Thomas Manu,
Director of Exploration and Production GNPC
The Ghana
National Petroleum Corporation (GNPC) has taken note of the
feature published in your paper dated July 7, 2010 which
unfortunately sought in vain to justify the sale by Kosmos
of its interests deriving from valuable national assets,
through a process in which Kosmos displayed wanton disregard
for the laws of Ghana and willful indifference to compliance
with its obligations under Petroleum Agreements, to which it
is party.
GNPC, as the national oil company, has a duty to ensure that
all petroleum activities are conducted in accordance with
the laws which have been enacted to protect Ghana’s
interests.
It is unfortunate that rather than uniting forces with GNPC
to ensure that oil companies such as Kosmos respect the
people and laws of Ghana, we have NGOs such as the Ghana
Energy transparency (GET) joining forces with companies that
clearly have no respect for the laws of Ghana (for whatever
benefits they may derive).
In its feature, GET states that “though Kosmos may have
erred in the area of information sharing, it is in keeping
with a precedence that the Ghana government has set by its
non enforcement of the contractual provision of the PA”.
The “precedence” that GET is referring to is a complete
mystery to GNPC, because GNPC has always sought to enforce
the contractual provisions of its petroleum agreements.
Even if this phantom “precedence” was a reality, it would be
no excuse to use it as a basis to allow the continued
violation of our laws. Yet GET is clearly trivializing
Kosmos’ data breaches and is telling us that:
• GNPC must allow a phantom precedent that hurts the country
to continue to be perpetrated.
• GNPC must not enforce the contractual provisions of the
petroleum agreements and must allow companies to violate
them at will with no consequences because they only followed
a “precedence” that must be maintained.
In the petroleum industry, data is of fundamental
importance. Data is critical for exploration, development
and production of oil, and for this reason, the Petroleum
Law has clear provisions regarding ownership and
confidentiality of petroleum data.
It is GNPC’s role, as the owner of the data, to ensure that
the appropriate safeguards are put in place to ensure that
the data is used properly and not disseminated in an
uncontrolled fashion.
Kosmos, as part of its sale process, made GNPC data
available to over twenty international oil companies,
including Exxon Mobil, without complying with those
safeguards.
Each of those international oil companies was notified of
this illegality in June 2009 and informed that there needed
to be a regularization of the illegal access that had been
provided by Kosmos to GNPC data.
Over the past one year, rather than regularizing the data
breaches, Kosmos and Exxon Mobil have engaged in various
transactions with each other, and have also ignored the
clear indications from the Government of Ghana that
compliance with the laws of Ghana is a fundamental
pre-condition for investing in Ghana.
Illegal release of data to a large number of international
oil companies has materially undermined GNPC’s commercial
and strategic position in respect of the future development
of the relevant blocks.
The loss of potential licensing fees as a result of Kosmos’
unlawful conduct is significant. Reduction in the inherent
value of the data, as a result of making it available to
such a wide group of recipients, has increased the risk of
wider dissemination and unauthorised use.
This has resulted in a significant change to the balance of
negotiating power between GNPC and the international oil
industry, and has irreversibly altered the investment
landscape in respect of these assets in a way that
constitutes a very substantial negative economic impact on
Ghana.
GNPC and all Ghanaians will disagree with GET for supporting
Kosmos, a company that has put its commercial interests
above compliance with our laws and the long-term interests
of Ghana and its people.
Kosmos has set dangerous precedents that, if allowed to go
un-rectified, will cause damage to Ghana.
GNPC wishes to state unequivocally that while we have made
no secret of our intent and preparedness to purchase the
Kosmos stake at a fair market value, we refused to submit a
formal bid without prior resolution of data breaches by
Kosmos because we could not participate in a process that
breached the laws of Ghana and Kosmos’ obligations under the
petroleum agreements.
We have repeatedly communicated as much to Kosmos. We have
secured the necessary financing to purchase the Kosmos stake
and will submit a fair market value offer at the appropriate
time.
GNPC has never stated that it has pre-emption rights or
rights of first refusal. In the context of the Petroleum
Exploration and Production Law 1984, PNDCL 84 Section 2(1)
which provides that “No person other than the Ghana national
Petroleum Corporation established under the Ghana national
Petroleum Corporation Law, 1983 (PNDCL 64) in this Law
referred to as ‘the Corporation’, shall engage in the
exploration, development or production of petroleum except
in accordance with the terms of a petroleum agreement
entered into between that person, the Republic and the
Corporation…”
This implies that no entity can conduct exploration,
development or production of petroleum without partnering
GNPC. GNPC does not need to have preemption rights or rights
of first refusal.
The right of GNPC, under the GNPC Law and the Petroleum Law,
makes such preemption rights unnecessary, as it subordinates
the exercise of all such preemption rights to GNPC’s consent
to the extent that under an existing petroleum agreement,
preemption rights seek to introduce new partners through the
assignment of interests or increase the interest or control
of existing partners in a petroleum agreement.
All of these will impose new associations or partnerships
either directly or indirectly on GNPC, through private
arrangements in which GNPC would not have participated.
Partnerships that GNPC, by law or commonsense, has the right
to accept or reject. These private arrangements which are
not rooted or derived from the law or from the petroleum
agreements do not therefore supersede GNPC’s legal or
contractual right to choose its own partner(s).
GNPC takes very seriously the responsibility derived from
this provision, and so in exercising its consent rights,
GNPC takes careful account of not only the technical and
financial capabilities of potential partners, but also the
alignment of their strategic interests with ours and the
long-term impact on the nation.
We are happy to inform GET that we at GNPC are proud of the
skill, expertise and ability of our staff to manage and
coordinate the exploration development and production of
Ghana’s hydrocarbon resources in a manner that will ensure
that the people of Ghana derive the greatest possible
benefit from these resources.
In the face of consistent discouragement by naysayers, GNPC
worked diligently with a singular objective towards the
discovery of oil in commercial quantities in Ghana.
Following the success demonstrated by the Jubilee discovery,
GNPC has continued to focus on managing and coordinating the
process in a manner that will allow first oil by year-end
2010, while managing efficient exploration of additional
blocks.
GNPC remains committed to ensuring that companies
undertaking exploration and production activities or seeking
to enter the sector comply with the laws of Ghana and
respect the sovereignty of the country.
Ghana has had the opportunity to learn lessons about oil
exploration and we remain vigilant to ensure that petroleum
activities are undertaken by international oil companies in
the best interest of Ghana.
As repeatedly communicated to both Kosmos and Exxon Mobil,
Ghana welcomes companies that are willing to operate under
the petroleum laws of Ghana and GNPC and the Government of
Ghana will work to ensure that all participants in Ghana’s
oil sector, without exception, operate within our existing
legal framework.
We urge all NGOs, especially the likes of GET, to check
their facts before coming out with such features to mislead
the people of Ghana. We also caution them to refrain from
allowing themselves to be used by international oil
companies to deceive the people of Ghana for private
benefit.
Accra, Aug 2, Ghanadot -
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