Ghana’s upstream oil and gas industry is at a crossroads as government weighs a state-led acquisition of Springfield Exploration & Production’s stake in the West Cape Three Points Block II (WCTP-II).
The proposal, driven by stalled progress on the block and government’s renewed effort to protect strategic petroleum assets, has ignited widespread debate about its implications for national output, fiscal stability and investor confidence.
To unpack the opportunities and emerging risks, Mr. Joshua Batsa Narh, Executive Chairman of the Energy Chamber Ghana and Director at Wingfield Group, shared an extensive analysis in an interview with Vaultz News.
His insights reveal that although the move could unlock significant national value, it could equally expose the state to steep financial and operational pitfalls if not executed with discipline.
Mr. Narh said the rationale for intervention is understandable, particularly given Ghana’s declining production volumes.
He noted that bringing the block under a GNPC-led structure could preserve a key national resource rather than leaving a “productive discovery idle.”
According to him, the potential exists for the country to “stabilise national oil volumes as other fields decline,” while enhancing the state’s fiscal gains if development proves commercially sound.
He added that a well-structured programme could also accelerate technical capacity within GNPC and Explorco.

“A credible, time-bounded programme could strengthen GNPC’s technical competencies and improve Ghana’s negotiating position on future deep-water contracts.”
Mr. Joshua Batsa Narh, Executive Chairman of the Energy Chamber Ghana and Director at Wingfield Group
However, Mr. Narh cautioned that the risks are equally substantial. He emphasised that deep-water development demands heavy capital, meaning the state must be prepared for a scenario where “a purchase and development programme can require hundreds of millions to billions of dollars.”
If the reservoir proves smaller than expected or costs escalate, he warned, “the state bears the loss.”
He further warned that an attempt to proceed without an experienced technical operator could undermine the government’s objective of boosting production quickly.
Another concern is investor confidence: “Forced or poorly structured takeovers invite litigation, sovereign reputational damage and could chill foreign investment,” he said.
Technical and Project-Management Realities Ahead

Should the government proceed, Mr. Narh stressed that the immediate challenge will be mastering the technical complexity of deep-water development. He explained that the first major hurdle lies in verifying the field’s potential.
He noted that independent reprocessing of seismic data and rigorous third-party volume certification are critical, because “reserving and recovery assumptions drive every commercial decision.” The appraisal phase itself comes with high costs, long lead times and significant subsurface uncertainty.
He pointed out that the procurement of an FPSO, subsea hardware and other long-lead items requires strong project management systems. “These are areas where GNPC has less recent turnkey deep-water execution experience compared with IOCs,” he observed.
Another challenge is the potential need for unitisation if the reservoir spans adjacent acreage. Mr. Narh described unitisation as “complex, politically sensitive and time-consuming,” warning that failure to secure agreements can delay first oil for years.
Overall, he argued that the state must prepare for a sophisticated governance infrastructure.
“Managing multiple international contractors requires a robust owner’s team, clear KPIs and timely payments. Weak governance quickly creates disputes and stoppages.”
Mr. Joshua Batsa Narh, Executive Chairman of the Energy Chamber Ghana and Director at Wingfield Group
Mr. Narh was blunt when assessing the state’s ability to increase production without external technical support.
“It’s unlikely Ghana will materially improve output quickly without partnering with an experienced operator,” he said, underscoring that deep-water development remains one of the most technically demanding domains in global energy.
He argued that while GNPC may acquire the asset, “it cannot buy the decades of project-delivery experience overnight.”
To avoid costly delays, he recommended a fast-tracked farm-in or co-developer partnership where the state retains majority economic interest but an experienced operator takes the technical lead.
He also stressed the need for an independent technical audit before any acquisition is finalised, saying this is essential for validating economic assumptions and ensuring prudent investment.
Ensuring Local Content and Value Creation

On ensuring that the state actually benefits from any intervention, Mr. Narh offered a roadmap centred on transparency and commercial discipline.
He insisted that any acquisition be accompanied by a fully transparent, independently verified valuation to “reduce perceptions of opacity.”
He recommended the creation of a ring-fenced project vehicle with audited accounts and an independent board composed of technical and financial experts.
To boost local participation meaningfully, he called for performance-linked local content requirements, saying targets should be tied to project milestones, independently verified and enforceable.
he cautioned, “Paper targets don’t translate into capability,” advocating supplier development programmes and bankable contracts for Ghanaian firms.
Institutional capacity building, including secondments of GNPC staff into operator teams, must also be embedded in all contractor frameworks, he added.
Finally, Mr. Narh urged the state to protect public finances through escrowed revenue flows, ring-fenced development accounts, and third-party cost benchmarking.
These measures, he said, would reduce the risk of cost overruns and shield the sovereign balance sheet from undue exposure.
As debate intensifies, Mr. Narh’s assessment underscores that the proposed takeover of Springfield’s WCTP-II stake is not merely a commercial negotiation but a pivotal national decision.
He argues that while the move could secure Ghana’s medium-term production and strengthen local capacity, the risks if mismanaged, could deepen fiscal vulnerability, erode investor confidence and delay production for years.
His message is clear: success depends on transparency, rigorous technical analysis, strong governance and the presence of a seasoned operator.
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