The Citizen (KZN)

New oil deals to lure investors

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Lower prices and increasing competitio­n for investment are driving many African states to make it easier and cheaper for overseas companies to keep their oil and gas output flowing.

From Ghana to Gabon, government­s are adjusting terms to lure picky investors who are also increasing­ly concerned about longterm demand for fossil fuels as renewable energy gains ground.

The shift follows declining oil production in Angola and Cameroon and disappoint­ing bid rounds in Ghana. It also marks an recognitio­n that the era of $100 (about R1 500) per barrel oil is over.

“Because of increased competitio­n for investment in Africa, we are changing our strategy,” Mohammed Amin Adam, Ghana’s Deputy Minister for Petroleum, said at last week’s Africa Oil Week in Cape Town.

Ghana’s Adam was not alone in announcing plans to revise oil and gas licensing laws in an effort to spur output.

Ministers from Angola, Cameroon and Gabon also stressed changes to legal and fiscal terms to boost their own production.

“We are aware that oil companies have to spend a lot of money. That is why we are careful in the way we design our (terms) to have it as a win-win,” said Gabon’s Petroleum Minister Noel Mboumba.

As renewables and efforts to cut fossil fuel consumptio­n gain ground, there are also growing concerns that the world will not need all of Africa’s oil.

“We don’t know how much new supply we’re going to need. So obviously everybody is going to have to be competitiv­e for that,” said Andrew Latham, vice-president of global exploratio­n at Wood Mackenzie.

Ghana plans to allow companies more leeway in where and when they can drill, while Angola is revising local content laws and privatisin­g oil assets.

Cameroon’s senate in April approved a reform to replace its 1999 petroleum code, sweetening tax terms for oil and condensate developmen­t and allowing companies to recoup “exploratio­n expenses” from production sharing contracts.

Gabon revised its fiscal terms to reduce the government take for shallow and deepwater concession­s and increased the cost-recover limits for companies.

But not all African producers are sweetening the deal.

Nigeria last week increased the amount oil companies pay the government for offshore production, while an overhaul of its oil and gas terms has languished for more than a decade.

Because of increased competitio­n for investment in Africa, we are changing our strategy.

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