Thursday, April 23, 2009

Ghana: A New Growth Area for Oil & Gas

In an earlier post we’ve discussed how Africa is becoming a new frontier for oil and gas exploration for western countries as well as new emerging Asian powerhouses like China and India. We review one country – Ghana which is emerging as an oil and gas exploration hub.

Ghana was the first African nation to have gained independence from British rule. Since its independence in 1957, the country is slowly yet surely moving forward with the help of abundant natural resources especially minerals like gold, diamond, bauxite and manganese. What makes Ghana important to the oil and gas industry is the presence of light oil which was discovered recently in 2007.

As demand for energy has increased in Ghana, many projects relating to the importation of gas via pipeline from nearby Nigeria and Cote d'Ivoire have come up. Although as yet, its upstream oil industry has no crude oil production, Ghana is one of four West African countries with an oil refinery. Oil-derived products supply 70% of Ghana's commercial energy needs and the downstream sector is well structured.

Much of Ghana's emerging oil industry is underpinned by the discovery and early development successes of the “Jubilee field” located in an area straddling the West Cape Three Points and Deepwater Tano contract blocs. The development of the Jubilee field is currently in the first phase, involving the drilling of nine production wells and an additional eight support wells.

Currently, exploration and commercial activity is limited to mid cap players. Texas-based oil exploration company E&P outfit Kosmos is amongst the major players in Ghana’s oil and gas sector, although there have been some reports of Kosmos’ interest in divesting some of its stakes in the country. The other big player is UK based Tullow.

Smaller companies are finding it easier to explore in Ghana than in some of its neighbors in West Africa. This is due in part to advantageous terms of the contract which include factors like no front end payments such as signature or production bonuses; negotiable royalties and income tax; no limit on cost recovery, low rental payments, no restrictions on the repatriation of funds and no import duties on exploration and production equipment and materials.

With such advantages for exploration and development coupled with the quality of light crude, Ghana is poised to be one of the new growth economies in the oil sector.

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