Ghana earned $731.94 million in petroleum receipts in the first half of this year, representing a 108.9 percent increase over the 2021 half-year receipt of $350.31 million.
The figure is also $51.39 million shy of the $783.33 million bagged in the entire 2021 and brings to $8.09 billion the revenue the country had received since 2011 when it started producing oil in commercial quantities.
The increase in the receipts, according to the Public Interest and Accountability Committee (PIAC), was largely attributable to revenues in respect of corporate taxes, surface rentals, and crude oil lifting.
This was contained in the semi-annual report on the management and use of petroleum revenues for January –June 2022 released by the Committee at a press briefing in Accra on September 27.
Of the total receipts, Carried and Participating Interest (CAPI) yielded the highest of $354.17 million (48.39 percent); Royalties, $190.43 million (26.02 percent); Corporate Income Tax, $186.33 million (25.46 percent); Surface Rentals, $687,759 and Overnight Interest on Petroleum Holding Fund (PHF), $304,613.
On the distribution, the report said the Ghana National Petroleum Corporation (GNPC) received $173.84 million and the Annual Budget Funding Amount (ABFA) $183.02 million.
The Ghana Petroleum Funds (GPFs) consist of the Ghana Stabilisation Fund (GSF) and the Ghana Heritage Fund (GHF), $390.02 million with GSF$273.02 million and GHF $117 million.
According to the report, Ghana produced a total of 25,861,810.42 barrels (bbls) of crude oil in the first half of 2022 from its three offshore producing fields.
The Jubilee field produced 14,906,957 bbls, representing 57.6 percent; Tweneboa-Enyenra-Ntomme (TEN), 4,394,067 bbls, representing 17 percent and SankofaGye-Nyame (SGN), 6,560,786 bbls representing 25.4 percent.
This represents a 6.9 percent reduction from the first half of 2021 production volume of 27,767,859.00 barrels (bbls) and the third consecutive reduction in year-on-year crude oil production volumes since 2011.
The decrease was a result of reduced production in the TEN and SGN fields, recording a decline of 34.3 and 21 percent respectively. Crude oil production increased in the Jubilee Field by 16.6 percent.
The cumulative raw gas production (Associated Gas-AG and Non-Associated Gas-NAG) for the period was 124,948.79 million standard cubic feet (MMSCF) representing a two percent reduction over the volume of 127,496.04 MMSCF produced for the same period in 2021.
The report said production from Jubilee and TEN Fields decreased by 7.2 and 10.2 percent respectively, whilst SGN’s raw gas production increased by 5.1 percent.
The Chairman of PIAC, Professor Kwame Adom-Frimpong who gave a highlight of the report said the retention of the current cap of $100 million on the GSF for the year 2022 was not in accordance with the formula stipulated in the Legislative Instrument (LI) 2381.
“A proper application of the formula would have returned a cap of US$460.63 million. The Minister for Finance, in determining the cap on the GSF, should comply with the relevant provisions of L.I 2381,” he said.
- Decline in oil production threatens survival of oil companies in Ghana – PIAC warns
- Declining crude production threatens GNPC's Voltaian basin plans
- ‘Create stand-alone gender policy in petroleum value chain’ - Participants
- Ghana's extractive sector: 2023 in focus
- Angola quits OPEC amid dispute over oil production quotas
- Read all related articles