The Minister of Energy, Felix Owusu-Adjapong says
the discovery of oil in Ghana should not be perceived as a curse but a national
asset that would put Ghana on the world market.
He said although communities where minerals are
extracted are the immediate beneficiaries, the benefit was for the whole
country. The Minister said this when he paid a working visit to some sector
agencies under his Ministry, including Ghana National Petroleum Corporation,
Tema Oil Refinery and Ghana Grid Company to deliberate with management and
staff on matters of concern and plan ways of improving activities in the sector
.
Mr. Owusu-Adjapong said, with a large land mass of
the country believed to have deposits of hydro-carbon, it was possible that
"we will be heading from the western frontier to the coastal, Eastern and
the Volta regions". "I therefore want to draw your attention to the
need to go through these difficult times to reach that goal for the development
of our country."
Moses Oduro Boateng, Managing Director of GNPC,
said it was important for all Ghanaians to acknowledge the urgency of the
sector's position in the oil business which was worth protecting adding that,
"many people are passionate about this oil business, but remember it is
not for a particular group of people but for every Ghanaian."
The Senior Staff Association of GNPC said over the
past seven years it had worked hard to improve on their services through the
development of new scientific and policy capacities.
However, the association said, despite these
achievements there were also signs of a stagnating and fragmented global regime
for personal and sustainable development. "The increase in world oil and
food prices calls for further strengthening of our pockets," they said.
The Association said the immediate challenges
which had particular relevance to the oil find included addressing the huge
resource gap between GNPC and its partners in the oil industry that had led to
discrepancies in remuneration. "We have every reason to be optimistic about
Ghana, the Ghanaian Diaspora and our partnership because Ghana too has arrived
on the world stage."
At TOR, the Minister and his team inspected the
production and the technical units, among others. Mr Kofi Kodua, Managing
Director of TOR, announced that it was currently embarking on a project to
increase productivity.
He said three storage tanks would be built to
reduce the constraints of crude oil storage, cooling water tower, sea water
pumping station and a fibre glass pipeline from the harbour to the refinery.
He disclosed that TOR was currently generating its
own electricity and by the end of the year the company would be self-sufficient
and would not have to rely on power from the national grid.
Joseph Wiafe, Chief Executive Officer of Gridco,
also told the minister about some strategic capital projects the company was
embarking on which include the Kumasi-Obuasi Transmission Reinforcement Project
funded by the Government of Ghana, Kintampo Substation, Buipe Substation and
Substations Reliability Enhancement Project.
Source: The Statesman.