Tullow Ghana
Limited, a leading oil firm in the country, has laid off 70 workers, claiming
to be reeling under the fall in crude oil prices.
The Petroleum Ministry had directed the company not to
lay-off any core technical staff.
Managing
Director of Tullow Ghana, Charles Darku has however denied allegations the
locals affected in the retrenchment fell within the highly skilled labour
force.
The Ministry also directed the company to put in mitigation
measures to ensure minimal impact on employees by redeploying “employees
of risk redundancy” to other areas of the business where their skills could be
used.
But
Industry Watcher, Dr. Steve Manteaw says such orders by the Ministry will yield
no results because it has no regulatory responsibility and that the oil companies
are not “an extension of government bureaucracy”.
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Dr.
Manteaw has acknowledged the importance of consultation in the process of
regulation “but not when the facts are so glaring that this country is being ripped
off…you crack the whip”.
The
Petroleum Commission was established in July 2011 by an Act of Parliament, Act 821,
to regulate and manage the exploitation of petroleum resources and to
co-ordinate the policies in relation to them.
The
Commission is the regulator of Ghana’s upstream petroleum sector and is
mandated to regulate and co-ordinate all activities in this sector for the
overall benefit and welfare of Ghanaians.
But
does the Petroleum Commission have the capacity to crack the whip?
Dr.
Manteaw, who is the Executive Director of the Integrated Social Development
Centre (ISODEC), says the Commission, as an infant institution, has some
weaknesses though there is an ongoing project to build capacity to the fullest
level.
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Story by Kofi
Adu Domfeh
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