Fate of Foreign Oil Investors In Limbo Amid Ghana-Côte d’Ivoire Border Dispute
Fawzia Sheikh
Earlier this month,
The Ghanaian parliament passed a boundary commission bill this week, according to media reports, which have also asserted that
While an actual war may not be looming between the African neighbors over the rightful ownership of offshore resources, potential “unclear title right at the margin” will most certainly be a problem, argued Peter Pham, director of the Africa Project at the New York-based National Committee on American Foreign Policy and an associate professor at James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Virginia.
“I think both sides have a stake in settling this, because if there’s uncertainty, no one is going to invest anywhere near the disputed area for fear of having bought a license that’s worthless,” Pham cautioned.
A change of “one or two degrees” with respect to where a line is drawn out to sea can have a “huge impact 100 miles offshore,” and neither side will be in a position to profit from resources found there, Pham told OilPrice.com.
The
The outcome of the maritime boundary row will also have a bearing on a number of small and mid-sized companies on both sides, Spio-Garbrah said. Firms like Kosmos Energy, Exxon, Total and Tullow Oil are all “sort of concerned” about the conflict, he said.
For the most part, though, oil investments have been made in blocks that are "unambiguously in one country’s economic zone or another,” Pham noted. But Ghana will move into a tricky “crunch” mode when most blocks have been spoken for and the location of the rest are questionable, he said, adding “that’s going to delay the sales on both sides.”
At the moment, the Ghanaian government has reached this key stage as far as licensing is concerned, Pham said. Both countries are operating off the “same ambiguous maps that
Once the
At this point, Pham added, it is “nearly impossible” to say which argument is legitimate.
But the dispute will “get very expensive,” he predicted, and how long it takes to resolve will depend on the "political will on both sides.”
Indeed, there is a “scramble” for natural resources in this “latent belt of oil” stretching from Sierra Leona eastward to
The disagreement between
These disputes, however, may simply become legal conflicts, he said, rather than slide into all-out war.
This article was written by Fawzia Sheikh for Oilprice.com who focus on Fossil Fuels, Alternative Energy, Metals, <a href=" http://www.oilprice.com/articles-oil-prices.php" target="new">Oil Prices</a> and Geopolitics. To find out more visit their website at: http://www.oilprice.com
March 23, 2010