LPG Tanker Explosion Kills Crew Member In Turkey
One crew member has reportedly died while fifteen others have been injured in an LNG tanker explosion at the port of Aliaga, Turkey.
At the time of the incident, the Italy-flagged tanker Syn Zania was anchored at the Petkim petrochemical plant operated by the Azerbaijani state oil company SOCAR, media outlets cited Aliaga province’s sub-Governor Erhan Gunay as saying.
He added that a Petkim worker was also hospitalized due to injuries sustained following the explosion that occurred in the evening hours of June 1 at Petkim Pier 5.
In a statement on the matter, Petkim said that a fire “broke out due to an unspecified reason during the connection to the Italian flagged Syn Zania for the filling of liquid hydrocarbons.”
The fire was soon extinguished and teams at the site continued cooling works.
Relevant authorities launched an investigation into the incident, while SOCAR informed that the operations at the petrochemical plant in Turkey’s western Izmir province continued.
Africa Oil Joins Azinam In Orange Basin
Azinam and Africa Oil Corp. have entered into an agreement under which Africa Oil will join Azinam offshore South Africa. Africa Oil will acquire a 20% participating interest in Block 3B/4B in the Orange Basin.
The acquisition is subject to customary regulatory consents, following which Africa Oil will become the operator of Block 3B/4B.
Azinam will retain a 20% participating interest post completion. License partner Ricocure (Pty) Ltd.’s participating interest shall remain unchanged at 60%.
Block 3B/4B is located in the Deep Western Mid-Orange Basin South Africa, extending from circa 120 to 250 km offshore. The block covers an area of 17,581 sq km and lies in water depths ranging from 300 to 2,500 meters.
Block 3B/4B sits at the center of an exciting emerging play which is being explored by a number of international oil & gas companies.
The block contains play types and prospects similar to those being targeted by majors in adjacent blocks.
During the Initial License Period of three years Azinam, Africa Oil and Ricocure shall carry out a regional subsurface review of existing seismic, geological and engineering data and may reprocess parts of the existing 3D data in order to high-grade the exploration prospects on the Block.
Source: petroleumafrica.com
Two Die In Lagos Pipeline Explosion
At least two people were killed after a pipeline fire outbreak in Lagos, Nigeria on Thursday morning.
A spokesman for the Lagos state emergency management agency said oil bunkering activities caused the incident in the Ijegun area.
“But it is pertinent to know that we are able to rescue 12 people alive, four are now at LASUTH (Lagos State University Teaching Hospital) receiving treatment and eight are being taken to the burns unit at Gbagada.
But it is pathetic to know that in our preliminary investigation, we gathered that we have two mortalities but the operation is still ongoing and by the time we finish the operation we will be able to give you the comprehensive report”, said Lagos State Emergency Management Agency official, Olufemi Oke-Osanyintolu.
An eyewitness recounts the chilling incident.
“That point you see burning now, it is the actual point where the operation happened so that’s why you are seeing this fire, it is not just caused by an ordinary person, it is just caused by these bad guys so it pass through this gutter down to the canal. So the fire, you can go there and see by yourself. You can see all the whole shop along the gutter where the product has passed through all of them got burnt even people got burnt. Some are in the hospital now. People who residents are living inside about four (inaudible) away from here”, Jude Odiah said.
Lagos state firefighters were at hand to quench the inferno. These incidents occur relatively in one of Africa’s largest oil exporter.
While fuel is cheap, many live in extreme poverty in Africa’s most populous nation.
On Tuesday, July 2, more than 50 people were killed when a fuel truck spillage in the southeast of Nigeria caught fire.
Source: Reuters
Ghana: We Have Sufficient Fuel To Keep Our Lights On-GRIDCo
Ghana’s power transmission company, Ghana Grid Company (GRIDCo), has explained that the West African country has sufficient fuel to keep its generation plants working, hence there is not going to be power crisis.
According to GRIDCo, the country experienced power crisis in the past because of non-availability of fuel to keep the power plants running.
Speaking in an interview with energynewsafrica.com, Director of Systems Operation at GRIDCo, Mark Baah said due to the arrangement government has put in place, there is fuel to power the generators.
“The main cause of the past erratic power supply, christened ‘dumsor’, was as a result of unavailability of crude oil or gas, but there’s abundant gas now to fuel our thermal plants to generate power. And so, we have no problem in that regard,” he explained.
He added that “we are looking forward to implementing our arrangements in the long term in order to avert any situation of erratic power supply.”
According to him, some of the plants, like Karpower and Aksa, run on heavy fuel oil and “we are reliably informed that there’s enough fuel to power them.
“Others, like the Asogli Kpone Thermal and VRA plant in Tema and Aboadze, run on gas and we generate gas from here (Ghana) and import some from Nigeria, thus, the generators that operate on this fuel are very efficient. As I speak to you now, we have no challenges with fuel.
“I want to assure Ghanaians that, we will continue to give them constant and regular power supply,” he ended.
Aker BP Ready To Drill Norwegian Sea Well
Norway’s Petroleum Safety Authority (PSA) has given its consent to Aker BP to drill an exploration well in the Norwegian Sea, using the Deepsea Stavanger drilling rig.
The consent applies for drilling of the exploration well 6608/6-1 – named Vågar – in production license 762 in the Norwegian Sea.
Aker BP is the operator of this license with an ownership interest of 20 percent. Other licensees are Equinor, with a 60 percent, and Petoro, with a 20 percent interest.
Aker BP has already secured a drilling permit for this well from the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate (NPD).
The drilling location is around 100 kilometers north-east of the Skarv field and 170 kilometers south-west of Røstøyan.
According to the safety watchdog’s statement on Thursday, the drilling of the well is scheduled to start in the third quarter of 2019 and drilling operations are expected to last 27 days.
This is the first exploration well to be drilled in the license. Water depth at the site is 288 meters.
The well will be drilled by Deepsea Stavanger which is a semi-submersible mobile drilling rig of the GVA 7500 type, built in South Korea in 2010. It is owned and operated by Odfjell Drilling.
The PSA issued Deepsea Stavanger with an Acknowledgement of Compliance (AoC) on March 16, 2017.
Maintaining Safe And Reliable Energy Infrastructure: A National Security Concern
In March 2019, and at the height of one of the most recent power outages across the country, news broke that one of the transmission towers near the Head office of Ghana Grid Company (GRIDCo) at Tema has fallen over onto another tower, leading to the loss of 180 megawatts of power; creating power outages in parts of Tema, Accra, Kasoa and Kumasi. Officials of the state utility discovered that the bolts holding the pylon had been loosened causing it to fall over, concluding that it was an act of vandalism and not an attempted theft.
When the Minister of Energy Mr. John Peter Amewu later had the opportunity to tour the tracks, he also concluded that it was an act of sabotage by some unscrupulous individuals to thwart the efforts of the government in ensuring uninterrupted power supply. The minister also alleged that the act was possibly to score some political points by making the government unpopular.
Following this incident and within a space of two weeks, there was a reported arsonist attack on pipelines which belonged to Cirrus Oil Services, a private oil company at the Tema energy enclave. The report was that a suspected person had parked used car tyres on the pipelines and set them ablaze.
Although the pipelines were not in use at the time because they were newly constructed and undergoing a leak test with water in the lines, the development raised a lot of concerns at the time because they were initially thought to be conveying gas and connected to one of the generating plants within the Tema enclave.
But while there has been past attacks on energy infrastructures, these two incidents amplifies the vulnerability of Ghana’s energy infrastructures to deliberate physical attacks. It brings to the fore the need to urgently protect these assets from the many potential threats which includes malicious vandalism and theft of essential equipment belonging to the power and oil sectors of the energy industry.
Due to the greater risk of accidents that could result in loss of life, significant environmental harm, and/or disruption to the reliability and continuity of energy systems, maintaining safe and reliable energy infrastructure is a matter of national security. It is a national security issue also because of the central role these facilities occupy in the socio-economic development of the country. Again, it remains a national security concern because these illegal activities are sometimes perpetuated by criminal minds to intimidate and coerce policy changes.
Widespread Issue
Attacks on energy sector assets have become increasingly coordinated and prevalent in all regions around the globe. The threats to these vulnerable assets are quite significant and they are occurring with increasing frequency, and complicated by their remote and dispersed locations.
In the power sector for example, equipment like distribution transformers are being vandalized for their copper windings, oil, bolts and nuts. Transmission towers also come under attack for their members (angle irons) and bolts and nuts. Some of the clean transformer oil, aluminum and copper conductors, angle irons, bolts and nuts finds their way into the open market for purposes of cooking, and for smelting (door handles, caskets, three-legged pots etc.) and fabrication works.
Within the oil and gas sectors, illegal tapping of pipelines and bunkering are familiar acts of stealing petroleum by hacking into the systems and syphoning off oil and gas, and on most occasions causing spillage and compromising transmission systems.
Poor infrastructure, unemployment, and greed have been identified as some of the factors that influence people to attack energy infrastructures. Another reason has been linked to lack of trust between oil companies and host communities. Some acts of vandalism occur as a prank, while other persons vandalize to vent anger, frustration or anxiety without personal confrontation.
Nigeria, Mexico, Iraq, Russia and Indonesia are listed as the top five countries most plagued by oil theft, with close to 75% of the stolen oil finding its way into the international oil market, with the rest being refined at “artisanal refineries”. In Nigeria, it is reported that some unscrupulous Niger Delta indigenes and foreigners collaborate to carry out the illegal activities mostly during the night at oil terminals, pipelines and wellheads.
Cost
The socio-economic and environmental impacts of theft and vandalism on energy systems could be huge, not to mention the negative impact it could have on business reputation and the potential damage to stakeholder confidence and value.
The attacks poses a greater risk of accidents that results in human fatalities, and significant environmental harm through pollution and fire. They lead to financial losses, and sometimes disruption to the reliability and continuity of energy systems. Leaks in pipeline systems could result in loss of corporate reputation, and also may in some cases lead to prosecution under environmental legislation. Other concerns is that the repeated attacks on the assets often impedes the expansion of energy systems, loss of economic activities for local communities, and loss of revenue to government; resulting in the reduction of funding for development initiatives.
In Nigeria for example, vandalism of pipelines has become a major issue for the state to fight on daily basis. For an economy that is heavily reliant on petroleum revenue, any form of attack on its pipelines come with a great socio-economic effect.
A recent publication by “World Pipeline” magazine shows that the Niger Delta which holds 95% of Nigeria’s oil reserves, accounts for over 90% of the region’s export and foreign exchange earnings, with the total Nigeria revenue being over 70% of this. The report continue that, in the area of the Niger Delta, oil theft has grown to such a degree that Nigeria is at present losing over 800,000 barrels per day (bpd) of crude oil, with this situation reflecting in Nigeria’s oil production decline from 2.2 million bpd to 1.4 million bpd between 2016 and 2017.
According to Shell Nigeria, 90% of its pipeline leaks are as a result of illegal activities. It reports that the number of sabotage-related spills is reported to have increased to 111 in 2018 compared to 62 in 2017, and that since 2012 the company has removed more than 1,160 illegal theft points. Some of the spillage recorded caused destruction to farms and lands, directly reducing the area of arable land. Pollution of water courses, as well as flora and fauna affected marine, aquatic life and water sources.
Copper theft is also impacting negatively on the bottom line of power utilities, and having a devastating effect on the South African economy. According to the South Africa Chamber of Commerce and Industry’s (SACCI’s) “copper theft barometer”, the stealing of copper cost the economy between $415 million and $581 million per year. The South Africa power company Eskom is reported as spending roughly $166 million a year to replace stolen copper cables. The stealing of cables have also been blamed for the several deaths due to electric shocks and burns arising from engineers carrying out repair works on vandalized sub-stations and copper cables.
Fighting the Menace
The fight against energy infrastructure theft and vandalism is being addressed seriously from diverse angles by state authorities, energy firms, and the public as a whole.
In South Africa for instance, the fight against infrastructure theft is being dealt with through intelligence-driven investigations. While industry players coordinate to fight the menace, the courts are also handing out significant sentences to perpetrators. Eskom is substituting copper conductors with aluminum, embossing unique markings on all aluminum conductors, replacing all normal bolts on pylons with anti-theft bolts, engraving support lattices on steel pylons with Eskom’s name on the steel. The power utility is also installing alarms on overhead lines so that if the line is cut or tampered with, the alarm triggered in the control room and the reaction unit is immediately dispatched to the location.
Shell Nigeria is partnering local communities to effectively patrol pipelines’ rights-of-way through direct surveillance and Global Memorandum of Understanding (GMoU) surveillance, proactively engaging government security agencies to prevent crude theft and vandalism. Shell is also undertaking awareness campaigns to educate community members, surveillance contractors and general public of the requirements of a 1990 Pipeline Act which prohibits any third-party activities 100ft from existing oil and gas right-of-way.
In the U.S. and Canada, security standards have been framed to help protect public safety, the environment and critical infrastructure from acts of vandalism and sabotage. The standards have been designed as a tool for producers to evaluate site security, introduce security solutions, and execute security incident management solutions as well as effective emergency response programs.
The oil giant BP, is among the list of companies using unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) technology or drones for the purposes of monitoring and mapping infrastructure such as pipelines and electric transmission lines. The drones enables the companies to get a view without having to send crews out on foot. Aside from the convenience and time-savings, UAVs takes care of safety issues; for instance where terrain is dangerous, around water crossings or where wildlife is prevalent.
Ghana could learn from these and many other tried and tested examples to fight the menace which remains as a national security challenge, due to the pivotal role of energy in the socio-economic development of the country.
Written by Paa Kwasi Anamua Sakyi, Institute for Energy Security ©2019
The writer has over 22 years of experience in the technical and management areas of Oil and Gas Management, Banking and Finance, and Mechanical Engineering; working in both the Gold Mining and Oil sector. He is currently working as an Oil Trader, Consultant, and Policy Analyst in the global energy sector. He serves as a resource to many global energy research firms, including Argus Media.
African Energy Chamber’s Investment Push In China Attracts Biggest Players
A roadshow organized by the Africa Energy Chamber in Beijing in the Republic China for the upcoming licensing bid round in Equatorial Guinea attracted the biggest Chinese energy companies participating in the show.
The roadshow in Beijing was aimed at showcasing the 27 oil & gas blocks on offer under the country’s 2019 oil & gas licensing round, and is promoting the high-potential that Equatorial Guinea has in minerals such as gold, diamond, base metals, bauxite and iron ore.
The winners would be announced during the upcoming GECF’s 5th Gas Forum in Malabo on November 27th, 2019.
This is the first investment roadshow organized by the Chamber in China, as it pursues its strategy of channeling Africa’s global outreach to energy investors and stakeholders worldwide.
“It has confirmed the appetite of Chinese companies for Africa, with the biggest public and private sector companies responding to the Chamber’s call to explore investment opportunities in Equatorial Guinea, including PowerChina, Sinohydro, Sinopec, Sinochem, Zhenhua Oil, CNOOC, CMEC, China Minmetals, Shenergy Group and CPP among others,” a statement issued by the African Energy Chamber and copied to energynewsafrica.com said.
“This two-day roadshow is a demonstration of what the Chamber can accomplish for African governments and private stakeholders. Our resources and reach have grown tremendously over the past few years and enabled us to position ourselves as a pillar of Africa’s global investment outreach. I am looking forward to seeing more deals being signed soon,” declared NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman at the Chamber and CEO of the Centurion Law Group.
“We thank the Government of China, the Chinese energy sector for putting their trust and funding in the Chamber to organize this very successful roadshow, which is the first of many more we will be organizing in the future in China.
“The pro-activeness of the Ministry of Mines and Hydrocarbons to reach out to global investors is a winning strategy that should be followed by many others amidst such competitive market conditions.
“The Chamber would always be ready to support African governments and companies seeking to attract investors and build successful industries at home that promote local content, job creation and prosperity,” said Mickael Vogel, Director of Strategy at the Chamber.
“The Chamber’s future roadshows will be taking us back to Beijing but also to global energy centers such as Singapore, Moscow, Dubai, London and Houston. Africa is the last true global energy frontier and the time to engage with investors is now.”






ExxonMobil Opens Office In Ghana
US oil and gas giant, ExxonMobil has opened its new office in Accra, Ghana to progress offshore exploration programs.
ExxonMobil Exploration & Production Ghana (Deepwater) Limited acquired rights in the West African country, in 2018 to explore the ultra-deepwater block Deepwater Cape Three Points. The petroleum agreement was ratified in April 2019.
ExxonMobil plans to begin 3-D seismic acquisition later this year. Once the seismic program has been completed, together with partners Ghana National Petroleum Commission (GNPC) and GOIL Offshore Limited, the company will evaluate the potential for drilling its first exploration well in the country.
“This office will help us progress our exploration program in Ghana,” said Pam Darwin, vice president of sub-Saharan Africa exploration and new ventures at ExxonMobil. “We look forward to working closely with our partners and the government to bring value to the Ghanaian people through our business and community involvement.”
“We appreciate the support we have received from all of our stakeholders in Ghana, particularly from Energy Minister John Peter Amewu and his team,” Darwin added.
The Deepwater Cape Three Points block, located 57 miles (92 kilometres) off the coast of Ghana. It measures approximately 366,000 acres (1,482 square kilometres) in water depths ranging from 5,085 feet to 9,350 feet (1,550 meters to 2,850 meters).
ExxonMobil holds 80 percent interest in the Deepwater Cape Three Point block while Ghana National Petroleum Corporation holds 15 percent with GOIL Offshore Limited holding the remaining 5 percent.










Nigeria Oil Tanker Explosion Kills At Least 50 People
At least 50 people were reported dead, and 101 others seriously injured after they rushed to scoop fuel from an overturned tanker, which exploded in central Nigeria, officials said Tuesday.
The incident happened on Monday afternoon after a fuel tanker trying to avoid a pothole overturned and fell off the road in Ahumbe village in Benue State, according to Baba Aliyu, who works with Nigeria’s road safety commission.
The death toll could rise as many of the injured were in a critical state, Benue State government spokesman Terver Akase told CNN.
Nearby shops were also burnt down in the explosion after fuel from the crash spilled on them, officials said.
Fuel tanker accidents are frequent in Nigeria, an oil-producing nation, where crude supplies are often transported by road.
Nearly 10 people died when an oil tanker exploded in Lagos city last June. More than 60 people were killed in another tanker accident in Anambra state in 2015
Nigeria Needs N36 Trillion for Power Supply
Electricity Distribution Companies (Discos) in Nigeria, have revealed that it will take not less than N36 trillion to ensure a stable power supply in the country. The Discos said the investments will be needed over a period of 20 years.
The Discos disclosed that the investments will include N3.6 trillion in distribution networks over the next five years.
The entire power supply value chain of the Discos, according to them, will also take about N14.4 trillion over the next two decades.
According to a November 2018 edition of the Monthly Business Expectations Survey Report of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), insufficient power supply is the most compelling factor that constrains businesses in the West African Nation.
Similarly, research by the World Bank revealed “that power outages and deficient power infrastructure in Sub-Saharan Africa had a measurable negative impact on economic growth over the period of 1995−2007”.
Source: Petroleumafrica.com
Ghana: LPG Marketing Companies Demand Removal Of Taxes On LPG
The LPG Marketing Companies Association in the Republic of Ghana is calling on the government to remove all taxes on the Liquefied Petroleum Gas.
The Association argued that “the product which used to be subsidized has its price build-up been constituted of more than 23% taxes now.”
Government of Ghana through the petroleum downstream regulator, the National Petroleum Authority, is implementing Cylinder Recirculation Model, which is seeking to increase domestic and industrial LPG consumption by at least 50% by 2030.
However, in a statement signed by Justice Adu Mante, secretary of the association, the LPG Marketers Association said considering the saturated market of the product, the only way to increase use is by creating access for new users.
The removal of taxes, the association says, “will significantly bring down the cost of the LPG and make it possible for the ordinary Ghanaian to afford it.”
Below is the full statement
LPG MC
Ghanaian Lawmakers Ask Government To Address Energy Sector Debts
Ghanaian lawmakers have called on the country’s Minister of Finance and the Minister of Energy, to as a matter of urgency, activate the cash waterfall scheme and other prudent measures to address the debt accumulation in the energy sector.
The lawmakers in the West African country further called on the Minister of Finance, Mr Ken Ofori Atta to conduct an audit to determine the level of indebtedness among the State Owned Enterprises (SOEs) in the Energy Sector.
Moreover, the legislators urged the Minister of Finance to consider issuing a new bond to finance the remaining legacy debts in the Energy Sector.
Dr Mark Assibey-Yeboah, Chairman of the Finance Committee whilst presenting a Report of the Finance Committee of Parliament expressed the need to address the growing indebtedness in the sector in order to avert any potential power crisis.
The lawmakers on Tuesday, approved the Annual Report on the management of the energy sector levies and accounts for the year 2018.
The purpose of the Annual Report is to inform Parliament on the Management and use of the funds realized from the imposition of the levies under Act 899.
The Energy Sector Levies Act, 2015 (Act 899) as amended in 2017 (Act 946), was promulgated in 2015 to address the huge burden and operational challenges facing SOEs in the Energy Sector, support power generation and power supply, subsidize premix and stabilized petroleum prices, support road maintenance as well as fund the activities of the Energy Commission.
To achieve these objects, Act 899 imposed a number of levies namely the Energy Debt Recovery Levy (EDRL), Price Stabilization and Recovery Levy (PSRL), Road Fund Levy (RFL), Energy Fund Levy (EFL), Public Lighting Levy and National Electrification Scheme Levy on the prices of petrol, diesel, MGO, fuel oil, kerosene, LPG as well as electricity. The proceeds from the imposition of the levies are to pay off the huge debt in the energy sector, among others.
The lawmakers also found it unacceptable for the Finance Minister’s intervention to suspend the PSRL without due process to Parliament.
Dr Assibey-Yeboah said the measure might be laudable in order to provide some relief for Ghanaians in the face of escalating petroleum prices at the pumps at the time.
The Committee subsequently urged the Minister of Finance to follow due process by coming to Parliament to get any section of the law amended, thereby upholding the rule of law.
Dr Assibey-Yeboah also observed that an amount of GHC3, 190,738,564.82 was collected as levies for the period as against a programmed collection of GHC 3, 507,036,778.77. This resulted in a shortfall in collection of GHC 316, 298,213.98 representing a 9.2 per cent shortfall.
He said at the end of 2018, the Energy Debt Recovery Levy (EDRL), Road Fund Levy and Energy Fund Levy outperformed their targets by 7.9 per cent, 0.72 per cent and 7.29 per cent respectively.
He said the positive performance of the levees was on account of 11.79 per cent increase in consumption volumes in 2018 compared with the same period in 2017.
Mr John Jinapor, Member of Parliament (MP) for Yapei Kusugwu, in his comment expressed concern about the mounting indebtedness in the country’s energy sector.
He urged the government to take careful measures to address the debt accumulation, saying, if nothing is done the sector may collapse.
He said Minister of Energy had no business to suspend the PSRL and that it was the only parliament that had the power to vary a tax or levy.
Mr Anthony Effah, MP for Asikuma-Odoben-Brakwa in his comment on the report stated that the levies collected over the period were properly lodged into the established accounts.
He said the evidence was given by the percentages of the collections of levies that were actually lodged.
He explained that for the utilization of the energy sector levies, a significant portion of the amount went into the ESLA plc for managing the debts of energy sectors SOEs and also provided support for premix and residual fuel.
Source: GNA
ENI & Vitol, First E&P Win Oil Blocks In Ghana
Ghana’s Ministry of Energy has announced winners for oil blocks GH_WB_02 and GH_WB_03 located in the Deepwater Cape Three Points in the Western Basin.
First Exploration and Petroleum Development Company, in partnership with Elandel Energy (Ghana), won block GH_WB_02 while ENI Ghana Exploration and Production Limited, in partnership with Vitol Upstream Tano Limited, emerged winner of block GH_WB_03.
A statement issued and signed by Head of Communications and Public Affairs Unit of the Ministry, Nana Kofi Damoah, said the government has, therefore, invited the winners for negotiations on the detailed terms of the Petroleum Agreement pursuant to Regulation 18 of the General Petroleum Regulations 2018 LI 2359 for the two blocks.
The West African country, early this year, earmarked about six oil blocks for exploration.
Three of the blocks-2, 3 and 4-were to go through competitive bidding process, while two blocks-5 and 6-were supposed to be direct negotiations.
Block 1 was reserved for the Ghana National Petroleum Corporation (GNPC).
The bidding round attracted multinational oil companies such US oil and gas giant ExxonMobil, British Petroleum (BP), China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) Qatar Petroleum and Aker Energy.
The rest were Cairn Energy, Global Petroleum Group, First E&P, Sasol, Equinor and Harmony Oil and Gas Corporation, Tullow Ghana Limited, Total, ENI Ghana, Vitol and Kosmos Energy.
Unfortunately, most of the oil majors pulled out at the last minute.
ENI and Vitol, as well as Tullow Ghana Limited, were the only companies that submitted bids for block 3, with First E&P submitting bid for block 2.
Ghana: Parts of Volta Region, Oti To Experience Power Outage Tomorrow
Some residents in parts of the Volta Region of the Republic of Ghana will on Wednesday, 3rd July, 2019, experience power cuts from 8:00am to 6:00pm.
This is because power transmission company, Ghana Grid Company (GRIDCo), has requested power distribution services (PDS) Ghana Limited to curtail power supply to the region to enable them carry out maintenance works at the Kpeve Bulk Supply Point.
In this regard, the areas to be affected are Tsito, Kpeve, Peki, Kpando, Amedzope, Anfoega, Nkonya and Alavanyo.
The rest are Jasikan, Wurawura, Bodada, Kadjebi, Nkwanta, Fodome, Dambai and surrounding areas.
