VRA scholarship scheme supports more than 300 students

Dr Adutwum presenting certificates to students who excel within the community The Volta River Authority under its Community Development Programme (CDP) has awarded 329 scholarships to students within its operational area to access higher education. Out of the number, 95 students have benefited from the programme at the tertiary level, while 30 students have successfully graduated, and 234 beneficiaries had graduated at the Senior High School level. The programme provides the framework that guides support for development of communities affected by the operations of the Authority for brilliant but needy students, while empowering these communities to take action for development. The scheme seeks to support the development of the human resources to contribute to the sustainability and the growth of the communities and provide opportunities for the youth to maximise their full potential and contribute to nation development. Dr Yaw Osei Adutwum, the Deputy Minister in charge of General Education, speaking at a ceremony to award scholarships to 50 tertiary students in Akuse in the Eastern Region, said VRA’s initiative aligned with government’s policy of making education accessible through free Senior High School (SHS) to the citizenry. The scholarship award for the students is valued at GH¢745,000, covering the payment of tuition and accommodation fees. He said government’s introduction of the free SHS policy had made other organizations to terminate their scholarship schemes, but lauded the efforts of VRA for sustaining its scheme to benefit brilliant and less privileged in society. The Deputy Minister said education would help transform the country’s socio-economic development, hence, the need for government to make education the centrepiece of its transformation agenda. He said countries like Singapore, South Korea and others have developed because of a strong educational system, where majority of their youth had completed tertiary level. Dr Adutwum said the introduction of the double track system was to cater for all disadvantaged students to have access to education and address congestion in the shortest possible time, calling on all to support the policy to succeed. He commended VRA for the initiative and urged other corporate organizations to follow suit and provide a holistic education for all especially the disadvantage in society. He advised the beneficiary to focus on their studies and come out of the programme successfully and contribute their quota to their communities and the nation as a whole. Mr Emmanuel Antwi-Darkwa, the Chief Executive Officer of VRA, said the Authority presented its first scholarship award to 50 students in 2011 as part of the 50th-anniversary celebrations. He said the Authority institutionalized the scheme after a broad consultation with stakeholders, which led to the development of the CDP framework document. Mr Antwi-Dankwa announced that, Miss Nancy Adjwoa Pokua, a third year Bachelor of Science Nursing at the University of Cape Coast, a beneficiary from the Osudoku Traditional area, was the first Nursing student to be selected by the University for an exchange programme at the University of Limerick, Ireland. Also, Mr Ebenezer Agyei, a beneficiary of the University of Health and Allied Sciences from the Akwamu Traditional area was the only participant selected from Africa to participate in the Global Youth in Partnership programme in Germany. He assured the public of the Authority’s commitment to sustain the scheme and include candidates who have qualified to enter Technical, Vocational and Educational Training in their impacted communities. The Chief Executive Officer tasked the beneficiaries to learn hard and justify the investment made in them and expected good performance and high level of commitment from them. Mr Emmanuel T. Abaitey, on behalf of the beneficiaries, thanked VRA for the opportunity and pledged to stay focus and make them proud by excelling in their academic prowess. The beneficiaries were presented with certificates. Source: ghananewsagency.org

Statement: PIAC Commends Gov’t For Increasing Allocation To The Agric Sector

The Public Interest and Accountability Committee (PIAC) has released a supplementary analysis to its 2018 Semi-annual Report on the management of petroleum revenues on its website www.piacghana.org. This supplementary report has become necessary as data for the analysis was submitted three months after the statutory publication date, and so could not be included in the substantive report. As indicated in the statement to release the substantive 2018 Semi-annual Report, PIAC on 17 July 2018 made its initial data request to the Minister of Finance, for revenue and expenditure data. The Ministry in response provided only the revenue data, leaving out the expenditure component. After several verbal reminders to the Ministry, the Committee followed up with a letter dated 4 October 2018 reminding the Minister that, his delay in providing the requested data had caused PIAC to slip on the deadline for filing its semi-annual report, and urged him to treat the matter with utmost urgency. This reminder also went unheeded. The following are the highlights of findings and recommendations from the supplementary expenditure analysis to the 2018 half-year report: Key Findings: 1. An amount of GH¢1.55 billion was programmed for spending in 2018. This equalled 70 percent of net petroleum revenues. From 2017, there was an un-utilised ABFA of GH¢403.74 million (now GH¢440.84 million due to exchange rate gains), which according to the Ministry of Finance was being held in the Treasury Single Account (TSA), and would be brought forward to 2018. By this calculation, the amount that should have been programmed for spending in 2018 should be GH¢1.99billion. 2. The GH¢1.55 billion which the Ministry claims is its programmed ABFA expenditure for 2018, represents 70 percent net petroleum revenues and complies with Section 18(1) of the PRMA regarding the allocation of petroleum revenues. 3. It therefore means the programmed amount is exclusive of the GH¢403 million (now GH¢440 million as a result of exchange rate gains) outstanding balance from 2017. 4. The Ministry indeed, confirmed this in a meeting held with PIAC on April 18 at which meeting it explained that because the 2018 budget was presented in September 2017 and the GH¢403 million had been approved by Parliament for spending in that year, it couldn’t have been included in the 2018 budget for Parliamentary approval. 5. The Ministry again, confirmed that, the GH¢440 million outstanding balance from 2017 was therefore not part of the approved expenditures for 2018 under the Appropriation Act for that year. 6. The Ministry indicated that the unspent amount will need to be brought forward into the 2019 budget for Parliamentary approval (under the 2019 Appropriation Act) before it could be spent. 7. Yet in detailing out the programmed expenditure in respect of the GH¢1.55 billion, the Ministry included the GH¢440 million balance from 2017. 8. The Ministry’s explanation to PIAC and, by extension, to the Ghanaian public is unsatisfactory and misleading, to the extent that it creates the impression that the GH¢440 million unspent amount from 2017 has been duly accounted for. 9. As regards allocations of the ABFA, the Ministry itself acknowledges that “The allocations were made in line with Section 21 (4) of the PRMA which requires the allocation of not more than 30 percent of ABFA receipts for Goods and Services Expenditure, and at least 70 percent of ABFA receipts to fund capital expenditure”. This assertion settles a running dispute between PIAC and the Ministry as to the interpretation of Section 21(4) of the PRMA. 10. PIAC notes that the programmed ABFA complied with Section 21(4) of the PRMA – 30 percent expenditure on Goods and Services, and 70 percent expenditure under Capital Expenditure – inspite of the Ministry’s earlier disagreement with the Committee on the interpretation of the Section. 11. Programmed funding to Agriculture in 2018 increased by a massive 61.19 percent, compared to 2017. 12. The Kojokrom-Tarkwa railway rehabilitation project received substantial allocations. PIAC’s visit to the projects confirmed good progress. The Anomabo Fisheries College on the contrary, witnessed slow progress as a result of paltry release of funds. Recommendations: If as the Ministry claims, the unspent ABFA amount from 2017 will require Parliamentary approval before being spent, then PIAC advises the Ministry to expunge the amount from its programmed expenditure for 2018. The Committee commits to work with the Ministry to properly account for the unspent amount and the outcome shall be made public in subsequent report(s). The Committee encourages the Ministry to ensure that going forward, its programmed and actual expenditure continue to comply with Section 21(4) of the PRMA, which requires 70 percent expenditure on public investments and 30 percent on goods and services. PIAC commends the government for the increased allocation to the Agriculture Priority Area in 2018, especially in developing the needed infrastructure to support the sector. While we encourage this development, we would also recommend that attention be paid to activities that support direct production. Funding to ABFA projects should be sustained in adequate amounts to ensure timely completion. This will help to avoid the huge cost overruns that have been associated with the delay in execution of many ABFA-funded projects, particularly road projects. Going forward, PIAC expects timely submission of data by stakeholder institutions to help the Committee meet statutory deadlines and avoid the need for supplementary reports. …………………………………….. Dr. Steve Manteaw Chairman, PIAC Media Contacts Dr Steve Manteaw – 0244 273 006 Dr Thomas Stephens, Vice Chairman – 0271720444 Mr Noble Wadzah, Member – 0242257972

BP CEO: Trump Is The Wild Card In Oil Markets

More than a week after the U.S. announced that it was ending all sanction waivers for Iranian oil customers, President Donald Trump’s policy toward Iran is still the key wild card in the oil market. That’s the opinion of Bob Dudley, the chief executive of UK oil supermajor BP, who doesn’t rule out that the U.S. could grant some waivers at the eleventh hour. Depending on whether or not President Trump were to do that, oil prices could go down or up, according to BP’s top manager, who sat down with CNBC’s Brian Sullivan for an interview this week. “Now the U.S. is saying they’re going to … take away those waivers again, and the oil price is clearly drifting up because of that, because of Venezuela, Libya’s got issues, so it doesn’t surprise me right now,” Dudley told CNBC, commenting on this year’s oil price rally after the 40-percent plunge in Q4 2018. “I think the key — the wild card key — is will the U.S. at the last minute give some more waivers or not?” Dudley said. There has been market chatter that despite the “maximum pressure” campaign against Iran, the U.S. could extend some sanction waivers as the Trump Administration would be seeking not to run up oil (and gasoline) prices too high—an issue with every American president, and a key issue for the current president. According to an exclusive report by Reuters, hawkish national security advisors convinced President Trump that ending all waivers for Iranian oil buyers would not result in a spike in oil prices and the time had come to exert that “maximum pressure” and cut off Iran’s oil sales, three sources familiar with the debate within the U.S. Administration said. The Administration appears convinced that Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) will step in the fill the gap after Iranian oil barrels come off the market. While analysts are trying to assess how low Iran’s exports could drop, the Saudis are not rushing to ramp up production before seeing actual barrels off the market. Last week, when the U.S. announced the end of sanction waivers, President Trump tweeted, “Saudi Arabia and others in OPEC will more than make up the Oil Flow difference in our now Full Sanctions on Iranian Oil.” “We have had extensive and productive discussions with Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and other major producers to ease this transition and ensure sufficient supply,” U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said, announcing the end of the waivers. Saudi Arabia, however, issued a measured response to the end of the waivers, vowing to work toward “market stability”, but stopping short of announcing any immediate production increase, as it did last year when it ramped up oil production ahead of the U.S. sanctions waivers decision, only to see exemptions for eight Iranian buyers, an oversupplied market, and crashing oil prices. “In the next few weeks, the Kingdom will be consulting closely with other producing countries and key oil consuming nations to ensure a well-balanced and stable oil market, for the benefits of producers and consumers as well as the stability of the world economy,” Saudi Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih said in a statement on the day in which the U.S. announced the end of all waivers. After rallying to six-month highs early last week, oil prices plunged by more than 3 percent on Friday, after President Trump said “The gasoline prices are coming down. I called up OPEC. I said, ‘You got to bring them down. You got to bring them down.’ And gasoline is coming down.” While neither Saudi Arabia nor anyone else at OPEC appears to have spoken to the U.S. president, the U.S. national average gas price actually set a new high for the year at $2.88 this Monday. This average is nearly 20 cents more than a month ago and 63 cents more expensive than at the beginning of the year, AAA said. “Compared to the beginning of this year, motorists have definitely felt an increasing squeeze on their wallets at the pump,” AAA spokesperson Jeanette Casselano said. “With 17 states within a dime of or already at $3/gal or more, Americans can expect the national average to likely surpass 2018’s high of $2.97 set during Memorial Day weekend,” Casselano added. Source: Oilprice.com

Chevron Acquires Shares Of Anadarko For LNG Project In Mozambique

Global energy corporation Chevron announced that it has entered into a definitive agreement with Anadarko Petroleum Corporation to acquire all of the outstanding shares of Anadarko in a stock and cash transaction valued at $33 billion, or $65 per share. According to local media, the Mozambican National Hydrocarbon Company (ENH), Omar Mitha, assured the shareholders that the sale of shares will not change the dynamics of the projects to exploiting liquefied natural gas (LNG) in the Rovuma Basin, north of Mozambique. Mitha added that the engineering of the projects and agreements will also remain unchanged. Meanwhile, Chevron’s chairman and CEO, Michael Wirth, said: “This transaction builds strength on strength for Chevron. “The combination of Anadarko’s premier, high-quality assets with our advantaged portfolio strengthens our leading position in the Permian, builds on our deepwater Gulf of Mexico capabilities and will grow our LNG business.” Wirth added: “It creates attractive growth opportunities in areas that play to Chevron’s operational strengths and underscores our commitment to short-cycle, higher-return investments.” The transaction is expected to achieve run-rate cost synergies of $1 billion before tax and capital spending reductions of $1 billion within a year of closing. “The strategic combination of Chevron and Anadarko will form a stronger and better company with world-class assets, people and opportunities,” said Anadarko Chairman and CEO Al Walker.

Aker Energy Did Not Make New Oil Discovery — Petroleum Economist

Dr. Theophilus Acheampong A Petroleum Economist and Political Risk Analyst, Dr. Theophilus Acheampong, has said Aker Energy cannot be said to have made new oil discoveries rejecting claims made by policy think IMANI Africa at a recent press conference. IMANI Africa at a press conference last week had said that Aker Energy had made new oil discovery outside its original period for oil exploration and thus the discovery is subject to a new petroleum agreement that should see government rake in more revenue. But commenting on the issue which has generated debate on whether or not Aker Energy’s discovery constitute new oil find outside the exploration period or outside the scope of Aker’s contracted area, Dr. Acheampong, Dr Theo Acheampong, who is a Fellow of IMANI-Africa has insisted that the Norwegian company has so far acted in a manner consistent with the laws of Ghana. “I have read the Petroleum Agreement, E&P Law and other legislation in detail, and it is likely (I could be entirely wrong if new technical evidence establishes otherwise) that the so-called discoveries are not really new discoveries but an extension of the same Pecan development in the same delimited contract area for production and development left by Hess. Thus, no new PA is required,” Dr. Acheampong said in an article. The Petroleum Economist said if IMANI’s claim about government missing out on a US$30 billion oil find is premised on the fact that Aker made a new oil find, then that claim cannot be wholly true.

Ghana Will Lose 25% Of AGM Oil Stake Due To Contract Review – Mutawakilu

The Minority in Parliament has raised red flags over a potential loss of billions of dollars in revenue due to the amendment to an AGM Petroleum Ghana Limited oil contract. Ranking member of the Mines and Energy Committee, Adam Mutawakilu has questioned why the state’s interest in the deal will be slashed from 43 percent to 18 percent as a result of the review of the contract. Mr Mutawakilu said the AGM agreement signed in 2013, has been reviewed by Energy Minister, John Peter Amewu and will prove to be costly to the Ghanaian tax payer. On 26 June 2018, the then Energy Minister, Boakye Agarko, wrote to the company declining the review because it was not in the interest of government. Speaking to an Accra based Radio Station, Mr Mutawakilu questioned why the Akufo-Addo-led government is fleecing the state through the award of dubious oil contracts and review of terms inimical to the country. “With this new agreement, the stake of the government or the state in the sharing of the oil after royalties and cost is 18 per cent, a reduction of 25 per cent. “There is a grand agenda by Nana Akufo-Addo to rob the people of Ghana billions of dollars with this renegotiated or amended agreement,” he said. According to him, the Minority has a serious “reservation” to the changes which are not positive but to the detriment of the country.” Source: Classfmonline.com

Nigeria: Latest metering roll-out sparks debate

Image credit: Stock The Association of Nigerian Electricity Distributors (ANED), the umbrella body of electricity distributors (DisCos), has raised questions over the new third-party-meter intervention draft introduced by the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC). NERC introduced the Meter Asset Provider (MAP) Scheme for metering of customers as a strategy to deal with the issue of estimated billing, reports the Independent Energy Watch Initiative. According to the regulators, the DisCos and MAPs will enter into a metering service agreement, which will provide for the number of meters to be installed by MAPs in the DISCOs’ franchise areas. ANED’s executive director for research and advocacy, Sunday Oduntan, commended NERC for its effort towards eliminating estimated billing. However, he revealed that unless irregularities within the scheme are addressed the intervention may not live up to expectation. “I have previously commended the federal government for the introduction of the MAP scheme through NERC; I believe it is for the general benefit of the country. Nonetheless, few irregularities have become obvious to us, and except they are looked into immediately, the programme will struggle in achieving its goal,” said Oduntan. “First, the regulations state that electricity consumers can pay in advance for meters, and others can pay by installment. Now from experience, if consumer X pays completely for his prepaid meter he has no problems, he can decide at any time to buy electricity or not, but if consumer Y that has opted for installment plan fails to vend regularly and vends in small amounts, a situation arises whereby whenever he or she vends, the entire amount of the payment made will automatically be used to service his or her prepaid meter debt thereby leaving him or her in darkness,” he noted. According to Oduntan, this situation will leave the consumers frustrated and may lead to claims of fraudulent practices on the part of the electricity distributors. “It is not fraud; it is bad payment programming,” he highlighted. In this regard, what is required is customer education and the development of practical installment schemes that take into account a customer’s payment pattern or history for customers that choose the installment plan. Issues with electricity franchise network Oduntan further stated that the disparity in the price of meters provided by the MAP is another cause for concern, “Issue number two, let’s use Lagos state as our case study, now Yaba is divided into two areas in the electricity franchise network, Eko DisCos manages one half of this area, while Ikeja DisCo manages the other half. “Let us say consumer X, who is serviced by EKO DISCO, buys his or her prepaid meter for N53000 (Fifty-Three Thousand Naira) from the MAP provider and customer Y who lives on the other end of Yaba buys his prepaid meter for N63000 (Sixty-Three thousand Naira) from Ikeja DisCo. Do you know what will happen? Customer Y will be seriously aggrieved and may feel cheated, not knowing that the companies that provided the prepaid meters to each of the DisCos are different” he asserted. In dealing with these issues arising from the MAP Scheme, the spokesman for the DISCOs called for a roundtable discussion of all the involved parties, this, he stated, should have been done before the scheme was rolled out. “What we expected NERC to have done was to invite the meter providers to agree on a benchmark flat price. The Specs of meter had been standardized; therefore, the price must be standardised as well. The DISCOs have all the details that MAPs need to operate effectively. Therefore, we should have been called as well to scrutinise the pros and cons of the scheme before implementation.” Differential pricing for meters In response to the issues raised by ANED, NERC stated that it had never failed as the regulator, to engage stakeholders in the sector before issuing out new regulations. According to the regulator, this was the case with the MAP scheme; NERC revealed that they held many engagements with the stakeholders, the DISCOs being the key stakeholder. The regulator stated that they held ten forum hearings in the six geopolitical zones. The regulatory body went on to state that it would be impossible not to engage the DISCOs because the implementation of the MAP scheme is the responsibility of the DISCOs. Regarding the difference in meter prices for different franchise areas, the regulatory body stated that they had envisaged that problem and are proffering solutions to make sure that all the meters come out at the same price. NERC insisted that they will address the issue of differential pricing for meters. The regulator noted that a competitive process for determining the cost of meters was extended by the Commission to engender more competition and has hence fixed a uniform price for all MAPs based on the outcome of the procurement of all DisCos. The regulator indicated that phase 1 of the implementation of the MAP scheme would focus on upfront payment. Phase 1b would be “off vending” financing by DisCos and phase 2 will be financed through a fixed charge on vending until fully amortized. The electricity regulator also addressed the issue of instalment payment for prepaid meters under the MAP Scheme. They agreed that the instalment payment scheme could pose some challenges, especially for the indigent customers, as the rate of payment for electricity (the average vending amount by the customer) and the amount of instalment payment may be so disparate that customers may only end up paying for meters without enough money to buy electricity. The regulator indicated that they are looking at creating different payment schemes so that the payment for meters does not unduly impact payment for electricity. In seeking to eliminate this challenge, the regulator could be experimenting with the option of third-party financing to support such class of electricity customers. The success of this option (third-Party Financing) will be dependent on the ability of the microfinance institutions to offer the customers long-term debt; without the long-term debt, the instalment payment scheme may work a hardship on customers, especially, the indigent ones. On its part, the regulator insisted that it had anticipated these problems and is working assiduously to ensure hitch-free implementation of the MAP program. In this regard, NERC declared that they are hopeful that they will come out with a solution that will be a win-win for all parties involved

Minister Inaugurates 10-Member Local Content And Local Participation Committee

Members of the Committee in a group photograph with Hon. Joseph Cudjoe and Hon. William Owuraku Aidoo Deputy Minister for Energy in-charge of Finance and Infrastructure, Joseph Cudjoe, has inaugurated a 10-member Local Content and Local Participation Committee with a call on the team to execute their task diligently and efficiently. The Committee is chaired by Dr Alfred Ofosu Ahenkrah, Executive Secretary of the Energy Commission. Other members of the committee are Dr Tony Oteng-Gyasi, Dr S.B Amponsah, Mr Solomon Adjetey, Miss Jennifer Brown, Dr Ishmael Ackah and Mr Benjamin Effah. The rest are Mr F.K. Nagatey, Mr David Ruthven Adzogble, Ing. Kingsford Laryea and Mr Michael Opoku Akurang. They are expected to oversee the development and measurable growth of Local Content and Local Participation in the electricity supply industry, monitoring and coordinating Local Content and Local Participation performance of all persons engaged in activities in the electricity supply industry in accordance with L.I. 2354 and ensuring the implementation of the provisions of L.I.2354. Addressing the committee members, Joseph Cudjoe, who is also the Member of Parliament for EEfia Constituency in the Western Region, said the aims of Local Content Regulations are to create linkages, build local industries, ensure employment of Ghanaians and promote value addition. Additionally, local content is government’s strategy to rally the citizens to take advantage of opportunities in the Electricity Supply Industry (ESI). The objective of the regulations, Mr Cudjoe said, is to achieve about 51% equity participation in wholesale supply and distribution in the ESI in Ghana, and 60% local content, and also develop capacity in the manufacturing industry for electrical cable, conductors and accessories. He touched on the progress made in Ghana’s power sector, saying the electricity supply industry has chalked tremendous growth since the power sector reforms. “Ghana’s Electricity Supply Industry has seen tremendous growth since the power sector reforms. Indeed, the installed generation capacity available for grid power supply at the transmission level in the country, since 2010, has doubled from 2,165 MW in 2010 to about 4,360 MW as of mid-2018. “On renewable energy generation, interest in manufacturing, installation, operation and servicing have also been heightened,” he said. He was hopeful that the Committee would exercise its functions with outmost integrity, professionalism and efficiency to ensure that the purpose for which the regulations were developed would be achieved. The Chairman of the Committee, Dr Alfred Ofosu Ahenkorah, who said the formation of the Committee was long overdue, pledged the commitment of the members to executing their mandate to ensure that Ghanaians have the benefits of the local content regulations. Chairman of the Committee Dr Alfred Ofosu Ahenkorah

ACEP Fights IMANI- Africa,Alex Mould Over Aker Energy Deal

The African Centre for Energy Policy (ACEP) has waded into the controversial Aker Energy deal by disputing IMANI Africa’s assertion that Aker Energy has acted illegally. Aker Energy recently announced the discovery of 450-550 barrels of oil at the Deep Water Tano Cape Three Point block (DWT/CTP) in the Western Region, and subsequently submitted its Plan Of Development (POD) to the Ministry of Energy. But IMANI-Africa at a press conference claimed its checks had revealed that Aker Energy was exploring oil in wells that had not been captured in the petroleum agreement with Government of Ghana, describing the move as illegal. It, therefore, asked the government to review the contract to ensure that Ghana benefited, stressing that the country risked a potential loss of US$30 billion, if the government failed to renegotiate the petroleum agreement. The issue has since generated public discussions, prompting responses from the Ministry of Energy. But, a statement from ACEP released and signed by Benjamin Boakye, Executive Director for ACEP, described IMANI’s claims as false. It says: “On paper, those making the argument that the initial 7-year exploration period has expired are right. But, ACEP can state authoritatively that Hess, and later Aker, has not been operating illegally for the past 6 years in the contract. “This also establishes the fact that Hess did not start enjoying extensions on the back of the International Tribunal of the Law of the Sea’s (ITLOS) preliminary injunction on further drilling issued in 2015. If anyone deems the appraisal wells drilled to be illegal, then, there is apparent lack of understanding of the agreement.” MR. MOULD’S INTERVENTION IN THE AKER ENERGY’S PETROLEUM AGREEMENT CONTROVERSY IS SHOCKING The Africa Centre for Energy Policy (ACEP) has been following the recent discussions on the Aker Energy and the interest of Ghana in the discoveries of the Deep Water Tano Cape Three Points ( DWT / CTP) block. The position of ACEP in that conversation has been that although ACEP does not share the concerns of IMANI, IMANI, who started it, did nothing wrong by asking questions of government to seek clarification on what they consider potential loss to the State in the Aker deal. This is consistent with ACEP’s long held position not to discourage other civil society organisations and think tanks from asking questions of government. However, if someone with the clout of Mr. Alex Mould, who for the better part of the Hess exploration campaign was the head of GNPC, misrepresents the facts, such misrepresentations cannot go unnoticed because of the potential to deepen misconceptions and miseducation. As an industry watcher, ACEP struggles to believe that Mr. Mould is not seized with the facts, either in law or technical realities, that has shaped the interpretation of the Petroleum Agreement (PA). ACEP therefore, wants to state its positions in relation to comments made by Mr. Mould on News File, a current affairs programme on Joy FM and the fundamental actualities that have shaped the DWT/CTP PA to date. Relinquishment The PA between Hess and the Republic of Ghana was signed in 2006 with effective date of 17th July of the same year. The work programme had three phases consistent with all PAs in Ghana. However, Hess, in their PA, was granted accessto 100% of their block at first extension with a requirement to relinquish 30% at second extension. The evidence as shown in Figures 1 and 2 below indicate that Hess indeed relinquished part of the block after second extension. Figure 1: Original Map of Hess’ contract area Figure 2: Current map of the area now controlled by Aker. The relinquished area was subsequently awarded to Eco Atlantic in a new PA as shown in figure 2. This means that the area relinquished was not available to Hess or the new operator, Aker. Therefore, the impression that Aker has made discoveries in a relinquished area cannot be true. Since the relinquishment of the 30%, there has been no further relinquishment on that block. After appraisal and determination of the production area, Aker is required to relinquish all other parts of the block that do not fall within the production area in keeping with section 25 of the Petroleum Act. However, Aker is proposing to hold on to the block for an integrated approach for further development of the contract area. This is subject to government’s approval or disapproval. ACEP’s position is that the entire area not needed for development of the discovered fields has to be relinquished post appraisal drilling, for a new PA that conforms to the new Petroleum Act, 2016 (Act 919). The POD is not the appropriate forum for extending hold over the area post submission of PoD. Exploration Period Based on the PA signed in 2006, the total exploration period was 7 years, subject to extension.Which means following the letter of the agreement, the PA would have expired in July 2013, in the absence of an extension. It therefore points to a fact that the exploration period was extended beyond 7 years during the period Mr. Mould was at GNPC as the Chief Executive. Mr. Mould should therefore be in the best position to educate the public on these timelines. But that is not the most important point. The most important point is that exploration period can be extended without necessarily demanding a new PA as was done in 2013 pursuant to article 3.2 (d) of the PA which states; Where pursuant to Article 8 Contractor has before the end of the Second Extension Period, including extensions under (a), (b) and (c) above, given to the Minister a notice of Commercial Discovery, Contractor shall, if the Exploration Period would otherwise have been terminated,be entitled to a further extension of the Exploration Period in which to prepare the Development Plan in respect of the Discovery Area Development Plan relates until either: i) the Minister has approved the Development Plan as set out in Article 8, or ii) in the event that the Development Plan is not approved by the Minister as set out in Article 8 and the matter or matters in issue between the Minister and Contractor have been referred for resolution under Article 24, one (1) Month after the date on which the final decision thereunder has been given. In fact, other blocks were negotiated in 2013 with far better terms than the Hess block but that did not require an adjustment to the fiscal terms of Hess agreement because the agreement could not be deemed expired on the basis of the article cited above. ACEP can state that if government had the opportunity, either in law or the PA, the PA would have been cancelled or renegotiated just as was done to the Aker one for the ultra-deep block to the south of the Hess block. Government in 2010 paid Aker $30 million to take over the block it deemed illegally acquired and handed it over to AGM Ghana who could not drill a well since it took over the block. Now Aker has acquired controlling interest in the same block. Therefore, on paper those making the argument that the initial 7-year exploration period has expired are right. But ACEP can state authoritatively that Hess, and later Aker, have not been operating illegally for the past 6 years in the contract. This also establishes the fact that Hess did not start enjoying extensions on the back of the International Tribunal of the Law of the Sea (ITLOS) preliminary injunction on further drilling issued in 2015. If anyone deems the appraisal wells drilled to be illegal, then there is apparent lack of understanding of the agreement. Exploratory Well versus Appraisal Well. In the current debate about the legality of Aker’s operations, appraisal seems surgically delimited from exploratory activities. This is not accurate in interpreting a PA. Appraisal is part of exploration. When there is a discovery, appraisal drilling is done to establish the extent of the discovery; the depth or thickness of the field and the lateral extent of the discovery. In establishing the extent of the discovery, the contractor does not unilaterally go about drilling the wells in secrecy. The contractor works with the Petroleum Commission (PC) to identify the particular spots for drilling appraisal wells which requires a permit from the PC. Other agencies of State such as the Navy and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) must be involved to allow a drill ship into the territorial waters of the country. The PC cannot grant a permit to an area for appraisal drilling if the area is not covered by a PA, which is the foundation for granting permits. To understand that appraisal is part of exploration, one may not find it written black and white in the PA or in the Law. But the petroleum cost accounting/classification establishes this fact. For emphasis, section 2.1 of the general provisions of the PA classifies petroleum costs as follows; 1. Exploration Expenditure 2. Development Expenditure; 3. Production Expenditure; 4. Service Costs; and 5. General and Administrative expenses Section 2.2 (c) further states; “Exploration expenditure shall consist of all direct, indirect and allotted costs incurred in the search for Petroleum in the Contract Area, including but not limited to expenditure on: “(c) labour, materials and services used in drilling wells with the objective of finding new Petroleum reservoirs or for the purpose of appraising of Petroleum reservoirs already discovered, provided such wells are not completed as producing wells” Section 2.2 (c) clearly shows that appraisal drilling is part of exploration. Therefore, if a contractor is granted extension to drill appraisal wells, that automatically extends the exploration period- again in reference to section 3.2 (d), except for the fact that the focus of the drilling is to establish the extent of the discovery. This is where it gets even more technical than just reading the letter of the PA or the law. In determining the spots to drill appraisal wells there are scientific predictions, through seismic data interpretation, that guides the process. The fact that drilling is required to confirm what the data shows, is an admission that the outcome could be different from what the data shows. Industry experience shows that appraisal drilling could result in; a. Confirmation of the extent of accumulation of a find; b. a dry well; a situation where there is no oil; c. a different discovery within the geological system not found to be in the same reservoir as the earlier discovery. In the case of a new discovery, the fundamental question to ask is, “What PA allowed the drilling to occur?” As established above, there cannot be any drilling without a PA. This is important because the cost of the drilling will have to be accounted for in the petroleum cost of pre-existing agreement. No contractor will spend $50 million or more with the knowledge that if the well encounters a new discovery, the State will appear with a new fiscal term. Therefore, without proof that Aker went out drilling without permit, there is no argument about what PA governed the drilling operation and for that matter the applicable fiscal terms. The appraisal programme submitted by Hess anticipated the drilling of the Pecan south and the Pecan south East wells but Hess could not progress with it because of the ITLOS injunction. Dynamic Pressure Communication Dynamic pressure communication has been cited to be the magic to require a new PA for the Pecan East and Pecan South East appraisal drilling. As far as interpreting the laws of the sector and the PA are concerned, dynamic pressure communication is foreign to the determination of fiscal terms in a contract area. Petroleum blocks in Ghana are not delimited by dynamic pressure communication, but rather by acreages. Otherwise, from basic geological understanding of how oil traps are formed, the entire Tano Basin could have dynamic pressure communication and thereby limiting the State’s ability to create oil blocks. The only instances where appraisal drilling could result in the change of fiscal terms are; 1. when the well can be proven to have been drilled outside the contract area, which will be illegal, and as established above Aker had control of the contract area; 2. when the discovery being appraised, or new discovery encountered during appraisal straddles another contract area with different fiscal terms. This situation will call for unitisation of the field through a scientific study to understand the spread of the reservoir between the two blocks as happened in the case of Kosmos Energy and Tullow. 3. When the state reduces at the fiscal term, at its sole right, to allow productions from a discovery otherwise deemed uncommercial. Commercial interest of 10% in the Hess block ceded to EXPLORCO GNPC negotiated for the purchase of 10% commercial interest in the Hess block in 2014 for its subsidiary, EXPLORCO, when Hess decided to dispose of part of its interest in the block. The GNPC, between 2014 and 2016 when Mr Mould was the head of the Corporation, could not pay for the negotiated interest. He posits an excuse that GNPC could not pay because ITLOS had set in. That cannot be accurate because other parties – Fuel Trade and Lukoil – paid for the interest they took at the same time. An excuse not to pay did not discount the right of Hess to sell to available buyer, but rather stretched the magnanimity of the investor. The decision of GNPC to lay claim over EXPLORCO’s 10% interest without paying caused significant financial loss to Hess who later had to dispose of the interest at a discounted market value of $20million instead of the original offering of $45 million they could have offered to the in 2014 when oil prices were high. Such attitudes by GNPC do not encourage investment in the petroleum industry. The fact must be emphasised that during the period of the proposed acquisition of the commercial interest, the priorities of GNPC were not aligned with the acquisition efforts. GNPC had the cash reserved to have been able to acquire the share but it rather chose to honour other government commitments including providing guarantees for the Karpowership. For good reason, ACEP has not been an advocate for acquisitions of commercial interest in petroleum blocks by agencies of State in the current state of the petroleum industry. It is easy to salivate over potential gains of commercial participation, but the risk of commercial participation can impact negatively on the fiscal position of the country, and Ghana has experience with GNPC in a similar situation under the OCTP project. Because of GNPC’s inability to pay for its share of cost of development for its interest in the project, the entire receivables from the carried and participating interest in the project has been encumbered by the OCTP partner to offset GNPC’s debt, denying the State of revenue to finance development in the past three years. This further leaves Ghana hoping that the market conditions will be favourable post the recovery period of GNPC’s debt to the project. Even the dynamics of the market on the Hess transaction has shown that if EXPLORCO had acquired the 10% stake in the block, the company would have lost $25million before field development, with value of the share dropping from $45 million in 2014 to $20 million in 2018. Taking commercial interest is not a simple assumption of profitability, but involves being mindful of all the risks associated with oil and gas investments. Interestingly Mr. Mould argues in one breadth that Ghana would have benefited more from the 10% commercial interest, but in another breadth that at $65 oil price, Ghana cannot make 55% fiscal take from the field as communicated by government, which indicates that the project is not the most profitable after all. This is a contradiction, as one will therefore wonder why government must take a commercial interest in an already deemed not-so-profitable venture. This is an indication that given its financial position, GNPC should be cautious about commercial commitments in petroleum blocks, especially when companies with deep pocket as Hess are exiting. Extension of the PA The extension of petroleum agreement is a possibility anticipated by PAs and the Act 919. In fact, there can be a circumstance that the State will itself propose the extension of PA. It is not out of place for contractor to request an extension PA. It is rather the duty of the State to ensure that the extension requested merits consideration, and so done through the appropriate forum. This is part of the reason why the PC exists to ensure that the decision of the Minister is not capricious or adverse to the interest of the country. Beyond the PC, Parliament is also required to approve of extensions proposed by the contractor or the Minister. In any case, if the country gives an operator 5 years to produce from a field and the operator has the technology to make enough revenue to compensate for the economics of the project, the contractor will do it. Therefore, it is really not a question of holding on to the trophy of no extension, but rather of understanding what production profile will optimise the interest of the state and balance the economics of the project, bearing in mind that depending on the geological condition of an area aggressive production could be detrimental to the production wells and long term revenue to the state. In the specific case of the Aker proposal for extension, ACEP is still assessing the geological and commercial counterfactuals to the proposals in the PoD submitted that could allow for a judgement to be made. This will be part of general comments on the PoD by ACEP. But even before that the PoD did not provide the needed justification for the extension which must not elude the judgement of the PC. Conclusion Ghana is the owner of petroleum resource in her jurisdiction and must at all times decide what the country wants to do with the resource. However, as long as private capital, be it foreign or local, is required to make meaning of the stranded resource in the ground or in the deep of the ocean, there is a duty on government and citizens to be responsible, fair and firm in the interpretation of laws and agreement. The country can sometimes give itself credit for how far it has come with the petroleum industry regardless of political positions. ACEP struggles to believe that after three successful PoDs anybody will be apprehensive that the first draft of a PoD will pass without objections. The debate on the Aker PoD has just begun. Signed Benjamin Boakye

ECG Boss addresses concerns of frustrated PDS workers

Mr Samuel Boakye-Appiah The Managing Director of Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG), Mr Samuel Boakye-Appiah, has assured workers of ECG, who were transferred to Power Distribution Services (PDS) Limited, following the take over of the distribution business of ECG, that their salaries and other working conditions remained unchanged. The assuring words follow reports that some ECG staff, who were transferred to PDS, have been murmuring about how they were not sure about where their salaries were going to come from. Others have reportedly concluded that they were not sure whether those who have remained at ECG and have not been transferred to PDS would become civil servants. However, addressing the workers at the head office of ECG on May Day, Mr Boakye-Appiah, who explained the transfer said it is only “ECG’s technical and commercial operations that have been transferred to the Power Distribution Services (PDS) Limited.” “ECG is still in existence as a bulk energy trader, asset owner and a provider of training and consultancy services,” he said and clarified that the two entities are separate and that, PDS is the concessionaire and ECG is the asset owner. “ECG has not been sold, ECG is continuing as a growing concern with a new focus of a bulk energy trader, and then monitoring the performance of the concessionaire and the use of the assets that have been handed over to the concessionaire,” he added. “Those of us in ECG, and if you have observed, I have never used the word restructured ECG because we must maintained the identity of ECG going forward.” “I have heard your frustrations, I ‘dey’ ground. Those of you who are in the regions, you do monitoring, [and] some of you have regretted…, People say they go to the office and they don’t know what they are doing.” “I want to be very frank, those of you in the regions… Please, I want to assure you, it won’t be long when you will get too busy… Assuming that you are in concession monitoring operations and you are in the Western Region and the whole of Western Region is under you, looking at PDS maintenance, projects, you will not just be the supervisor but seeing what is happening, attending to all the utility issues, the reports that we have to prepare and issues and sit in meetings and all that, it is going to be a lot of work. Just that we are taking time to put everything together.” “So please, bear with us, today, we have planned a series of activities towards finalising our business model and our plans and all that. “There is a big meeting at Alisa Hotel on Thursday, 2nd May, 2019 among the managers and directors to review our business plan. “As a first step, we are prepared to develop business plans for all the directorates…, the alignment with business plans and all that. The MD said to thunderous applause from the workers, “I want to assure you that, your future with ECG is very bright.” Adding, he said, “Before the transfer, somebody walked to my office” and wanted to know whether those of us left at ECG will belong to a subvented organisation, to the extent that “we don’t even know where our salaries will come from.“ “Anyway I have been in Ghana all these years and there has not been any month that I have heard that the people at the Ministry of Energy or Ministry of Finance have not received their salaries, so assuming that without even admitting that we are going to be a subvented organisation, I’m sure that we would be paid.” He said when management went round to “tell you people about PDS entry into our operations, we mentioned to you that everybody was being transferred on the same conditions of service as they were enjoying in ECG, so how can people with PDS go on conditions that they are enjoying in ECG and then those that are left with ECG, will be enjoying conditions in the civil service, does it make sense?” “So why do you believe such things. I’m saying this because I’m sure some of you still are believing in that. Please, everybody is going to continue to enjoy the conditions that they were enjoying in ECG as the minimum. “We are yet to enter into negotiations, [Collective Bargaining Agreement], both PDS and ECG, we are all in transition, when we settle, we will go to the board with proposals for negotiations and all that, but just to assure you that, you are in ECG on the same conditions of service as you were enjoying before. Mr Boakye-Appiah said it was always normal for speculations to thrive when there is a transition and some of the stories are peddled by ECG’s own workers.

Abu Dhabi Launches Second Oil, Gas Exploration Bid Round

The Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) is launching Abu Dhabi’s second competitive bid round for oil and gas exploration of conventional and unconventional resources, the state oil firm said on Wednesday. ADNOC and Abu Dhabi are opening for bidding five new blocks, including three offshore and two onshore blocks, with one of the onshore blocks offering two separate licensing opportunities for conventional and unconventional oil and gas, respectively. “Based on existing data from detailed petroleum system studies, seismic surveys, exploration and appraisal wells data, estimates suggest the blocks in the second bid round hold multiple billion barrels of oil and multiple trillion cubic feet of natural gas,” ADNOC said in today’s statement. ADNOC will be accepting bids by the end of November 2019, after which the company will evaluate the bids received. The Supreme Petroleum Council (SPC) will award the successful bidders, ADNOC said. The launch of second exploration bid round comes a year after ADNOC offered six oil and gas blocks for bidding in a first-ever competitive exploration and production bid round as part of its strategy to expand strategic partnerships in all business areas. The first bid round concluded in March 2019, in which Abu Dhabi awarded two offshore blocks in concessions to a consortium led by Italy’s oil and gas major Eni and Thailand’s PTT Exploration and Production Public Company Limited (PTTEP). One onshore block went to India’s Bharat Petroleum Corporation Limited and Indian Oil Corporation Limited, another onshore block was awarded to Occidental Petroleum, and a third onshore block was awarded to Japan’s Inpex Corporation. “The launch of Abu Dhabi’s second licensing bid round builds on the momentum of the first and very successful competitive bid round,” Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber, UAE Minister of State and ADNOC Group CEO, said. “It demonstrates how ADNOC’s expanded approach to partnerships is enabling us to utilize value-add partnerships and smart technologies to drive new commercial opportunities and efficiently accelerate the exploration and development of Abu Dhabi’s untapped resources, in line with the leadership’s directives,” Al Jaber noted. Source: Oilprice.com

Saudi Arabia, UAE “Draw The Death And Collapse Of OPEC

Namdar Zanganeh In among the multitude of threats that Iran has made public since the US sanctions on Iran were levied, Iran has now heralded the collapse of OPEC, if OPEC members fill the void by snagging market share left unfilled by Iran and Venezuela, according to S&P Global Platts. Iran’s oil minister said that two OPEC members were doing just that, accusing them of wielding their oil as a weapon. The two members Zanganeh was referring to were Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. It’s interesting to note that both Saudi Arabia has unduly taken on the burden of cutting production. Saudi Arabia has agreed to keep its production to 10.311 million barrels per day, while the UAE’s target is 3.072 million bpd. Saudi Arabia has been overachieving its share of the production cuts, producing 9.794 million bpd in March. Similarly, the UAE is producing closer to target—but is still under at 3.059 for March. The “oil weapon”, then, to which Iran is referring, according to S&P Global Platts, is their contact with the United States to come up with a plan to ensure that the oil market is well supplied. Thus far, Saudi Arabia has not increased production to fill any void left by either Iran or Venezuela. “By using oil as a weapon against two founding members of OPEC [Venezuela and Iran], [they] turn OPEC solidarity into division and draw the death and collapse of OPEC,” Zanganeh said, warning that any country using oil to this end should “accept its consequences.” Iran and Venezuela have indeed suffered falling oil production as the sanctions on both countries restrict exports and cut out buyers such as India, South Korea, and Cuba who will have to shop elsewhere to obtain sufficient quantities of crude oil. Venezuela’s oil production fell below 1 million bpd in March at 732,000 bpd, while Iran’s fell to 2.698 million bpd—with more decreases expected as the sanction waivers that eight countries have thus far enjoyed ended on May 1. Iran’s 208 average production was 3.553 million bpd, while Venezuela’s averaged 1.354 bpd, according to secondary sources provided by OPEC. The tough times in which Iran and Venezuela now find themselves may continue to drive a wedge into the oil cartel as other members will naturally respond to market demand as they are able. Source: Oilprice.com

Power Sector Workers Cry Over huge debts at May Day

Workers within Ghana’s Power Sector have expressed worry over what they described as huge indebtedness in the sector, which they claimed is stifling operations. The workers communicated their grievances on placards they displayed at this year’s May Day celebration, which took place in all the regional capitals, with the national one held at the Black Star Square in Accra. At the Black Star Square, some staff of the power company waved placards with inscriptions to drum home their SOS call to the President to save the power sector agencies from collapse. Some of the placards read: ‘GRIDCo is bleeding’, ‘ECG/VALCO debt killing GRIDCo’, ‘No GRIDCo, no 1District, 1Factory’, ‘Energy sector without GRIDCo is useless’, ‘GRIDCo is viable; government pay us our ESLA debt’, ‘No ESLA money = dum dum’, ‘Government, don’t throw away GRIDCo like ECG’, ‘Current tariff killing GRIDCo’, ‘ESLA – GRIDCo = Dumsor’, ‘Mr President, aagbe GRIDCo’ and ‘Lack of maintenance = More dumsor’. The country’s energy sector is saddled with debts running into billions of cedis.In August last year when GRIDCo celebrated its 10th anniversary CEO of the company, Mr Jonathan Amoako Baah revealed that Electricity Company of Ghana for instance owe GRIDCo about GHS900million. Again early this year, CEO of Ghana Gas Dr Benjamin K. D Asante also revealed that Volta River Authority(VRA) is also owing them to the tune of about $750million for gas supplies. Below are some of the messages on the placards the energy sector workers displayed at the May Day.

NPA commissions biggest Tanker Terminal in Kpone

The National Petroleum Authority (NPA) has commissioned a modern and the biggest Bulk Road Vehicles (BRVs) terminal at Kpone, in the Greater Accra Region. The facility, which was started some years ago and completed this year at the cost of GHc17 million, can accommodate about 1000 BRVs. The terminal, which is strategically located, is expected to ease traffic congestion around Tema Oil Refinery (TOR), as well as eliminate the dangers the BRVs posed to other road users due to how they park haphazardly along the roads linking Tema Oil Refinery and other Petroleum Products Storage Depots in Tema, because of the unavailability of spaces. In his address, the Chief Executive of NPA, Mr. Hassan Tampuli, said the NPA wanted movement of tanker vehicles scheduled to load petroleum products properly regulated. He noted a number of accidents were borne out of fatigue as a result of inadequate rest after a trip, hence, “the need to construct the tanker parking terminal to address any unforeseeable occurrences of accidents caused by drivers.” “We, as stakeholders in the industry and operators of these tankers, therefore, have the responsibility to give members of the public the assurance that we are doing our utmost best to ensure their safety while we carry out our business,” he stressed. He assured the tanker drivers that the NPA would continue to create an enabling environment for the operations of the transportation section of the Petroleum Downstream Industry. He used the occasion to urge all tanker drivers to be more safety conscious by observing road traffic signs, and avoid excessive and reckless speeding, dangerous overtaking particularly in sharp bends and hilly areas, avoid night driving and use of mobile phones while driving. “You are also urged to take the pre-trip inspections of your vehicles such as checking of tire pressure, headlights, hazard lights, tail/brake lights and pointers/traficators and windshield wipers very seriously,” he added. On his part, the Minister for Energy, Mr John Peter Amewu, in a speech read on his behalf by the Managing Director of TOR, Mr Isaac Ossei, said “the parking of tanker vehicles, sometimes loaded with petroleum products, along these roads, poses a serious health and safety risk to life and property. I, therefore, commend the National Petroleum Authority for this laudable project.” He said the facility would ensure efficiency in the distribution of petroleum products in the country. Pledging government’s support to develop petroleum downstream sector, he said government would ensure the regular supply of petroleum products to all parts of the country “through a cost-effective and an efficient distribution system.” The Energy Minister said issues on rehabilitation of pipelines from Tema to Akosombo, the possibility of a rail line between Tema and Kumasi, are all being given attention to reduce road transportation of petroleum products. The MD of TOR, Mr Isaac Osei(middle) being assisted by CEO of NPA, Hassan Tampuli (left) and Board Chairman of NPA,Mr Addo Yobo to cut the tape to officially open the facility