Ghana: Ghana Gas gets more gas
Government’s new policy to accelerate growth in the oil and gas sector to help it meet its target of half a million barrels of oil per day may be derailed by some unfavorable factors confronting the sector.
The existence of unreliable data and low level of documentation on exploratory fields continue to hamper government bid to bargain higher returns from global oil exploratory companies.
This is as a result of a strategic legislative review which government has commissioned for the oil and gas industry. The review process which has begun with stakeholders and industry players seeks to examine the prospects of meeting government’s target.
John Peter Amewu, Ghana’s Energy Minister, at the first stakeholders meeting in Accra indicated that government had identified lack of accurate and reliable data on Ghana’s oil fields among others as it weaknesses which continue to hamper the prospects of the country to attract adequate capital to develop the oil fields.
“As a country and as a Ministry, we continue to face fiscal challenges and risk to the oil industry. Our basins as we are all aware, are largely not completely de-risked. Significant data gaps and low data quality still exists. And many companies continue to cite our fiscal regime as a disincentive to attract global fund and capital for investment,” he said.
According to the Minister, the low interest shown in the last bidding rounds for the nation’s oil blocks is a testimony to the fact that all is not well with the sector.
“The recent results for our first licensing round, although not satisfactory in terms of the response rate, has confirmed the fears about developing the industry and the risks associated with the frontier area,” he stressed.