By George Wachira
In Summary
- Energy ministry should learn from Ghana, which is keen on local content development.
For the business community and professionals
“local content” is of immediate interest in respect to the ongoing oil
and gas exploration.
Local content is defined as the services,
materials and labour supplied by local firms and individuals to the oil
and gas sector. This is in contrast to foreign supply of the same.
Services and materials are required as soon as an
investor commits to search for oil through exploration, drilling and
finally production development if quantities of hydrocarbons are
confirmed commercial.
Whereas it may take about four years to pocket the
initial cash from oil production, services and materials are required
immediately exploration starts. Local content is a major input into GDP
and a major
employment generator. Local content expertise has the capacity to be “exported” to other countries with less developed oil and gas activities.
employment generator. Local content expertise has the capacity to be “exported” to other countries with less developed oil and gas activities.
However, a nation can miss full benefits of local
content if the government does not create laws, regulations, and
institutions to promote, develop and monitor the same. Kenya does not
need to re-invent the wheel as we can copy and paste what Ghana has done
in the past few years.
Whereas Norway may be considered the global leader
in hydrocarbons resource governance, Ghana is the current best practice
in Africa. Ghana discovered oil only in 2008 and is already exporting
it.
The fact that Ghana’s oil finds were offshore
meant that there was less delay in developing and monetising the
resource. Onshore resource developments, as in Uganda and Kenya, take
much longer.
My interest is, however, in local content
development in Ghana. A couple of weeks ago Ghana inaugurated the
Enterprise Development Centre (EDC) in the coastal city of Takoradi as a
key institution for operationalising the local content component of
their national Petroleum Activities Policy.
The EDC targets to empower small and medium
enterprises (SME) to take advantage of opportunities available in the
emergent sector, thus ensuring participation by locals in the oil
sector.
According to the Minister of Energy and Petroleum,
Mr Emmanuel Armah Kofi Buah, the EDC will ensure that SMEs get a fair
share of large oil and gas investments which will translate into
transformation of Ghanaian business, job creation, and overall expansion
of the economy.
Kenya is losing time of organising local content
because we do not as yet have in place laws and institutions supporting
the concept. Although Kenya only discovered oil last March and has not
established commercial volumes, this should not be an excuse for
inaction.
We should urgently set-up a local content “help
desk” at the Ministry of Energy and Petroleum to offer basic guidelines
to enterprising Kenyans who do not know where or how to make an entry
into the oil and gas market.
When oil and gas volumes are confirmed commercial,
Kenya will need to establish more permanent institutions to guide and
monitor local content. There will be need to segment local content into
both onshore and offshore enterprise sections with offshore efforts
based at the coast.
A lot of exploration activities are taking place
in our coastal waters and many potential local content participants are
not sure how to make an entry into materials and services supplies.
A recent forum organised by National Oil of Kenya
(NOCK), funded by Wily Olsen of Norway, classified local content into
three: specialist services , direct services and indirect services.
Specialist services are technical and high on capital and operating
costs.
Special services
They include seismic services, rig hire, and well
services. We would expect foreign involvement in special services
provision in the short to medium term, with gradual local content
development through partnerships.
Direct services include field construction (civil,
mechanical, and electrical), construction materials and spare parts,
inspection, international freight services, and environmental services.
We expect to see more local companies making an entry in this sector
.
.
Indirect services include freight forwarding,
customs clearance, waste management, security, catering, camps and
accommodation, equipment hire, fuel supply, provision of unskilled
labour, personnel transport, medical, legal, etc. Local firms should
fully participate in this sector.
It is important that the oil and gas sector
receives wider inter-ministerial attention so as to maximise economic
benefit to the economy through development of local content, especially
SMEs which will require credit and training.
Development of local content is a shared responsibility between oil and gas principal investors and the government.
However, it is only after investors confirm
commercial quantities of the fuel that can we expect them to
substantially engage in longer term local content development.
Wachira is the director Petroleum Focus Consultants.
No comments :
Post a Comment