By GEORGE WACHIRA
In Summary
- Most urgent on his to-do list is to push Energy, Upstream Petroleum Bills through the legislature and get them signed into law.
I am sure the energy and petroleum stakeholders will
join me in welcoming the nomination of Senator Charles Keter to the
position of Cabinet Secretary (CS) for Energy and Petroleum.
Mr Keter is not new to the ministry as he served as an
assistant minister in the same ministry in the last government. Further,
his experience as a previous MP and a senator will be an added
advantage in the political management of the energy and petroleum
affairs.
The splitting of the ministry into two departments
(Energy and Petroleum) with two separate Principal Secretaries is a
welcome reform.
Previously electricity issues were perceived by
many as receiving more attention and priority compared to petroleum.
This separation of accountability and responsibility will certainly
improve focus and effectiveness in the management of both energy and
petroleum sub-sectors.
We also wish to welcome the new principal secretary for Petroleum, Andrew Kamau who is not new to the this sector.
Here then is my list of issues that I feel the
cabinet secretary and his two principal secretaries should prioritise
with a view to making a major difference to the energy and petroleum
sectors and in so doing to the entire economy.
The most urgent agenda for Charles Keter is to push
the two Bills (Energy and Upstream Petroleum) through the legislature
and get them signed into laws.
Once passed, the two laws shall be operationalised
into facilitative institutions and regulations that should unleash
numerous potential opportunities.
In the upstream oil and gas area, monetisation of
the discovered oil in Turkana is amost pressing issue. Investors are not
likely to sign off their final investment decisions on oil production
development until decisions and commitments are made on the export
pipeline project.
The CS will therefore be under pressure from
various stakeholders to deliver the pipeline project, for only then can
we correctly estimate the date of the first oil.
The finalisation of the legal, fiscal and
regulatory framework is also equally critical in final investment
decisions by investors. Institutional and human resource capacity
building in the oil and gas sector is in progress especially under the
World Bank funded project. This will require acceleration once the new
laws are passed.
In the downstream petroleum sector, the CS will
find this area more or less stable with the imports and pricing
instruments working fairly well.
The integrity and intentions of the monthly
products price formula should be protected at all costs to maintain
fairness, transparency and predictability in the downstream petroleum
sector.
The ongoing work to rationalise products imports
storage and distribution capacity should gradually remove bottlenecks
in the petroleum product supply chain.
However, the CS will need to provide early
decisions on the institutional status of the Mombasa refinery which has
remained vague since the refinery stopped refining in 2013.
No comments :
Post a Comment