Audio By Carbonatix
The former Chief Executive of the Ghana National Petroleum Corporation, Alex Mould, has accused government of incorrect accounting in relation to Ghana’s share of oil revenue from the Sankofa Gye Nyame (SGN) oil field.
According to him, the crude oil given to EniGhana as payment for the advance they made on behalf of GNPC to cover its 5% development cost, has not been passed through the Petroleum Holding Fund (PHF) as mandated in the Petroleum Revenue Management Act (PRMA).
"Payments for Jubilee and Tweneboa, Enyenra and Ntomme (TEN ) oil fields were correctly passed through the PHF but this has not been done for SGN," he indicated in a statement adding.
He added that "If true, then this is a violation of the Law as stipulated by the PRMA."
Read the statement below:
GOVERNMENT VIOLATES THE LAW ON ACCOUNTING FOR OIL REVENUE
In each oil field, Government of Ghana (GoG) has two distinct 'equity Interests'; a Carried Interest and a Paid-in Participation Interest.
The Carried Interest is where GoG is “Carried” and as such pays no exploration/appraisal or development cost to bring the field to production; GoG only contributes to the field’s operating and production costs once the field is in production.
The Paid-in Participation Interest is where GoG, having opted to increase its equity after the Contractor Group declares Commerciality, pays for only the development cost to bring the field to production. Once the field is in production, GoG then contributes to the field’s operating and production costs.
For both Jubilee and TEN, we agreed to repay the Contractor Group who financed the development costs for Ghana National Petroleum Corporation's (GNPC) Participating Interest. The agreement was to use 40% of our revenue from the sale of the crude oil of our combined Carried and Participating Interests equity takes (this excludes the Royalties that are paid directly to government).
Strangely, the Agreement for the SGN oil field does NOT specify what percentage of our revenue from oil sales would be used to repay the amount owed to the SGN Partners (eniGhana & Vitol) who funded the development costs for GoG’s 5% Participating Interest on behalf of GNPC.
Based on data from GNPC, SGN Partners are being paid the amounts owed using 100% of all the revenue from the sale of Ghana’s share of Oil (excluding Gas) from the SGN field production; (note: for Jubilee and TEN we used 40% of our revenue).
Furthermore, the revenue from the sale is not being paid into the PHF as per the PRMA before being disbursed to GNPC to repay the debt incurred by the SGN Partners for the development cost of the field.
So, why is GoG is not following the PRMA rules with regards to the revenue from selling Ghana’s share of the oil to repay the monies advanced for the development cost of the SGN field?
The PRMA rules are simple:
1. Sell Ghana’s share of the oil from the field (to eniGhana);
2. Pass the Funds through the Petroleum Holding Fund (note: this is also not being done for Natural Gas Sales i.e. GNPC is once again violating the PRMA);
3. Allocate GNPC funds to repay the Development and Production costs;
4. GNPC pays the Contractor (eniGhana in this case) for the costs incurred (which is 100% of the equity portion of the funds derived from sale of crude oil relating to only the participating Equity Interest (5%));
- Why are we giving up 100% of the revenue derived from the sale of all Ghana’s oil (excluding Oil related to Royalties) rather than 100% of only the Participating Interest “Equity”?
- Why are the oil revenue payments not being paid into Bank of Ghana accounts as we currently do for the oil revenue from both the Jubilee and TEN fields?
- Doesn’t the law require payment of all petroleum (oil and natural gas) sales into the PHF before any disbursement is made (and such disbursement should follow the PRMA Waterfall )?
- Is there no violation with Natural Gas proceeds from Jubilee, TEN and SGN?
Lastly, it seems from the various reports Ministry of Finance has released, that GoG is actually under reporting the amount of Oil sold and consequently under reporting the amount of our oil contribution to our GDP!
If any other company in Ghana under reported its revenue, GoG would have clamped down on it.
Let’s do the right thing, please!!
Signed
Alex Mould
(Former Chief Executive of GNPC)
02/12/2019
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Free MRI scans available at 37 Military Hospital as new diagnostic partnership takes effect
4 minutes -
Over 50% of Barekese forest cover lost as reservoir capacity drops by 30% – GWL
4 minutes -
Fire destroys GH¢80,000 worth of goods at Amenam in Eastern Region
6 minutes -
Stepson of Norway’s crown prince convicted of rape, sentenced to 4 years in prison
8 minutes -
Cocoa sector must become more resilient, prosperous and profitable – Finance Minister
13 minutes -
Wontumi appoints Atta Akyea as new lead counsel in ongoing criminal case following Appiah-Kubi’s withdrawal
16 minutes -
Gov’t to clarify presidency staffing claims and release roads contracts enquiry report
24 minutes -
We’re optimistic stabilising Iran-US tensions could push crude oil prices below $80 – COMAC CEO
25 minutes -
Rhode Island assures Black Stars hospitality throughout FIFA World Cup campaign
45 minutes -
Africa must strengthen political advisory capacity to meet emerging security challenges – KAIPTC, Austrian officials say
46 minutes -
France star Mbappe vows to increase defensive work
54 minutes -
Oil prices fall and shares jump after US-Iran deal announced
55 minutes -
Finance Minister opens 7th Steering Committee Meeting of Côte d’Ivoire-Ghana Cocoa Initiative in Abidjan
57 minutes -
MMDAs to receive over 80% of Common Fund directly — Chief of Staff
59 minutes -
Kuami Eugene’s ‘Sweet Boy’: A dose of heartbreak, highlife and hitmaker energy
59 minutes