Recounting The Rawlings Legacy In Ghana’s Energy Sector (Opinion)

By Nana Amoasi VII & Edmond Kombat, IES “Ghana could not have survived the Economic Recovery Program (ERPs) of the 1980s put in place by the ruling Provisional National Defence Council (PNDC) without the strength of character and unwavering determination of Mr. Rawlings” – Naomi Chazan, 1983 Beginning 1983 under its Economic Recovery Program (ERP), the then Government led by His Excellency Flight Lieutenant Jerry John Rawlings had successfully implemented a series of macroeconomic and structural reforms which reversed the country’s profound economic decline since independence. Under the economic program, the government was committed to liberalizing the cocoa sub-sector and reforming the energy sector in order to improve efficiency and eliminate the existing fiscal burden by promoting private sector participation. In the mid-1990s, the Ghanaian energy sector had to go through a phase change because of a shift in the overall policy framework. Before then, the country’s energy sector was financed by the government and managed by public utilities and companies. In 1994, the government led by late and former President Jerry John Rawlings initiated the process of reforming and restructuring the energy sector in the quest to improve operational efficiency and increase consumer access to electrical power and petroleum products. The objective of the policy shift was: • To create an environment which can attract private investment for the expansion of electricity generation and refinery capacity, • To deploy technical innovation, • To ensure realistic energy pricing policy and competition, and • To incorporate use of renewable energy resources into the country’s energy mix. The policy change was intended to eliminate government’s involvement as owner and manager of energy businesses and re-focus its role on policy-making and market regulation. Consequently, public funds can be saved to improve social infrastructure. THE POWER SECTOR -Introduction of Thermal in Generation Mix Prior to the drought of 1983-1984, Ghana’s electricity supply was virtually sourced from hydro; Akosombo and Kpong. Following the severity of the drought which had lowered the water level in the Volta lake beyond the minimum operating limit, the power generation potentiality of the two plants had reduced to just 30 percent of its 1980 level. This led to mandatory rationing, hence curtailment of power to customers of the two plants operated by the Volta River Authority (VRA). This was followed up by another drought in 1993-94, which again led to serious blackouts across the country. Within the period there had also been steady growth in power consumption, driven by spurred economic growth and the National Electrification Scheme, which compounded the issues. These two power crisis induced by the droughts and the increasing demand for power exposed the country’s almost absolute reliance on hydroelectric power. The Jerry John Rawlings-led government saw the need to increase the country’s power generation capacity, and certainly add on to the existing generation mix to reduce the over dependence on hydroelectric plants. The government represented by the then Ministry of Mines and Energy (MME) negotiated with the World Bank and its partners to secure a credit to construct the Takoradi Thermal Power Station (TTPS), Ghana’s first thermal (fossil fuel) facility. The Volta River Authority (VRA) operationalized the 330 MW combined cycle facility in 1997, with official inauguration by President Rawlings taking place in October 2000. -Introduction of IPP Concept The government in January 1994 as part of its plan to push for the penetration of thermal plants with full participation of Independent Power Producers (IPPs), prepared a strategic framework called “Ghana Power Sector Development Policy” to among other things; develop future power generation, coordinate generation and transmission operations, develop framework electricity distribution and pricing, and formation of regulatory bodies. Reference to the development of future power generation, the structure included but not limited to VRA continuing to develop the Volta lake, and entering into Build, Operate and Transfer (BOT) arrangements with IPPs. In 2000, the Takoradi International Company (TICO), a joint venture between Abu Dhabi National Energy Company PJSC (TAQA) (90 percent) and the VRA (10 percent), completed construction and began operating the second combustion unit, Takoradi 2 (T2). Other wholly owned IPPs were later to follow, with their present generation assets accounting for over 50 percent of Ghana’s installed power production capacity, thus serving as key component of the country’s generation capacity. -Extended Electricity Access After witnessing the construction and commissioning of the enormous Akosombo Dam, the country was plunged into a state of electricity fever. Communities both far and near, were ready for ample supply of cheap power from the country’s most ambitious development project, that has created a power plant with 528 megawatt (MW) capacity. The Akosombo power plant, which provided cheap electricity for the smelter of the Volta Aluminium Company (VALCO), had powered 500 miles of transmission lines that connected the population centers like Tema, Accra and mining areas of southern Ghana. There were no immediate plans then, to provide electricity to rural areas. However, statements capture in the press by government functionaries at the time, created the impression that the whole country would benefit from Akosombo. Chiefs, town development committees, and other opinion leaders expressed their desire for electricity. For instance, it is reported that five days later and after Osagyefo the President turned on a switch at the Akosombo powerhouse, the traditional council of Senya Bereku wrote to inquire whether the transmission lines could be extended to their “old and historic” coastal town. Again, a Convention People’s Party (CPP) former Member of Parliament (MP) for Asebu Eddie Ampah, was said to have been convinced that his hometown Moree, close to Cape Coast, would be connected to the Volta grid in no time. He was sure that the then “Electricity Division” will at all cost provide Moree with power after having conveyed to his electorate “Osagyefo’s dream” of generating ample flow of electricity for use in every home in Ghana. To the extent that the Asebu Local Council was prepared to contribute cash and communal labor to have electricity connection. However, the expectations of immediate connections to the Volta grid were never to be. The coup that swept Nkrumah from power in February 1966 could not end the desire and the popular quest for electricity. Petitions requesting the extension of Volta power to places close to the grid and beyond continued to increase. The National Liberation Council (NLC) regime that ousted Osagyefo encountered difficulties to cope with expectations, especially in the disadvantaged North. The extension of power to the North was described as neither technically nor economically feasible due to the small demand. In 1967, Issifu Ali NLC commissioner for the Ministry of Works and Housing could only mention a plan for rural electrification that privileged the South and Ashanti, leaving many Ghanaians, particularly those in the Northern regions with no access the Volta grid, feeling neglected. The rural folks linked electricity access with hopes for economic development and for stemming the rural to urban migration of their youth, and phrased their efforts for access to electrical power as claims to citizenship. For them, electricity did not become the cure-all for their economic misery. Rather, this technological innovation proved to be an enhancement in existing inequities. Electricity became just another cost that extracted tight resources with few benefits. At the time the NLC regime relinquished power to a civilian government, Osagyefo’s high hopes had not been fulfilled. A vast majority of Ghanaians were still waiting for electricity connection. Successive Military and civil governments promised to extend the grid or at least provide local generation. Yet majority of the people in rural areas remained without electricity due to low load demand, funding shortage, high equipment and construction cost, and reversal of policies. It took another 15 years until Ghana began extending the Volta grid to the North, as part of a “National Electrification Scheme”. By the mid-1980s, Ghana had about 250,000 electricity consumers, meaning that merely 10 percent of the population had access to power. The major cities of Accra, Tema, Takoradi, Kumasi, and Cape Coast accounted for 70 percent of these consumers. Driven by growth in demographic requirements, increased urbanization, an ever-increasing technological demand, and the aspiration to transform into a middle-income country, the Provisional National Defense Council (PNDC) under Jerry John Rawlings in 1987 committed itself to an ambitious “National Electrification Scheme.” The policy, which was targeted at achieving universal access to reliable electricity supply by 2020, gained the support of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. The Volta River Authority (VRA) supported the scheme by extending the Volta grid from Kumasi to Brong Ahafo, the Northern, and the Upper Regions and by taking over the distribution of electric power through its new subsidiary, the Northern Electricity Department, to Northern consumers. At the inauguration celebrating the extension of the grid to the Northern Region, Rawlings evoked the legacy of Nkrumah and declared; “This occasion marks the fulfillment of a dream conceived so many years ago”. This singular initiative by the Rawlings-led administration, slowed down out-migration, boosted socio-economic development in rural areas, and shored up support for the Democrats in rural areas and across the Northern region. It is said that “The extension of electricity to the North, was a conduit for the PNDC government to “gain greater credibility and legitimacy.” At the time of leaving office, the former and late President Jerry John Rawlings-led governments had increased electricity access from 10 percent to a whopping 45 percent, with an annual average growth rate of approximately 2 percent. The increase in electricity access was accompanied by extensions and improvement in transmission and distribution networks. “Rawlings left a legacy in which Ghanaians as a people and society, have the enviable opportunity to enjoy the quality of life and also to reap the benefits of a systemic development in an ever-changing global, political and economic environment” – Kevin Shillington, 1992 -Establishment of Regulatory Bodies In pursuit of the energy sector reform in mid-1990s, which was aimed at limiting the role of government to the operation of the electricity transmission network, market regulation and energy sector planning, a Parliamentary Act, Act 536, established the Public Utilities and Regulatory Commission (PURC) in 1997 to among other functions: • Regulate utility tariffs, • Ensure customer protection, and • Promote competition in the provision of energy services. Another Parliamentary Act in 1997, Act 541 that established the Energy Commission followed, in order to: • Regulate technical standards in the provision of energy (excluding crude oil and natural gas), • Prepare, review and periodically update indicative energy plans to ensure that all energy requirements of the economy are met in a sustainable manner, and • Formulate national energy policies for the development and utilization of indigenous energy resources, in particular renewable energy sources: solar, wind and biomass. THE PETROLEUM SECTOR • UPSTREAM SEGMENT Ghana joined the league of oil and gas producing countries in December 2010, with a little over 1.18 million barrels produced oil at end of same year from the Jubilee field. Ten (10) years on, and up until June 2020 the country had produced from three fields close to 421 million barrels of crude oil, earning the country roughly US$5.32 billion over the period. The Dollar denominated revenue receipts from Ghana’s oil production have been used to fund diverse development projects, to manage shocks to the economy or unanticipated shortfalls in petroleum revenue, and to provide an endowment to support development for future generations when Ghana’s petroleum reserves had been depleted. Some of the projects the petroleum revenue have been used to fund can be tracked to agriculture, road, rail and other critical physical infrastructure. Some of the money is also invested in industrialization, as well as service delivery in education and health. The oil industry continue to attract key global industry players on the back of sustained investor interest, as well as significant de-risking of the Western Basin. This was evident in the 2019 Licensing Rounds Bids and Negotiations. Additionally, the data room of the Petroleum Commission attracted a considerable number of investors and industry giants like BP, Hunt Oil, Shell, among others. Beyond the Jubilee fields, which was the first to commence commercial oil production, Ghana’s continental shelf is playing host to the Tweneboah-Enyera-Ntomme (TEN) fields and the Sankofa fields for purposes of petroleum production. More recently, Aker Energy, AGM, Springfield and a few other exploration and production companies are pronounced as entities at various stages of commencing production. The growing interest in upstream activities is expected to increase Ghana’s daily production of oil and gas, and by extension the amount of Dollar-denominated revenue to be earned by the country, to support key sectors of the economy. The benefits Ghanaians are currently enjoying from oil production could not have been possible without the foresight of the late and former President Jerry John Rawlings who established the Ghana National Petroleum Corporation (GNPC), whose work preceded oil find in the country, and facilitated the inflow of investors into Ghana. The GNPC was established by the erstwhile PNDC Government in 1983 by the GNPC Act, 1983 (PNDCL64) as the commercial entity in the upstream petroleum sector; charged with the primary responsibility for exploration, development, production and disposal of petroleum resources. GNPC’s establishment was followed up a year later with the enactment of the Petroleum (Exploration and Production) Act, 1984 (PNDCL 84) to govern the upstream petroleum sector. The man Rawlings saw the green shoots. The offshore was of course looking appetizing at the time, and a dedicated body like the GNPC was needed to commit solely to the upstream. Because of GNPC’s full time dedication to exploration activities in collecting data, it reduced the efforts of private prospectors who came in, and enhanced the chances of commercial discovery. No wonder, two decades after the establishment of GNPC, and the enactment of PNDCL 84, petroleum was discovered in commercial quantities offshore Ghana in 2007, followed by production in November 2010. The feat was achieved by the pioneering role of Mr. Tsatsu Tsikata and his team in gathering, analyzing and interpretation data for oil and gas exploration, under the vision of the late and former President. Presently the GNPC owns a 10 percent interest in the various Ghanaian offshore oil blocks. It is also concentrating on data management of geological and geophysical information, the promotion of further exploitation sites, and the control of oil companies that are operating in Ghana. •DOWNSTREAM SEGMENT -Restoration of Petroleum Supplies Ghana’s relationship with the Nigerian government had turned sour following the PNDC ousting of the Limann-led government in 1981. Nigeria, which Ghana at the time counted on for about 90 percent of its petroleum needs, discontinued the supply over US$150 million debt, owed Nigeria prior to the entry of the PNDC government. This happened at a time Ghana was confronted with one of the most devastating droughts in recorded history, and economic challenges. The new government led by Flight Lieutenant Jerry John Rawlings had to look elsewhere for Ghana’s petroleum needs as the country was met with stringent measures from President Shehu Shagari’s Nigerian government. The continued shutdown of the country’s refinery for lack of crude would have meant that the over 11 million Ghanaians at the time would have been starved of petroleum products― vital commodities for purposes of mobility, commercial and industrial production, and lighting. It could have degenerated into job losses, social disturbances and possible shutdown of the Ghanaian economy. However, the persona of Rawlings, who was pre-occupied with improving the wellbeing of the poor and masses, and his political perspectives, was to open new doors. His administration primarily sought to build stronger relations with socialist and progressive states, and so it did not come as strange when Libya led by Colonel Muammar al-Gaddafi undertook to supply the crude oil Ghanaians so much needed. The affable and charismatic late and former President on restoring and building ties with Colonel Gaddafi’s Libya negotiated for a term-contract for crude supply at favorable terms. In addition, when Major General Ibrahim Babangida took over power in Nigeria in 1985, the man Jerry John Rawlings capitalized on the change to restore bilateral trade between the two countries, and that included crude supplies from Nigeria.The steps taken to ensure consistent supply of crude oil were necessary to forestall the collapse of the Tema Oil Refinery (TOR), which remained central to the downstream petroleum segment of the country. -Expansion and Modernization of TOR In 1989, the government of Jerry John Rawlings undertook the first major rehabilitation of the Tema Oil Refinery (TOR) to improve the distribution of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), and increase supply volume from 4,500 to 5,400 cubic meter. Phase two of the rehabilitation started in 1990 at an estimated cost of US$36 million. In 1997, the hydro-skimming plant that had an initial Crude Distillation Unit (CDU) capacity of 28,000 barrels per stream day when it was commissioned in 1963 saw an expansion. A US$200 million loan facility contracted by the Rawlings-led government from a Korean consortium in 1997 made the revamping of the CDU plant possible. The capacity was increased by 60 percent from 28,000 to 45,000 barrels per stream day, as part of phase one of TOR’S expansion and modernization programme. Until date, this expansion remain the only upgrade the facility has received since its inception. -Strategic Repositioning TOR In 1996, as part of the restructuring of the petroleum sector, the state-owned refinery began to procure and process crude oil on its own account following an industrial restructuring programme. The plan was for TOR to seek strategic partnership with private investors in line with the economic reform program, which the government was committed to liberalizing and reforming the energy sector in order to improve efficiency and eliminate the existing fiscal burden. Hitherto the GNPC was the entity that procured the crude for the refinery to refine based on Tolling basis. The GNPC was to leave the crude procurement and refinery business for TOR, so it could focus on crude exploration and production activities. -Introduction of Premix Fuel In the 1990s, Ghanaian fisher-folks were fueling their Out-board Motors with a mixture of RON 84 Gasoline (Regular) and Lubricant called Marine-mix. During the period, the world had to switch from Leaded-Gasoline to un-Leaded Gasoline with a higher Research Octane Number (RON). As such, fishermen in Ghana were compelled to buy the newly introduced RON 91 (Super) at a much higher price before mixing with the usual lubricant. This of course was going to increase the input costs for the fishermen. The late and former President Jerry John Rawlings had to intervene to first have the Tema Oil Refinery formulate the Premix Fuel (a laboratory combination of Gasoline and Lubricant) purposely for firing the 2-stroke engine of the Out-board Motors used by the fishermen. The government of Jerry John Rawlings proceeded to subsidize the final price of the formulated Premix Fuel for the fisher-folks to lessen their existing burden. –Making Petroleum Products Accessible In 1992, the government of Jerry John Rawlings sought a loan from the government of Korea to build a multi-product pipeline from the port of Tema via the Tema Oil Refinery and the Accra Plains terminal to the port of Akosombo. This pipeline project was to facilitate the transportation of petroleum products for local distribution and shipment via barge from the Akosombo port (South) to the Buipe in the Northern region. The plan was to bridge the gap between the North and the South, ensuring there is uniform distribution and pricing of petroleum products across the country. Today the Tema-Akosombo Pipeline Project (TAPP) and the river Barging system remain the most efficient and safer means to transport fuel from the South to the North of the country. The transportation systems (pipeline and river Barges) has also presented itself as the major contributor of revenue to the Volta Lake Transport Company (VLTC). -Establishment of BOST Very much aware that the growing demand for petroleum products across the country was confronted with distribution challenges in the face of poor distribution network system, the government led by the late and former president Jerry John Rawlings established in 1993 the Bulk Oil Storage and Transportation Company (BOST) with depots across the country. BOST was incorporated as a private limited liability company under the Companies Act 1963 (Act 179) with the Government of Ghana as the sole shareholder. The initial mandates were: • To develop, own and manage a network of storage tanks, pipelines and other bulk transportation infrastructure throughout the country, • To keep Strategic Reserve Stocks for the country as Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR), and • To manage the “Zonalization” policy of the National Petroleum Authority (NPA) These mandates were later expanded to include; the renting or leasing out part of the storage facilities to enable it generate income, and to develop the Natural Gas Infrastructure throughout the country. In relation to the SPR programme, BOST was charged with the responsibility to build strategic reserve stocks to meet a minimum of six (6) weeks of national consumption in the short and medium term and to increase stock level to twelve (12) weeks in the long term. In the late 90s, the government handed over to BOST strategic depots being run by the Ghana Oil Company Limited (GOIL) throughout the country. These included the Accra Plains Depot in Tema, the Mami-water Depot close to Atimpoku, the Akosombo Depot, the Kumasi Depot, the Buipe and the Bolgatanga Depots. These depots were not only for strategic reserve reasons, but also to serve the communities close by. The SPR programme as initiated by the Rawlings-led government and the increase utilization rate of the depots by BOST at the time, helped in curtailing the persistent shortage of fuels that plagued the country in the late 90s and the early 2000s. CONCLUSION Ghanaians from all walks of lives, including chiefs, farmers, artisans, town development committees, and opinion leaders, strongly believe that the man Jerry John Rawlings is one individual who led them through difficult socio-economic times. To those who linked access to electric power with hopes for economic development and for stemming the rural to urban migration of their youth, and phrased their efforts for access to electrical power as claims to citizenship, they stand satisfied today, with their national pride intact. Ghanaian fisher-folks would forever be grateful to the man Jerry John Rawlings for the formulation and introduction of the subsidized Premix fuel for their two-stroke engines, taking away the hassle with the much expensive Premium Gasoline and Marine mix Lubricant. “Rawlings’ leadership was a mixture of populism and authoritarianism, sometimes marked by controversial pronouncements. He had the capacity to pull crowds and appeal to the ordinary man on the streets” – Kevin Shillington, 1992 Under the Economic Recovery Program (ERP), Jerry John Rawlings successfully implemented a series of macroeconomic and structural reforms that reversed the country’s profound economic decline since independence. He was committed to liberalizing and reforming the energy sector in order to improve efficiency and eliminate the existing fiscal burden by promoting private sector participation in the sector. He led the Ghanaian energy sector to go through a phase change by initiating the process of reforming and restructuring in the quest to improve operational efficiency and increase consumer access to electrical power and petroleum products. He created and repositioned some relevant energy sector entities to harmonize the downstream and upstream petroleum sector so that Ghanaians may reap and benefit from their power and petroleum resource endowment. Rawlings’ legacy in the Ghanaian energy sector has been tremendous. He understood the ever-changing global, political and economic environment, and appreciated the role energy security would play in that equation. Through foresight and mindful of the economics, he built physical, regulatory, and technical structures, consistent with changes within the domestic and global energy space, to guarantee that quality of life Ghanaian so desire. He is that man who lived the dream of our founding father, Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah.

Tullow Budgets Less For Capex, Raises Decommissioning Cost In 2021

Africa’s focused oil and gas firm, Tullow, has planned to spend $265 million on capital expenditure (Capex) for 2021, down by $ 35 million compared to the $290 million expended in 2020. It, however, wants to double its cost for decommissioning exercises by spending $100 this year compared to $50 million spent on decommissioned exercises in 2020. Tullow expects to deliver a cash flow of $0.5 billion at $50/bbl for the first year of its new business plan which aims to deliver c.$7 billion under the operating cash flow over the next 10 years. In a statement on Tuesday, January 27, 2021,Tullow said it has completed organisational restructuring and this, it said is expected to deliver sustainable annual cash savings of over $125 million. The group’s working interest oil production averaged 74,900 bopd in 2020 with full year revenue expected to be $1.4 billion realised oil price of $50.8/bbl. Tullow said the impact of COVID-19 was well managed effectively across the Group with negligible impact on production. Commenting on the 2020 performance and 2021 outlook, CEO of Tullow, Rahur Dhir said, “Despite the challenges that 2020 presented, Tullow delivered production in line with expectations, executed major reductions to its cost-base and reduced net debt through the Uganda asset sale. Tullow has a busy year ahead as we begin implementing the business plan that we laid out at our Capital Markets Day. The plan is focused on ensuring that Tullow’s producing assets in West Africa reach their full potential. We will leverage the new plan and our reduced cost base to generate positive free cash flow at current commodity prices, drive down our net debt and deliver a robust balance sheet.” Source: www.energynewsafrica.com

Spain: Waga Energy Contracted To Convert Massive Landfill Gas-To-Biomethane

Waga Energy, an innovative French company committed to the fight against climate change has been selected by Ferrovial Servicios group, a leading global service operator, to produce biomethane at the Can Mata landfill, one of Spain’s largest landfill, near Barcelona. Waga Energy is expected to use its purification technology known as ‘WAGABOX®’ to recover landfill gas in the form of biomethane, a renewable substitute for natural gas. The WAGABOX® unit at the Can Mata site would be commissioned in 2022. A statement copied to energynewsafrica.com, said the WAGABOX will treat up to 2,200 m3/h of landfill gas and inject 70 GWh of biomethane per year into the gas network of the Spanish operator Nedgia, which is equivalent to the annual energy consumption of 14,000 Spanish households or a fleet of 200 Lorries. The statement said the project will avoid the emission of 17,000 tonnes of CO2 per year by substituting renewable gas for natural gas. This is the first ever landfill gas injection project to be financed by a long-term power purchase agreement in Europe. This method of financing is common for renewable electricity projects, but rarely used for green gas projects, generally unable to provide buyers with a competitive price over the long term. “This first-ever “Biomethane Purchase Agreement” has been made possible thanks to the proven efficiency of the WAGABOX® technology, combined to Waga Energy’s unique expertise in the management of landfill biogas injection projects, and Ferrovial Servicios’ experience of more than 50 years in the treatment and recovery of waste,’’ the statement said.
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Per the business model adopted by the two partners Waga Energy will purchase part of the landfill gas from the Can Mata site from Ferrovial Servicios, finance the construction and operation of the WAGABOX® unit, as well as manage relations with the gas network operator and the sale of the biomethane. Waga Energy would also be required to invest 7.5 million euros to commission the unit and connect the Can Mata site to the Nedgia gas grid, located four kilometers away. Antonio Aliana, Regional Director of Ferrovial Servicios in Catalonia, said: “The agreement signed with Waga Energy strengthens Ferrovial’s commitment to sustainable development. This circular economy project will make it possible to produce biomethane, for the benefit of our citizens, thanks to the most advanced technology for the recovery of biogas from waste gas. We hope that this innovative green energy project will be extended to other sites that we operate, as part of our strategy to transform waste into resources”. Mathieu Lefebvre, CEO and co-founder of Waga Energy, concluded: “This significant project with the Ferrovial Servicios group marks the culmination of three years of hard work by both parties. Landfill gas-to-biomethane injection projects are complex from a technological, regulatory, and financial point of view. Our unique expertise in this area, combined to our commitment to the energy transition, has enabled this major renewable gas project in Spain to materialize.” Source: www.energynewsafrica.com

Biden Readies Ban On New Oil, Gas Drilling On Federal Lands

U.S. President Joe Biden is expected to sign an executive order directing federal government agencies to determine the extent of a ban on new drilling on federal lands and waters, The New York Times reports, quoting two sources familiar with the President’s upcoming executive orders. The move to order the federal agencies to weigh in on the extent of a ban takes President Biden’s 60-day moratorium on oil and gas permitting on federal lands and waters a step further. Hours after taking office, President Biden’s Administration suspended for 60 days oil and gas permitting on federal lands and waters, as part of a review into the policies of the previous administration and the push to green energy to fight climate change. President Biden’s move drew harsh reactions from the oil industry. “Restricting development on federal lands and waters is nothing more than an ‘import more oil’ policy. Energy demand will continue to rise—especially as the economy recovers—and we can choose to produce that energy here in the United States or rely on foreign countries hostile to American interests,” American Petroleum Institute (API) President and CEO Mike Sommers said.
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“We stand ready to engage with the Biden administration on ways to address America’s energy challenges, but impeding American energy will only serve to hurt local communities and hamper America’s economic recovery,” Sommers noted. The biggest U.S. oil producers operating on federal land have years’ worth of drilling permits and don’t expect much to change in the short to medium term. The small independent shale drillers, however, especially those that have a large part of their operations coming from federal lands, are concerned, and some think that the U.S. Administration banning new federal lease sales could pose an “existential threat” to their companies. Some states could also be much more impacted than others—in New Mexico, for example, 65 percent of the state’s oil and gas production takes place on federal land. Source: Oilprice.com

Libya: Construction Of 164MW Gas-Fired Power Plant Begins

Libya’s state-owned power company – General Electricity Company of Libya (GECOL) – has kick-started construction of a new 164MW gas-fired power plant. According to Africa Oil & Power, the project which is located in Zliten, will comprise four, 41MW turbines. The project is estimated to cost $134 million and would be completed within five months. GECOL has received full approval from the Audit Bureau for the construction of the plant, as well as completed contracting procedures for a second, 170 MW plant, according to Ibrahim Falah, Executive Director of GECOL. In an effort to stabilize the national grid, GECOL announced earlier this month that its technical teams had installed and began operation of two power distribution substations with a capacity of 500 KV. Source: www.energynewsafrica.com

Zambia: ZESCO Excited Over 23 Years’ Jail Term For Three Vandals

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Zambia’s electricity company, ZESCO Limited, has hailed the prosecution and sentencing of three persons for vandalising the company’s property with a total of K 57,230.13(U.S $2,679.47) Kennedy Mubili and Gilbert Zulu were apprehended during an operation by ZESCO security team, when they were found vandalising ZESCO copper cables at substation 371 in Chinika industrial area in Lusaka. The other suspect, Abel Edson Njobvu, was arrested on May 8, 2020, while vandalising cables at Old Independence substation, resulting in power outage in East Matero. The three accused persons were, on Wednesday, January 13, 2021, found guilty by a Zambian court for the offence of vandalism, and consequently, sentenced Mobuli and Zulu to 13 years’ imprisonment in hard labour while Abel Edson Njobvu was jailed 10 years in hard labour.
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In a statement signed by Hazel M. Zulu(Mrs), Public Relations Manager of ZESCO, it said “As a corporation, we are elated with the conviction and sentencing of the three because we are confident that it will act as deterrent to would be offenders. We have repeatedly warned that vandalism is serious criminal offence under the Laws of Zambia, and if convicted, one can be imprisoned for over 10 years.” ZESCO assured the public that it remain committed to ensuring that it make it easy for people to live a better life saying we continue to work vigorously with other stakeholders to ensure that we bring vile acts to a halt,” “We further encourage members of the community to guard public property jealously and report any suspicious acts around ZESCO installations to ZESCO security or the Zambian Police Service as SCU vices are retrogressive to the action. “In 2020, ZESCO lost in excess of K5million kwacha (U.S $234,095.76) due to vandalism of its installation,” the company said. Source: www.energynewsafrica.com

Rising Crude Prices Will Continue-Dr. Agunbiade

The rising crude oil prices on the international market will continue for a longer period this year, an oil and gas expert with years of experience has said, citing a number of factors. Dr. Babajide Agunbiade, who is a Director at National Oilwell Varco, an American Oil and Gas drilling and production operations conglomerate based in Houston, Texas, cited the rolling out of COVID-19 vaccines, saying as they are being rolled out, people would become immune to the virus and this, he argued would lead to a reduction on the lockdowns which would cause business activities to resume and thereby creating demands for refined petroleum products. “This will increase demands which will invariably continue to sustain the increment in the oil price,” he posited. Another factor which Dr. Agunbiade cited is the falling US dollar on the back of global economic recovery and continued stimulus spending in the US as announced by The US Federal Reserves are bullish for oil prices, and would help favour the rise in oil prices this year. “Also, with the cartel – OPEC+, resuming its traditional role of setting crude prices for the world, Saudi Arabia withdrawing another one million BOPD, there is all likeliness for a sustained oil price this year,” he added. Dr. Agunbiade, who was responding to questions posed by energynewsafrica.com also, touched on what has been driving the rise in crude oil prices. Below is the questionnaire and response: What is the possible driver for the rise in crude oil prices in the beginning of 2021? Demand is Returning In spite that demand for petroleum product has been limited by the current lockdowns, the trend is higher i.e., there have been a strong move higher in the key crude oil benchmarks – WTI and Brent, in the last several months. This was initiated by the advent of positive news on the Covid front that the vaccines in development were extremely efficacious, promising an endpoint to the spread of the virus. This has led to business activity resuming and thereby creating demands for refined petroleum products causing a rise in crude oil price in the beginning of 2021. The Political and Macro Environment Push Supplies Lower There are effects that comes with election. The Democrats having a concentration of power by controlling all three branches of government in the next couple of years, is causing a gradual decline in U.S. shale production and inventories resulting in boosting an uptrend in crude. Other key driver for the recent increase in oil prices has been the deal to slowly cut the OPEC production cap in the first quarter instead of a hard 2 million barrels a day. OPEC+ agreed to raise oil supply by 500,000 barrels a day in the next month, well below the 2 million barrels mark. Also, the increase is due to Saudi Arabia ‘gift’ to remove another 1-million BOPD from the market. Saudi Arabia is known as one of the world top three crude oil produces and its unchallenged place as the lowest-cost producer in the world. Oil prices is bullish as the role for swing producer has been resumed by OPEC+. Commodity Prices will Boom Crude Oil is the number one commodity that matters to the world economy the most. Other than the scarcity that drives the price of crude oil, the fact that its priced in dollars also makes it susceptible to inflationary pressures. The dollar index has declined over the last year but has recently seen support with a weeklong trend higher which has caused bullish in oil. Oil prices is bullish with a stronger dollar because you get less oil for the dollar, which means to get an equal amount, you need to spend more dollar. Are we likely to see this rise in oil prices sustained for a longer period this year? According to the above drivers that have led to an increase in the price of Oil, there is a strong likeliness of a sustained oil price this year. Firstly, as the COVID-19 vaccines are been rolled out, people become immune to the virus thereby a reduction on the lockdowns which will cause business activities to resume and thereby creating demands for refined petroleum products. This will increase demands which will invariably continue to sustain the increment in the oil price. A falling US Dollar on the back of global economic recovery & continued stimulus spending in the US as announced by The US Federal Reserve are bullish for oil prices, and will help favor the rise in oil prices this year. Also, with the cartel – OPEC+, resuming its traditional role of setting crude prices for the world, Saudi Arabia withdrawing another 1-million BOPD, there is all likeliness for a sustained oil price this year. Source: www.energynewsafrica.com

Ghana: MiDA Commences Work To Upgrade ECG’s Low Voltage Network In Kwabenya, Complete Other Projects

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The Millennium Development Authority (MiDA), the implementing agency for Ghana’s Power Compact II, has signed a contract for the commencement of works to upgrade the Southern power distribution company, Electricity Company of Ghana’s (ECG) low voltage (LV) network in the Kwabenya District in Greater Accra Region. The project, when completed by end of the August 2021 deadline, will see the provision of electricity supply and a reduction in power outages to residents and businesses in the Kwabenya District. A statement issued by the Authority said similar works in the Achimota and Akuapim Mampong Districts in the Eastern part of the country have since been completed, while those in the Dansoman and Kaneshie Districts are set to be completed in March this year.
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“The work on the Kwabenya District is expected to be completed by the end of August 2021. The LV network improvement project, referred to as the LV Bifurcation Project, involves installing 350 new and higher capacity transformers, upgrading 1,000km of conductors, and also erecting over 16,000 wooden transmission poles across the five named ECG districts to enhance electricity delivery in the beneficiary areas,” the statement said. MiDA said an estimated 397,950 customers in the five ECG districts, namely; Kaneshie, Dansoman, Achimota, Akuapim Mampong and Kwabenya would directly benefit from the project with funds provided by the Millennium Challenge Corporation of the USA. Roland Osei Nyarko, the LV Bifurcation Project Manager at MiDA, explained that “besides improving general access to electricity and enhancing the quality of power supply, the interventions will also strengthen and support the operating environment for micro, small and medium-sized enterprises. “This will ultimately contribute to improved incomes, enhance job opportunities and sustain poverty reduction,” he added. Source: www.energynewsafrica.com

Nigeria: Federal Gov’t Will Require $4bn To Provide Clean Energy Annually –Jedy-Agba

Nigeria will require $4 billion yearly to provide its citizens with universal access to sustainable, clean and renewable energy, the country’s Minister of State in-charge of Power, Mr Goddy Jedy-Agba, has said. Jedy-Agba is quoted as saying this at a virtual global power sector players’ conference which was presided over by the United Nations Secretary General, Antonio Guterres. According to him, the Federal Government was desirous of ensuring that there is adequate supply of electricity to consumers through the provision of off-grid electricity. “Our ambition is demonstrated by the recent removal of the fuel subsidy in Nigeria which now makes the off-grid sector more competitive, as well as the five million solar connections programme which was included in the COVID-19 recovery strategy and the Economic Sustainability Plan (ESP),” he said. While urging global partners to support the programme, the Minister stressed that Nigeria was taking steps to merge its energy access and energy transition plan as the largest population without electricity globally resides within its borders.
COVID-19: How Nigeria Can Use Renewable Energy To Kick Start Post-Pandemic Economy – MD, Lumos Nigeria
He argued that it was important to give access to the country’s 85 million people without electricity, using renewable sources so as to maintain Nigeria and indeed Africa’s low contribution to carbon emission. Mr Jedy-Agba declared that financing had been a major constraint, saying the present administration had identified areas of conflicts including accountability, transparency and technical capacity and had gone ahead to address these challenges. “Clean and renewable energy is the way to go for a sustained power sector reforms in the country to hand over a prestigious legacy in the power sector for successive governments,” he stated. Source: www.energynewsafrica.com

Ghana: Push For Nuclear Power In Ghana Is Wasteful And Ill-Adviced-IES Analysis

The Institute for Energy Security (IES) has noted with concern government’s plan to switch its energy base-load— the permanent minimum load that a power supply system is required to deliver— from the Akosombo and Kpong hydropower systems to nuclear. The government is seeking to introduce nuclear into the country’s energy mix, at a time when many countries around the world including Germany, Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Greece, and Italy; have either shutdown, or are in the process of pulling the plugs off nuclear plants because of complicated relationships with nuclear power. The institute sees the push for nuclear power as backward, given that times have changed to favor solar and wind energies, instead of nuclear power, based on economics, safety and security risks, and investment hurdles. Government argues that the establishment of a nuclear plant will guarantee the provision of regular and cheap power to push the nation’s industrialization agenda. However, the IES finds government’s claim as flawed, and does not reflect recent changes in the global power space. IES’ analysis based on time to build, costs per kilowatt-hour, investment uptake and risk in relation to renewable sources of energy, finds that nuclear energy— once thought of as the primary answer to the world’s renewable energy drive, is today presenting itself as unfavorable in comparison to solar and wind alternatives. Data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) and financial advisory and asset management firm Lazard, have revealed that generating electricity from wind and solar is more economical than nuclear. Trend analysis based on Lazard’s Levelized Cost of Energy (LCOE) between 2010 and 2019 has shown that new unsubsidized wind and solar power are cheaper than some already running resources like coal, nuclear, and some gas. For instance, Lazard’s data shows an unsubsidized utility scale solar power plant generating electricity at a cost between 3.6 and 4.4 cents per kilowatt-hour (¢/kWh), with mean value of 4.0 ¢/kWh. Meanwhile, nuclear can generate unsubsidized power at rates between 11.8 and 19.2 cents per kilowatt-hour (¢/kWh), with mean value of 15.5 ¢/kWh, according to Lazard. Between 2010 and 2019, the cost per megawatt-hour of nuclear has risen by 61 percent, while utility scale solar power has fallen by approximately 84 between same periods. The dramatic historical LCOE decline of utility-scale solar PV and wind is in light of material declines in the pricing of system components (turbines, panels, inverters, etc.) and improvements in efficiency, among other factors.
Ghana: Gov’t Hopes To Generate One Gigawatt Nuclear Power By 2030 (Video)
The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) defines LCOE as the average revenue per unit of electricity generated that would be required to recover the costs of building and operating a generating plant over its assumed lifetime. LCOE is often cited as a convenient summary measure of the overall competiveness of different generating technologies. Key inputs to calculating LCOE include capital costs, fuel costs, fixed and variable operations and maintenance (O&M) costs. One other concern about renewables had been the variable nature of these energy resources, particular wind and solar. However, research have proven that it is feasible today, to have an all-renewable electric grid. The bit about renewable energy’s intermittency and dispatchability have long been solved, with the introduction of diverse forms of energy storage such as batteries, pump storages, and chemical technologies like hydrogen. As a result, wind and solar have become highly dispatchable with storage, making it a baseload source of energy. In terms of time taken to build the two different facilities, Lazard finds that utility-scale solar takes nearly 9 months to complete, while nuclear may take nearly 69 months to construct. This means, when deciding to build solar versus nuclear power facility, a developer can bring online solar power in substantially less time and at much lower cost than a single nuclear project. The construction delays are a big factor behind the rising cost of nuclear. The 2017 World Nuclear Industry Status Report had it that of the 53 reactors under construction in mid-2017, 37 were behind schedule. That 8 of those projects had been in progress for a decade or more, and 3 of those have been under construction for more than 30 years. The other key factor boil down to safety and security of nuclear facilities. The nuclear industry has been shaped in many ways by its plants accidents, in terms of both cost and casualties. Serious nuclear power plants accidents including the 1986 catastrophic Chernobyl power station explosion in Ukraine, the 2011 Fukushima Daiichi plant disaster in Japan, and the SL-1 accident in 1961, have cast a shadow over the sector. Apart from these major incidents, there have been several life-threatening incidents recorded from numerous nuclear plants and facilities across the globe. Additionally, the hurdles to investment in new nuclear projects in even advanced economies are daunting. Securing investment in new nuclear plants now require more intrusive policy intervention given the very high cost of projects and unfavourable recent experiences in some countries. In summary, nuclear is expensive, takes too long a time to build, risky, and faces investment hurdles; compared to solar and wind power. Therefore, if the idea is about looking for power sources that offers a good opportunity to lower the cost of power for purpose of industrialization, then the choice of nuclear is wasteful and wrongly adviced. More to the point, a comprehensive modelling of Ghana’s energy sources would reveal that it can satisfy Ghana’s electricity demands throughout the year with just a combination of renewables, hydropower, and battery storages. Research Analysts: Fritz Moses, Elizabeth Sam, & Abisola Ganiyu

Ghana: Energy Ministry Loses Departmental Head To Covid-19

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Ghana’s Ministry of Energy has lost one of its former departmental heads to the deadly coronavirus. Mr. Kwesi Twum was the Head of Health, Safety, Security and Environment at the Ministry of Energy. Sources within the Ministry told this portal that his contract with the sector ended sometime last year but was not renewed and, thus, went home. Details of his death are sketchy but a source close to him confirmed that the late Mr. Twum died of covid-19.
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Source: www.energynewsafrica.com

Ghana: Confirmed: Dr. Matthew Opoku Prempeh Appointed Energy Minister Designate

A former Minister for Education in the Republic of Ghana, Dr. Matthew Opoku Prempeh, has been appointed as the Minister designate for Energy. He was named among the list of Ministers appointed by President Nana Akufo-Addo and submitted to the country’s Parliament on Thursday, January 21, 2021. Prior to his appointment, there were speculations in the media that the former Education Minister, who is the Member of Parliament for South Manhyia in the Ashanti Region, would be swapping positions with Mr. John-Peter Amewu, a former Energy Minister in the first term of President Akufo-Addo. Earlier today, Thursday, a statement issued by the Director of Communications at the Presidency, Eugene Arhin indicated that President Akufo-Addo had appointed a new Energy Minister and deputies, one of whom would be an indigene of the Western Region, the oil hub of the West African nation to head the Energy Ministry . Opoku Prempeh hails from Pakyi No. 2 in the Ashanti Region. He is a Medical Doctor and holds MB CHB (KNUST), MSc (Clinical Epidemiology), Netherlands Institute for Health Science in 1994 and 1998 respectively and furthered to do a post graduate training in surgery in the UK (MRCS) in 2002. Opoku Prempeh became a Member of Parliament in 2008 for South Manhyia, then known as the Manhyia Constituency. Source: www.energynewsafrica.com

Ghana Is On Course Towards Clean Energy-Mr Amewu

Ghana is on course for energy transition to clean energy sources including Renewable Energy, the country’s Acting Minister for Energy and Member of Parliament for Hohoe Constituency in the Volta Region, John-Peter Amewu, has said. The West African nation has developed a Renewable Energy Master Plan and hopes to increase the penetration of the renewable energy sources mainly from solar, wind, waste to energy into the energy mix by 10 percent by 2030. This would be in line with the country’s commitment towards Paris Agreement on Climate Change. Currently, renewable energy, mainly from hydro power, accounts for 38 percent of the electricity generation mix. Apart from this, there are other renewable energy plants, mainly solar, such as the VRA’s 2.5MWp solar park in Navrongo in the Upper East Region, VRA’s 6.4 MWp in Lawra in the Upper West, the ongoing VRA’s 13.5 MWp solar in Kaleo, Bui Power Authority’s 250MWp, 20MWp BXC Solar farm at Gomoa Onyadzi (near Winneba), 20MW Minergy solar farm Winneba, 100kW Safisana Waste-to-Energy Power Plant at Ashaiman and 45KW Alavanyo Tsatsadu Mini Hydro Power Plant in the Hohoe District. Delivering a speech at the Eleventh IRENA Assembly, which is being held virtually under the theme: ‘Covid-19-Energy Transition’, Mr Peter Amewu said: “Our policy is to transition from oil-based fuels to gas and renewable in the short-to medium-term.” He said based on this, the government, in 2020, amended the Renewable Energy Act to provide the legal backing and also create the enabling environment for scaling up renewable energy application in the country. He said one of the key provisions in the Renewable Energy Amendment was the introduction of Competitive Procurement of power plants including Renewable Energy. “The Renewable Energy amended Act also encourages small scale self-generation and net metering on roof tops. Accordingly, we have commenced the integration of solar in government buildings to reduce the finance burden on the government in paying of utility bills,” he said. According to Mr. Amewu, the Amended Act also mandates fossil fuel based wholesale electricity suppliers, fossil fuel producers and other companies that contribute to greenhouse gas emissions to complement the global effort of climate mitigation by contributing to finance RE programmes partially for off-grid and mini grid electrification. “Renewable Energy has a key role to play to energizing health care in off grid communities in the mist of the Covid 19 pandemic,” he concluded. Source:www.energynewsafrica.com

Ghana Nominated As Vice Chair Of Eleventh IRENA Assembly

Ghana has been nominated for the position of the Vice President for the 11th International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) Assembly which is being held virtually. The West African nation was nominated alongside Costa Rica, India and Albania. In a letter written by H.E Ms. Teresa Ribera, President Designate to Mr John-Peter Amewu, a caretaker Minister for Energy, Republic of Ghana, it said: “At IRENA’s tent session in January 2020, the IRENA Assembly designated Ghana as Vice President of the eleventh session of the IRENA Assembly scheduled between 18the and 21st January, 2021.” The letter congratulated Mr John-Peter Amewu and welcomed him as the member of the 2021 Bureau of the Assembly. This year’s eleventh Assembly is under the theme: ‘COVID-19-Energy Transition’. The IRENA Assembly offers platform for members to share their experiences on the road towards a sustainable, resilient and climate safe recovery. In his acceptance speech, Mr John –Peter Amewu expressed gratitude of Ghana to IRENA for the nomination. “Ghana is grateful to the Assembly for endorsing her nomination as Vice President of the Assembly. I look forward to working with the President, Spain and my colleagues Vice Presidents from Albania, Costa Rica and India,” Mr Peter Amewu said. Source.www.energynewsafrica.com