A new wind of change started sweeping through Ghana when the country
poured its first oil in the last quarter of 2010 from its Jubilee oil
field. The oil field is estimated to hold 1.8 billion barrels. Initially
it was planned that within the first year of production 120,000 barrels
per day (bpd) was to be produced, with the production ramping up to
250,000 bpd at the production peak a few years later. It currently
produces about an average of 110,000 bpd.
Many people predicted the involvement and participation of local
businesses in this sector, as it would directly impact on the
socio-economic status of Ghanaians. This dream has not been fully
realised till date. Local content has become a daily public outcry.
What is Local Content in the first place?
Local content is defined as the development of skills, technology
transfer, use of local manpower and local manufacturing. In other words
it involves the use of Ghanaian local expertise, goods and services,
people and business in the operations of the oil and gas industry.
Many countries which are into oil and gas production are setting up
requirements for ‘local content’ into their regulatory frameworks. These
requirements aim to create jobs, promote enterprise development and
accelerate the transfer of skills and technologies. Local content has
therefore become a tactical issue for the oil and gas
industry—presenting both challenges and opportunities.
In local content policy formulation, there is a phenomenon called
Margin of Preference. Margin of Preference refers to the extent to which
a person or group is given favourable treatment over others with the
rationale of making that person or group more competitive.
In May this year, the Ghana government approved a second oil field
called the Tweneboa, Enyera and Ntome (TEN). The TEN oil project is
expected to produce about 80,000 barrels of oil per day when production
finally begins in 2016. The field is located on Ghana’s Deepwater Tano
Block which according to appraisal reports contains over 200 million
barrels of oil.
Partners in the TEN projects are Tullow, Kosmos Energy, Anadarko
Petroleum, Petro SA and GNPC. These are the same partners operating
Ghana’s Jubilee field.
On June 6th this year, the Ghana Cabinet approved a new Local
Content Bill for the Oil and Gas sector. The Bill which is a Legislative
Instrument (LI) has been sent to the country’s parliament for approval
into law. Parliament is yet to approve it.
After cabinet introduced the bill, Ghana’s Minister of Information
and Media Relations, Mahama Ayariga, outlined some of the highlights in
the bill.
“The key highlights of the policy include; that priority should be
given to Ghanaians in the granting of licensing and agreements in the
petroleum sector in all operations, where foreigners want to be involved
they must partner with Ghanaians who should carry at least a five
percent equity interest and that is reviewable at the pleasure of the
Minister given certain circumstances.”
“Also there is an elaborate reporting procedure which requires that
the companies use local services and products manufactured by Ghanaian
companies and they must also make investments in research and carry out
programs aimed at technology transfer to Ghanaians,” he stated.
This week the Minister for Petroleum and Energy, Emmanuel Kofi Buah
advised the partners operating in the TEN project to start rolling out
local content projects immediately.
The Ghana National Petroleum Corporation (GNPC), a state oil
exploration company that also licenses firms seeking to participate in
oil exploration in the country, has set an ambitious target to achieve
full local participation in all aspects of the oil and gas value chain
of at least 90% by 2020.
The absence of the local content law could deny many local businesses
from expanding and growing. For instance, Tullow Oil is reported to
have abrogated its air transport contract with CityLink – a Ghanaian
owned airline company – and opted for Noordzee Helikopters Vlaanderen
(NHV) of Belgium for the transportation of personnel and cargo of the
oil company to the offshore Jubilee platform. Citylink has ceased
operations and is going through merger talks with EgyptAir. It is not
clear whether Citylink’s loss of the Tullow contract has anything to do
with the former’s struggles.
Indeed, in October 2010, the Ghana News Agency (GNA) reported that,
oil riggers and offshore workers petitioned the GNPC against what it
termed discrimination in the award of contracts for oil rig operations
on the Jubilee oil field.
According to the GNA report, the oil riggers alleged that companies
like Menergy Oil, O & L Trinity and Sea World which had been
registered by the GNPC to employ artisans such as motormen, floor men,
caterers, crane drivers, badge masters for oil rigs operating in the oil
fields were rather employing foreign nationals; especially, Nigerians
instead of local artisans who were equally qualified.
The Association of Ghana Industries (AGI) is on the heels of
Government to cede some of the contracts in the oil and gas sector to
local enterprises in order to promote the growth of the local
industries. According to its President, Nana Owusu-Afari, the subject of
local content in the oil and gas sector continue to be a very serious
issue that government cannot ignore.
In all this, the question that needs to be asked is that, when given
the opportunity, do Ghanaian locals, firms and businesses have the
capacity to meet the challenge? The implementation of the local content
bill must be gradual and collaborative, in my view, to lead to
technology transfer and boosting of local capacity. Its pursuit should
not be done in a blanket manner.
Thanks Surelia for letting me know.
ReplyDeleteThat is a good news and it will help to generate more money for the country growth.
ReplyDeleteRegards,
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