The Afina-1x Well is located at the West Cape Three Points (WCTP) Block 2 offshore
The Government of Ghana has withdrawn an earlier directive issued by the erstwhile NPP administration, which mandated a compulsory unitisation between Springfield Exploration and Production Limited (Springfield) and Eni Ghana Exploration and Production Limited (ENI) concerning the Afina-1X Discovery and the Sankofa Cenomanian Oil Field (Unitisation Directives).
The directive, issued in 2019 the then Energy Minister, Dr. Matthew Opoku Prempeh, under the Akufo-Addo administration, has now been officially revoked.
In a letter addressed to the respective parties and signed by the Minister of Energy and Green Transition, Dr. John Jinapor, the government stated that the decision followed a thorough review of the Arbitral Award-referenced SCC Arbitration U2021/114 (ENI & Vitol v. Ghana & GNPC) dated July 8, 2024, along with the legal opinion provided by the Attorney General and Minister of Justice.
The Tribunal, while acknowledging the potential value of unitisation in principle, identified several procedural flaws in the implementation of the directives, including:
• Absence of a statutory trigger for unitisation: The Tribunal determined that the conditions required under Section 34 of the Petroleum (Exploration and Production) Act, 2016 (Act 919) and Regulation 50 of the Petroleum (Exploration and Production) (General) Regulations, 2018 (L.I. 2359) were not satisfied.
• Arbitrary determination of initial tract participation: The allocation of participation interests was deemed arbitrary and unsupported by sufficient evidence.
The Ministry of Energy on its part acknowledged the Tribunal’s findings that, while the issuance of the directives breached the Petroleum Agreement due to specific circumstances surrounding their implementation, the concept of unitisation itself was not deemed inherently unlawful.
This latest development provides Ghana with the flexibility to determine the most appropriate course of action in the national interest.
“In consequence, and in alignment with the discretionary powers vested in the Minister under Section 34 of Act 919 and Regulation 50 of L.I. 2359, the Ministry hereby withdraws the Unitisation Directives.”
Meanwhile, the withdrawal of the directive does not prevent the Minister from issuing new directives in the future if further evidence demonstrates that such a measure is necessary for the equitable and efficient development of Ghana’s petroleum resources.
The Government of Ghana reiterated its commitment to maintaining a conducive environment for investments in the upstream petroleum sector while ensuring compliance with the legal and regulatory framework governing the industry.
“I look forward to continuing our collaborative efforts to advance Ghana’s upstream development goals and strengthen trust with all our partners,” the Minister of Energy concluded.
MA
See the statement below: