The Chief Executive Officer of the Petroleum Commission, Ghana’s petroleum upstream regulator, Mr. Egbert Faibille, has disclosed that as part of government’s local content agenda in the petroleum sector, the Commission is to sponsor a 10-month training course of 150 technicians at the Takoradi Technical University.
Mr Faibille made this known during an event dubbed ‘Around the World Series’ at the ongoing Offshore Technology Conference (OTC) in Houston, Texas, USA.
Mr Faibille is among a government delegation led by the Minister for Energy, Dr Matthew Opoku Prempeh. Others include senior officials of the Ministry as well as heads and senior managers of various energy sector agencies.
Tracing the background to this development, Mr Faibille stated that in the Commission’s engagements with International Oil Companies (ICOs) on local content engagements, it had emerged that there were deficiencies in the skill sets and qualifications of the mid-level technicians that the Commission sought to get engaged by the IOCs.
He stated that the Commission, under the leadership of the Ministry of Energy, was seeking to reverse this by rolling out a number of training programmes for high-end international certification for Ghanaian youth, and that in the instant case, the 150 candidates had been selected from a total of over 2,000 young Ghanaians who had been examined.
Speaking on this issue, the Public Relations Officer for the Ministry of Energy, Mr Kwasi Obeng-Fosu explained that, these candidates would, on the completion of their training, be issued City and Guilds certification and come out as process technicians, instrumentation technicians and mechanical technicians.
He quoted Mr Fabille: “When we started our journey, we were looking at the high-end engineering and geoscience training. But over the period, we forgot, possibly, that we would have FPSOs in our waters, for which you would still need mid-level specialist technicians to perform key roles, just as a hospital needs both doctors and laboratory or dispensing technicians.”
The result, he noted, was that when the FPSOs berthed, a certain deficiency came to light, and the idea now is that if a person is coming into the country as an expatriate technician for say 2-3 years, then by the time the person leaves, there should be in his or her place, a Ghanaian technician who has understudied the expatriate and has been trained up to their standard both in terms of certification and practical experience and ready to take over. Ultimately, he noted this would drive down the cost of running the FPSO.
Touching on service provision and in-country spending as part of the local content conversation in the sector, Mr Faibille stated that this hovered around 67-70 percent and lauded international oil companies like Tullow for their commitment to this. However, he called for diversification of the supply base, noting that it is the same companies that supply the same services for the same oil companies and he called that a market failure.
“Tullow and others must be more welcoming of other suppliers so that the chain of monopoly is broken, else the local content story will remain stagnant,” he remarked.
This year’s OTC, which started on Monday 16th August, 2021, will end today.
Source: https://energynewsafrica.com
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