Audio By Carbonatix
Former Chief Executive Officer of the Ghana National Petroleum Corporation, Dr. Amos Ofori Quaah wants Ghana to return to the Oil Production Sharing Agreement to accrue more revenue from the hydrocarbon resources.
According to him, the country's current contractual arrangement for petroleum exploration is a bane to the development of the sector and the economy at large.
Speaking to Joy Business at the launch of his book dubbed 'My Footprint in Ghana's Black Gold', Dr Ofori Quaah unraveled the challenges the country went through before discovering oil in 2007.
He explained that some of his colleagues met their untimely death in the quest to search for offshore oil, and therefore appealed for a collaboration between stakeholders of the sector to review the petroleum law.
“We went into this hybrid thing which has not helped Ghana because technically the Production Sharing Agreement stood to give Ghana more of the resources than we have at the moment. It’s a very sad reflection of the industry. I think we should go back to the production sharing agreement”, he advised.
“Personally, I think we should review the agreement and go back to the production agreement because what we are getting is simply not fair for the efforts we put in. Is not fair, we could do better”, he lamented.
Furthermore, he said "I wrote my book because some of our friends passed on due to the offshore discovery. We need to go back to the agreement and review it with the efforts we put in”, he further bemoaned.
On the prospect for Ghana's oil production, he said it’s still positive both onshore and offshore, hence the need to be resolute as a country with its agreements.
"We have prospect for both onshore and offshore for oil discovery. The Voltarian basin stretches from Nkwakaw to Daboya; and at Daboya we have salt and it’s associated with oil. Potentially, we have onshore oil at the Voltarian basin", he added
A production sharing agreement is an agreement usually between an oil and gas company and royalty interest owners. This agreement allows the firm to drill horizontal wells that will cross unit boundaries and produce from lands from multiple units.
In production sharing agreement, the government awards the execution of exploration and production activities to an oil company. The oil company bears the mineral and financial risk of the initiative and explores, develops and ultimately produces the field as required.
In June 2007, GNPC together with its partners of the Jubilee oil field - Tullow Oil and Kosmos Energy - announced the discovery of oil offshore Ghana. Tullow Oil explained that the oil discovered offshore Ghana is one of the biggest oil finds in Africa in recent times.
Latest Stories
-
Moody’s maintains Ghana’s rating at Caa1, revises outlook to positive
24 minutes -
Zambia elevates tourism education to national priority as President Hichilema backs continental summit
1 hour -
Activa promotes credit insurance to boost SME export growth
1 hour -
ILTM Africa 2026 opens doors to inbound and outbound luxury travel in Cape Town
1 hour -
“BP Soul Travel and Tours scored the highest marks” – Sports Minister Kofi Adams endorses agency for World Cup travel
1 hour -
‘At the age of 12, I was teaching people and collecting money from them’ – Forty Under 40 Awards
3 hours -
I broke my virginity at the age of 26 after university – Richard Abbey Jnr.
4 hours -
Sacked for fees, saved by faith: The untold story of Forty Under 40 Awards founder Richard Abbey Jnr
4 hours -
GCB Bank surges GH¢0.45, ETI gains GH¢0.06 as GSE ends week higher
5 hours -
Two teens jailed 55 years for robbery
5 hours -
UDS demands apology for MPhil student wrongly branded as Tamale robber
6 hours -
“We don’t sell fish!” – Tema Shipyard CEO hits back over dead fish discovery
6 hours -
Sam George defends anti-LGBTQ+ Bill as ‘national priority’ amid debate over gov’t focus
7 hours -
Artemis II astronauts safely back on Earth after trip around moon
7 hours -
Sam George unveils massive 1,150-cell site rollout to end network woes
8 hours