Senior
Programmes Manager at the African Centre for Energy Policy (ACEP), Munira
Abubakari, says in order to ensure efficiency, Ghana’s oil money should be
spent on a few sustainable projects.
According to her, even though government has tried as
much as possible to follow the dictates of the petroleum revenue law, revenue generated
from the sale of oil currently is “spread too thinly over so many projects” which
do not ensure value for money.
“We as a policy think-thank we don’t think that it is
good to spread money in that manner because it’s difficult tracking where the
money goes to.
“Besides, it also creates another problem where if you
allocate money to a project and there are other funding sources coming to fund
the same project, which is counterpart funding, it’s really not easy tracking
the money and speaking to the right authorities, and getting information on
such projects becomes difficult because there are so many funding sources.
Speaking to Citi News in an interview on the sidelines
of a day’s sensitization programme organized by ACEP at the Tamale Technical
University, Ms. Abubakari revealed that she and her team have also visited some
communities where there are supposed to be oil funded projects but
unfortunately, those projects were nowhere to be found.
She indicated that, no significant impact has been
made so far in the agric sector where oil money has been spent on capital
projects, adding that, delay in the execution of projects also sometimes lead
to cost overrun.
With funding support from OXFAM, the tracking of the
oil money project by ACEP is focusing on projects executed with oil money in
the agric sector. The team from ACEP has visited and interacted with officials
of the Ministry of Food and Agriculture and the Irrigation Development
Authority at the regional level.
The Senior Programmes Manager of ACEP cited the
unwillingness of some officials of certain departments to cooperate with her
team when information is requested as one of the biggest challenges they are
facing in tracking the oil money.
The sensitation programme sought to do a value for
money analyses on oil funded projects in the agric sector specifically the
Zakpalsi irrigation project in the Northern Region and the Tankasi and Zuiding
irrigation projects in the Upper East Region.
It also sought to sensitise students of the Tamale
Technical University about the existence of Ghana’s found iron ore at Sheini in
the Tatale District and elicit views on how as a country, the minerals deposit could
be managed or utilized in a sustainable manner.
The programme was also intended to sensitise the
students on Ghana’s oil revenue utilization so far since the discovery oil in
2007 and the thematic areas within which the revenue has been used, how it was used
and going forward, how well it could be used.
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