ACEP advocates for contract transparency in extractive sector

The Africa Centre for Energy Policy (ACEP) has charged regulators of Ghana’s mining industry to implement international best mining practices in the award of contracts to ensure accountability in the extractives sector.

Stakeholders in the extractive sector have constantly complained about contract agreements awarded to companies and the ineffective monitoring of the agreements.

ACEP has over the years, been calling for a review of existing petroleum agreements and appropriate sanctions for defaulters of the law.

But with the recent launch of a new Contracts Monitor Platform, which is an online tool to digitally track all petroleum agreements in the country, the Centre plans to bridge the wide gap created over the years.

The platform, which started as a study in 2017, proved the inactivity of non-producing oil blocks in the country, contrary to the legal obligations on contractors to make minimum financial and technical investments within specified periods.

The new platform thus comes as a step in further in tackling the problems found in the study.

But the Head of Policy Unit at the Centre, Pauline Anaman, says the Centre plans to expand the scope of the new platform to cover the mining sector, hence the call for better strategies to ensure transparency and accountability.

“The Ghana Contract Monitor is a representation of how far Ghana has come, from the abyss of extractive contract secrecy, to the glory of contract transparency. But contract transparency is not enough in the wake of an era of open contracting. ACEP intends to expand the scope of the Ghana Contract Monitor Platform to cover mining contracts. To this end, we call on the regulators of Ghana’s over a Century-old mining industry to legalize and implement international best practices on open contracting that achieves good accountability results at every stage of the mining value chain for meaningful development outcomes.”

Head of Policy Unit, ACEP, Pauline Anaman

She further reiterated their call on government to review existing petroleum agreements and sanction non-compliant contractors, stressing that, “Companies have failed to deliver on their contractual obligations due to lack of competition for blocks, weak parliamentary oversight, poor track record of some companies, and political patronage of the inefficiencies we see”.

Ghana Contract Monitor Platform

The Ghana Contract Monitor Platform is an online tool that provides updates on work progress of non-producing extractive sector companies who have valid agreements with the Government of Ghana to explore, develop, and produce petroleum and mineral resources in the country.

The rationale of the platform is to ensure that contractors do not hold Ghana’s blocks for speculative reasons, but rather make the necessary technical and financial investments that will increase resource production for fiscal and non-fiscal benefits that drive the country’s development.

It currently reports work progress of 14 operators in Ghana’s upstream oil and gas industry. The platform is also friendly for persons with disabilities as it has been equipped with text to speech features for the blind.

By Wontumi2