Audio By Carbonatix
An alliance of African think tanks active in the areas of governance, anti-corruption and energy policy has called for transparency and accountability for projects in the energy sector.
The Think Tanks made up of Africa Centre for Energy Policy (ACEP), IMANI Center for Policy & Education, HEDA Resource Centre, Tax Justice Network Africa and SEATINI also want an immediate termination of crony contracts that deepens the energy poverty of citizens.
The Think Tanks are of the view that “poorly planned, badly governed, and/or corrupt energy sector capital projects and investments usually fail, denying African governments of strategic capabilities and flexibilities to address market instability.”
This, they argue, makes it impossible for African governments to support African consumers during periods when the cost of living is high and economic crises are rampaging.
They have launched a series of case studies looking at energy sector investments in Africa where the first of such cases which focuses on Ghana’s Tema LNG Terminal project, will be released at a webinar on Wednesday, November 9.
“Other case studies in the works that will be touched on during the webinar are related to the perennially botched Tema Oil Refinery public-private partnerships, and the scandal involving Swiss giant Glencore’s bribing of African officials for access to oil & gas cargoes and other opportunities,” a statement from the Think Tanks noted.
Currently, global leaders including African leaders are attending the 27th United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP27) in Egypt to invest in cleaner, greener cities that contribute to climate action.
But the Think Tanks say “until the good governance, accountability, transparency, anti-corruption and broad citizen participation principles originally at the heart of the increasingly cosmetic ESG agenda gets taken seriously, all the noble intentions of the COP process will come to naught.”
The alliance of policy think tanks and institutions noted that they shall continue to use all legal means to push for total transparency and disclosure in the energy and climate project sectors.
According to them, only through informed accountability can the COP27 agenda work for Africa.
Latest Stories
-
Audit Service staff raise alarm over unpaid allowances and budget shortfalls
7 minutes -
Wife of Guinea-Bissau’s ousted president arrested after co-passenger found with $5.9m in cash
10 minutes -
Don’t change a winning team — Dr. Asah Asante rejects calls linking minister–MP roles to poor performance
12 minutes -
National secretariat demands accountability for premix funds managed between 2017 and 2024
18 minutes -
Photos: Archbishop Charles Agyinasare hands over astroturf to Perez University College
35 minutes -
Supreme Court’s halt of Kpandai rerun prevents bigger complications – Prof. Osae-Kwapong
44 minutes -
NDC rules out third-term agenda for Mahama
55 minutes -
Ashanti Region: Military officer arrested over alleged illegal sale of firearms
57 minutes -
Tactical overview of Afcon 2025 – trends to expect
1 hour -
Vice President commissions Softcare sanitary pads production line, reaffirms gov’t partnership
1 hour -
Today’s front pages: Wednesday, December 17, 2025
1 hour -
OSP controversy: Individual views don’t reflect party position – NDC General Secretary
2 hours -
We returned winners, not losers – Bryan Acheampong rewrites NPP’s electoral history
2 hours -
‘Barely in office, already talking power?’ – Fifi Kwetey slams early succession talk in NDC
3 hours -
‘Performance, not sympathy’ – Bryan Acheampong says NPP must break tradition
3 hours
