
Infrastructure expenditure was also prioritized, especially electricity provision. This led to the building of additional generation capacity such as the Laúca dam which is one of Africa’s largest. Upon completion and full commissioning, it is expected to provide affordable and reliable power for over 8 million Angolans and spur the creation of heavy industry and associated jobs.
Angola’s oil wealth has by no means spared it from criticism about the unfair distribution of wealth, inequality in society and, in some cases, the misappropriation of state funds. These concerns are legitimate and should be looked at by the state. Where people are found to have profited unduly, it is important that they be held accountable and that justice be unbiasedly served as per the law and in the name of the People of Angola. The sector’s ability to generate wealth for Angola in itself is not the problem. Neither is the oil sector’s ability to generate that wealth at all in question. Concerns are rather centered around the use of the revenues generated and its fair distribution. These concerns should be addressed adequately by the relevant authorities. However, all sections of Angolan society and Angola’s international partners should continue to support the country’s oil and gas sector, to ensure that it continues to generate revenues for the development of the country. This is ever more important, given growing competition globally from new frontiers like Guyana, shale in the USA, and a global transition discourse that is adversely affecting the financing of oil exploration projects in Africa.
A Reform-Driven Approach
In addition to key socioeconomic indicators, hydrocarbon development in Angola has set in motion a reformist approach to oil and non-oil sectors alike. Notably, in positioning its petroleum sector as an attractive investment destination for international operators, Angola has initiated greater transparency, environmental sustainability and decentralization across its economy, which has also bred diversification and growth of non-energy industries.
Following the general election of President Lourenço in 2017, the country’s administration embraced bullish reforms, in part driven by the oil sector, in a way that is perhaps best encapsulated by its National Development Plan 2018-2022 (PDN), which comprises 25 strategic policies and 85 action programs. The PDN is based on five main pillars:
• Sustainable, diversified and inclusive economic development
• Infrastructure needed for development
• Peace-building.
• Strengthening of the democratic state and governance.
• State reform and decentralization.
In addition to outlining the way in which oil production will reach an estimated production of 1.5 million barrels per day, it provides for the privatization and divestment of state-owned Sonangol through the sale of 195 non-core assets between 2019 and 2022. Along with raising capital for the State, the divestment program seeks to refocus Sonangol on its core activities on hydrocarbon exploration, production and marketing and make it more efficient.
This same privatization and efficiency drive was quickly extended to other sectors of the economy. This has led to reforms of public utilities, tariffs and subsidies, and to the privatization or liquidation of state-owned assets through the Angolan Institute for State Asset and Holdings Management – or IGAPE – an expenditure surveillance unit – in June 2018.
Angola has also taken several measures to encourage foreign investors to engage with economic diversification initiatives beyond its oil sector. Pre-COVID-19, the PDN forecast that Angola would achieve three percent economic growth by 2022, associated with the growth of other non-oil critical sectors such as agriculture, fisheries, manufacturing, construction, services and tourism. Two new laws have been approved and adopted to harness that growth. The private investment law and the antitrust law both aim to enhance private sector-led growth and the competitiveness of Angola’s industrial sector, in turn making substantial strides toward creating more inclusive development and stability.
The government also created the National Agency for Private Investment and Promotion of Exports (AIPEX) which serves to identify key products to stimulate exports, promote private investment and the internationalization of companies outside of the oil and gas sector. These vital new programs and institutions benefit from financing generated by the oil sector. AIPEX currently holds two flagship programs: one that focuses on attracting private investment and another that focuses on exports and the internationalization of companies, with a view toward providing a “one-stop shop” resource for private investment across sectors and for the export business. As the oil and gas sector continues to attract private sector players, an investor-friendly environment opens the door for multinationals to enter the market and establish other, non-energy businesses in their portfolio in Angola, as well.
In short, the impact of Angola’s oil boom on national development cannot be measured in dollars, nor limited to socioeconomic indicators. Instead, the continued growth of the petroleum industry has served to bring sustainability, transparency and improved governance to the country, as it rightfully assumes its position as one of the largest economies in sub-Saharan Africa. The oil industry is one of the most dynamic globally, constantly changing due to innovations and technology improvements. Angola and the ANPG under the leadership of H.E. Paulino Jerónimo must continue to respond in real time to these industry changes in order to stay competitive and attractive for investment. A competitive Angolan oil and gas sector will drive reforms in other sectors of Angola’s economy, and inevitably benefit the lives of all Angolans.
Andres Vega is an International Associate at Centurion Law Group and has extensive experience in the implementation, development and financing of oil and gas and energy projects in some of the most important energy markets in the world.
WAPCO Highlights Major Feats In Fulfilment Of Being Reliable Partner In Meeting Energy Needs In Ghana, Togo And Benin
The West African Gas Pipeline Company Limited (WAPCo), owner and operator of the West African Gas Pipeline (WAGP), has highlighted three major achievements attained in 2020 that has resulted in improved reliability of the gas supply through the pipeline and brought great benefits to customers especially in Ghana.
These events have placed WAPCo in an excellent position to fulfill the company’s mission to transport natural gas from producers in Nigeria and Ghana to consumers in Benin, Togo, and Ghana in a safe and reliable manner.
Completion of Takoradi to Tema Interconnection Project added Ghana gas supply to the network of gas sources.
In collaboration with the government of Ghana and other partners, the Takoradi to Tema Interconnection Project (TTIP) was successfully completed in July 2020.
Following the completion of TTIP, WAPCo averaged in the second half of 2020 over 83,000 MMBtu/day of natural gas transportation from the Western Region of Ghana to the Tema enclave to feed power plants to generate power.
With the successful completion of the interconnection project, WAPCo now has reverse flow capability and transports gas from the Western Region of Ghana, from Ghanaian sources while maintaining its original transportation of gas from sources in Nigeria, thereby increasing the volume available for its gas off takers.
As part of the interconnection project, WAPCo’s Tema Regulating and Metering Station (R&MS) expanded its delivery capacity in 2020 to 235 MMscfd from a previous capacity of 140MMscfd.
In addition, WAPCo’s Takoradi R&MS had a new process area added in 2019 with 225 MMscfd gas receipt capacity.
In January 2021, WAPCo’s Tema R&MS set a new monthly average gas delivery record of over 159 MMscfd and a new record one day peak of over 176 MMscfd with gas supplies from both Ghana and Nigeria.
Successful inspection of offshore section of WAGP
WAPCo successfully completed cleaning and inspecting its 569 km offshore pipeline stretching from Nigeria to Takoradi in Ghana.
This periodic internal inspection of the pipeline, a regulatory requirement and in compliance with WAPCo’s Pipeline Integrity Management System, provides critical information to verify the integrity of our system for continuing safe and reliable service.
A collaborative effort of key stakeholders across Nigeria, Ghana, Togo and Benin allowed this effort to be completed safely and ahead of schedule.
Significant improvement in reliable gas supply from Nigeria to the WAGP
WAPCo’s key business partner, the Nigerian Gas Company Limited (NGC), accomplished a great success, which has boosted WAPCo’s reliability efforts.
Through a number of efforts, NGC was able to mitigate issues on their Escravos to Lagos Pipeline System (ELPS) allowing them to lift on 1st November 2020 the prolonged force majeure on the ELPS, which had been affecting gas supply to the WAGP from the east.
Due to the lifting of the force majeure, WAGP is in a better position to transport record volumes of gas to customers.
With the improvement in gas supply from Nigeria, the completion of TTIP in Ghana and the growing demand for use of gas in power supply in Ghana, Togo and Benin, the WAGP was able to set a new record on monthly average gas deliveries to customers across the pipeline of over 178 MMscfd in January 2021.
Achieved eight million workforce hours without a recordable incident
WAPCo is also pleased to announce that in keeping with its previous safety records, all these laudable accomplishments were achieved without a recordable incident.
WAPCo’s continued focus on Operational Excellence and a strong safety culture allowed it to achieve zero recordable incidents for the past 6 years and 8 million workforce hours without a recordable incident, helping to protect our workforce and the communities we operate in.
WAPCo is engaged in continuous improvement to ensure reliability and safe operations and is embarking on a number of reliability, efficiency and improvement programs to further position the WAGP to remain relevant to the needs of its customers.
WAGP Background
The WAGP was developed to contribute to the accelerated economic growth of the West African sub-region and currently provides vital infrastructure linking four cities, in Togo (Lome), Benin (Cotonou) and Ghana (Tema & Takoradi), to natural gas supply sources that provide natural gas for the needed power generation required to complement other energy generation sources.
This year, 2021, marks ten years’ of WAPCo commencing commercial operations.
While it has not been without challenges, these were to be expected of a project as complex as the WAGP.
WAPCo has been flexible over these 10 years and together with its shareholders have adapted the pipeline to the growing and changing needs of its stakeholder countries.
With a decade of commercial operations and a strong start in 2021, WAPCo is in a much-improved position to deliver needed energy supplies to customers into the next decade thanks to the dedication of the OneWAPCo workforce and the support of key stakeholders on the WAGP project.
Ghana: Gas Sub-Sector Becoming A Fiscal Burden To The Country: IES Study
The Institute for Energy Security’s (IES’) study of the petroleum industry reveals that the natural gas sub-sector is rapidly becoming a fiscal burden to the country due poor energy strategies, and delays in building the necessary and relevant infrastructure to off-take the processed domestic gas.
Government’s poor handling of the gas sub-sector is greatly contributing to the rising energy sector debt, while threatening the sustainability of the entire energy industry. Moreover, increasing debts in the energy sector is placing an additional fiscal challenge on the Ghanaian economy.
While records from the Public Interest and Accountability Committee (PIAC), the Ministry of Finance (MoF), and the Petroleum Commission (PC) shows that country’s petroleum industry continued to attract investments into exploration and producing fields, leading to increases in natural gas production volumes; the bottlenecks created in off-take of same, is leading to cost to the country.
In 2020, gas production from the Jubilee, the Tweneboah-Enyera-Ntomme (TEN) and the Sankofa-Gye-Nyame (SGN) fields increased significantly by approximately 60 percent over the volume produced for 2019, the highest recorded since 2010, according to data from the Petroleum Commission. The cumulative raw gas production (associated and non-associated gas) for first half (H1) of 2020 stood at 116,373.39 million standard cubic (MMscf), and expected to reach close to 240,000 MMscf at end 2020.
PIAC’s report indicate that raw gas exported to Ghana National Gas Company (GNGC) from the three producing fields (SGN) fields during the period was 41,314 MMscf, partly due to a 60.5 percent increase in gas production over H1 2019. Ironically, the exported gas represented just 35.5 percent of produced gas compared to reinjected gas of 59,101 MMscf, constituting 50.8 percent of produced gas. The total gas flared during the first half of 2020 was also recorded as 9,600 MMscf, representing 8.2 percent of total gas produced.
This shows re-injected and flared gas as constituting a significant portion of the total gas produced from the three fields. It is therefore clear that the country has failed to make optimal use of its natural gas resource, hence the excess. In 2019 for instance, it is on record that the volume of gas utilized by power generators and industries was just 82,125 MMscf (225 MMscf/d), compared to 169,509 MMscf of associated and non-associated gas produced in 2019.
Until the issue with excess natural gas is addressed, the GNPC would continue to be financially exposed due to the take-or-play clauses in gas contracts. In 2019, the GNPC had to pay a whopping US$168 million for gas unutilized. The attending revenue losses being borne by the GNPC will negatively affect its goal of becoming a stand-alone operator.
Government must as a matter of urgency, stimulate relevant gas infrastructural projects to resolve the issue of unutilized domestic natural gas. Beyond the use of natural gas by power generators, the commodity must be made more accessible to industries by building relevant infrastructure. There must be a radical shift of government’s priorities in the gas sub-sector, going back to the fundamental analysis of the strategic issues to address the demand-supply imbalances.
To the extent that the sector is fast becoming a fiscal risk that places Ghana at a further fiscal disadvantage, a policy shift is crucial.
Source: www.energynewsafrica.com
Nigeria: We’re Working To Ensure Reliable Electricity-Minister Mamman
Nigeria’s Power Minister, Sale Mamman, has assured Nigerians of the commitment of the Ministry of Power in providing reliable electricity.
The West African nation has been having challenges with its power sector, leading to numerous cuts in electricity supply.
With an estimated population of 201 million in 2019, 47 percent of Nigerians did not have access to grid electricity and those who did, faced regular power cuts.
In addition, the economic cost of power shortages in Nigeria is estimated at around $28 billion; equivalent to two percent of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP), according to the World Bank report in 2020.
Speaking at a seminar organised by the Joint Negotiation Council (JNC), a chapter of the Ministry of Power, Sale Mamman, who was represented by the Acting Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Power, Mr Otun Emmanuel assured Nigerians that the Federal Government is working to resolve the power challenges in the country.
He assured the staff of the Ministry of his unwavering support on matters of welfare.
He urged the union leaders to engage meaningfully with the Ministry in order to foster the relationship between management and staff.
The Chairman of the JNC, Comrade Bala Mohammed stated that the meeting was held to strengthen the relationship between the management and staff of the Ministry. He appealed to the staff to be dedicated in their duties.
“I wish to appeal to the staff to be dedicated to their duties at all times. Let me also use today’s auspicious occasion to urge you all to pay attention to all aspects of the tasks required to move the Ministry forward and, most especially, to deliver its mandate to Nigerians,“ he said.
Source:www.energynewsafrica.com
Senegal: President Sall Calls For National Oil And Gas Reform
Senegalese President Macky Sall has called for a transformation of organization, management, execution and evaluation processes within the domestic oil and gas sector, as the country prepares to enter oil and gas operations from 2023.
The President made his announcement during a virtual conference held with the Council of Ministers last Wednesday.
President Sall advocated for the enhanced management of oil and gas resources, supported by a new roadmap that accelerates reforms and ensures adequate supervision of projects by the relevant ministers and parastatals.
To this end, President Sall implored Minister of Petroleum and Energy Aissatou Sophie Gladima to work towards revolutionizing information reporting systems within the hydrocarbon sector and implementing a cohesive communication strategy on oil and gas management.
President Sall further urged national oil company PETROSEN to finalize Production Sharing Contracts and Association Agreements with operators, with a view to driving inclusion of the private sector and indigenous industries.
President Sall also requested that the Ministry of Finance and Budget finalize the bill on revenue sharing related to oil and gas development before the end of March 2021.
He urged government to support the establishment of the National Institute of Oil and Gas, as well as formalize regulation related to education and training in the sector, in a bid to develop human capital and facilitate knowledge, skills and technology transfer.
Africa Oil & Power will unite leaders from Senegal, Gambia, Guinea-Bissau, Guinea, Mauritania and the wider West Africa region with global energy dealmakers, for the first-ever MSGBC Oil, Gas & Power 2021 conference and exhibition on October 26-27 in Dakar, Senegal.
Source: www.energynewsafrica.com
Iraq Walks Away From $2B Upfront Oil Deal With China
Iraq has decided against signing an oil-supply deal with a Chinese state company that would’ve seen the cash-strapped Arab nation get about $2 billion upfront, according to its oil minister.
Baghdad opted not to go ahead with the contract after oil prices rose in recent months, Ihsan Abdul Jabbar said in an interview with BBC Arabic.
Iraq, whose economy is reeling after last year’s crash in crude prices, in November asked oil traders to bid for a five-year supply deal. Baghdad proposed delivering 4 million barrels a month, or about 130,000 barrels a day, with the buyer paying upfront for one year of supply.
China’s Zhenhua Oil Co., a subsidiary of defense contractor Norinco, won the bid, Bloomberg reported in December.
Prepayment deals are rare in the oil world and this was meant to improve Iraq’s financial situation. While the government is still struggling, its position has improved because oil prices have soared 62% since the start of November to around $63 a barrel, largely thanks to the roll-out of coronavirus vaccines.
OPEC’s second-biggest producer had wanted as much liquidity as possible in January and February this year and was concerned that oil prices wouldn’t exceed $40 a barrel, Jabbar said in the interview.
After prices stabilized, “we decided to freeze this attempt or option and we didn’t activate it,” BBC Arabic cited him as saying.
In an interview with the Iraq Oil Report earlier this month, Finance Minister Ali Allawi said pre-payment oil deals were problematic because they required a sovereign guarantee.
Source: worldoil.com
Ghana: CalBank, EU Set Up Green Energy Financing Scheme
CalBank Ghana, one of the indigenous banks in the Republic of Ghana, in partnership with the European Union (EU), has set a Green Energy Financing scheme with a seed capital running into several millions of dollars to support corporate bodies, Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs) and individuals who want to invest in green energy.
The scheme supports Renewable Energy Projects and Energy Efficiency Projects which lead to 20 percent energy savings and initiatives aimed at sustainable use of natural resources.
According to the bank, these projects must be implemented in Ghana before it could qualify for support.
Speaking during a virtual stakeholder dialogue on the best options in providing financial support for renewable energy investment and adoption by SMEs in the country, organised by ACEP, in partnership with the German Development Cooperation (GIZ), Abraham Dsane of the Corporate Relations Department of CalBank, mentioned that for corporate customers, a maximum of $8 million has been set aside, while that for SME customers and individuals have been pegged at $2 million and $50,000.
He noted that there exists many funding opportunities for businesses to tap into if they want to go green.
Among the funding options available to businesses, he said there is a US$11.4 million Africa Climate Change Fund and Africa Green Fund administered by the African Development Bank and the Sustainable Use of Natural Resources and Energy Fund which, he said US$20 million has been made available to CalBank for onward lending to companies and individuals that want to invest in renewable energy.
Others include the Nordic Development Fund, the Global Environment Facility of which the country has received over US$100 million, and the Green Climate Fund, among others.
“Renewable energy is important in our world today because of the advantages it comes with, so financial institutions in the country are increasingly committing more resources and efforts to support businesses and individuals that want to invest in renewables,” he added.
Themed ‘Financing options for renewable energy adoption by SMEs in Ghana’, the stakeholder dialogue formed part of efforts to enhance affordable renewable energy through interventions that will explore opportunities for renewable energy adoption by SMEs.
Source:www.energynewsafrica.com
Ghana: I’ll Work Towards Universal Access To Electricity-Napo
Ghana’s Minister-designate for Energy, Dr Matthew Opoku Prempeh, has pledged his commitment towards achieving 100 percent electricity access in the West African nation in the second term of the Akufo-Addo-administration.
“As a Minister for Energy, I will work towards affordable universal power for all Ghanaians,” Dr. Opoku Prempeh who is popularly known as Napo said while answering questions on his commitment to ensuring that Ghana achieves universal access to electricity during his vetting in Parliament recently.
In 2016, Ghana’s national electricity access was about 83.24 percent and moved to 83.62 percent in 2018.
As at last year, Ghana’s electricity access had increased to 85 percent.
Ghana Struggling To Grow Electricity Access: IES AnalysisHowever, the level of increment, according to the Minority Leader of the Parliament of Ghana, Haruna Iddrisu, is not encouraging and wanted the Minister- designate to do something to improve it if he were approved. President Akufo-Addo, in his inaugural speech on January 7, 2021, intimated that the remaining population would be connected to electricity in his second term to ensure economic growth. “The remaining fifteen percent of our communities without electricity would be covered by the end of my second term,” he assured Ghanaians. Source:www.energynewsafrica.com
Nigeria: Court Blocks Shell’s Bank Accounts Over Oil Pipeline Dispute
A Nigerian court has restricted Royal Dutch Shell Plc’s access to its bank accounts in the West African country amid a legal dispute with a local oil producer over a pipeline deal six years ago.
Aiteo Eastern E&P Co. Ltd. is demanding billions of dollars in damages, claiming Shell misrepresented the condition of the pipeline and under-counted the volume of crude one of its facilities received from the Nigerian firm, according to court documents seen by Bloomberg.
Shell said Aiteo’s lawsuit is baseless and it is working to overturn the freezing order.
The dispute is just one among a growing list of legal entanglements related to Shell’s business in Africa’s largest crude producer. Since the start of the year, a Dutch court has ordered the company to pay compensation for oil spills in two villages more than a decade ago, and the U.K. Supreme Court allowed 40,000 fishermen and farmers to sue Shell in England.
The legal precedents could result in the company facing more cases related to Nigeria in its home country.
A federal court in Lagos, Nigeria’s commercial hub, on Feb. 15 retained an injunction issued late last month directing Shell not to withdraw funds held at 20 banks “without first preserving or ring-fencing” almost $2.8 billion. The judge, Oluremi Oguntoyinbo, has adjourned proceedings until Feb. 24.
Aiteo’s allegations relate to its $2.4 billion purchase in 2015 of a 45% interest in an oil block and pipeline from a trio of multinational companies: Shell, Total SE and Eni SpA. Nigeria’s state-owned energy company owns the rest.
The African company secured a loan of almost $1.5 billion from local and international banks to fund its entrance into the oil exploration and production business, according to a lawsuit the company filed against four Shell units and the parent company on Jan. 15. Aiteo is controlled by prominent Nigerian businessman Benedict Peters.
Aiteo alleged in the lawsuit that “fraudulent misrepresentations” made by Shell’s local unit, the former operator of the assets, before the sale mean it is “practically impossible” for the company to “meet its repayment obligations to its financiers.” The company claims the pipeline, the Nembe Creek Trunk Line, or NCTL, was in a more degraded state and more prone to crude theft than Shell advertised.
Subsequent to the transaction, Aiteo also alleges that Shell understated the volume of crude delivered to its Bonny oil and gas export terminal through the NCTL by Aiteo and other local producers. The company is demanding that Shell refund it with 16 million barrels of oil or $1.3 billion.
The full penalty sought in Aiteo’s lawsuit is for more than $9 billion, including $5 billion in general damages, $799 million to cover the purchase of the NCTL and $933 million to reimburse pipeline repairs.
Shell “is working to secure an expeditious discharge of the freezing injunction which we believe was obtained by Aiteo without any valid basis,” a spokesman for the company’s Nigerian unit, SPDC, said by email.
Aiteo’s allegation of “crude theft/diversion” related to the Bonny terminal is “factually incorrect,” Shell said.
Rather, it is a “distinct issue” concerning a directive given by Nigeria’s Ministry of Petroleum Resources to SPDC, as operator of the facility, saying that the company should reallocate oil between producers that inject into another pipeline and those that use the NCTL.
Shell plans to refund 2.1 million barrels from producers, including SPDC and Total, that pump crude into the Trans Niger Pipeline to firms that use the NCTL, according to a letter the company sent the petroleum resources ministry on Feb. 8. The allotment to Aiteo will be 1 million barrels, with the largest share taken from a joint venture headed by SPDC.
The readjustment, which relates to calculations made at the Bonny terminal between June 2016 and June 2017, is part of “normal industry practice,” Shell said.
Ghana: We’ll Resist Any Attempt To Increase Fuel Prices – Minority
Minority Parliamentarians in the Republic of Ghana have accused the Akufo-Addo government of being insensitive to the plight of suffering Ghanaians with the recent increases in the prices of petroleum products.
According to the Minority, the increase in the price of fuel is an indication of the government’s poor management of the energy sector.
Prices of fuel at various pumps across the country have witnessed an increment in the first pricing window of February.
The national average price of fuel per litre at the moment is pegged at GH¢5.03.
Minority spokesperson on energy who is also the Member of Parliament (MP) for Yapei-Kusawgu, John Jinapor said they will resist any attempt by government to further increase fuel prices.
He further added the Minority will not tolerate any such increments.
The Yapei-Kusawgu thus insisted the Akufo-Addo presidency is out of ideas in raising revenue to manage the sector.
“The recent increase has only resulted in worsening off the living conditions of the already improvised Ghanaians under the Akufo-Addo presidency. It this appear that things are taking for the worse as international rating agencies have begun sounding the alarm bells on Ghana’s huge and unsustainable debt levels.”
“One cannot account but come to the conclusion that the Akufo-Addo government has ran out of ideas, hence, their decision to resort to such rampage petroleum increase. Notice is hereby served and the Minority and the people of Ghana for that matter will not tolerate any further increment that will only exacerbate the suffering of the Ghanaian. The government must think outside the box and be innovative than these measures,” he said.



The increasing demand for power, arising from the expansion of economic activities in the country, Barrow said, also makes it compelling for government to redouble efforts in the energy sector.
“The strategy is to gradually replace the old generator sets with reliable ones and maintain a single national grid.”
“Besides providing sustainable energy for all, it is equally necessary to work towards cost-reflective electricity tariffs in a systematic manner and within the right regulatory framework. We remain committed to the socio-economic development objectives as outlined in our National Development Plan (NDP), the AU 2063 Agenda and the AU/EU partnership for Green Transition and Energy Access. Accordingly, the energy sector has a critical role to play for the realisation of these development mileposts.”
“To this end, the Ministry of Petroleum and Energy is establishing an Energy Platform to exploit sustainable energy solutions in order to propel agricultural development, facilitate trade and promote digital inclusion, among other objectives. We are also working with our development partners to mitigate the effects of climate change, increase our renewable energy uptake and improve energy efficiency in our homes, institutions and businesses.”
“Let me stress that my government will keep up the momentum of infrastructure development countrywide. To stir economic growth, we need good roads, bridges, schools and hospitals among others. All these developments require regular and reliable electricity supply. Therefore, this occasion marks a key milestone for the nation in the long quest for steady power supply.”
“Alongside increasing the generation capacity of electricity are other projects to step up access, and expand the transmission and distribution network within a reinforced and reliable system. These measures will improve supply, increase customer connections and support investments.”
Source:www.energynewsafrica.com