Posted - From: Ghana | J. Ato Kobbie, Managing Editor |The Business Analyst          Last Updated: April 6, 2012, 8:30 pm 
Even as Ghanaians wonder about the level of  the country’s preparedness in responding to oil and oil-related  spillage, environmental experts are already looking at Ghana becoming  the hub for rapidly responding to such incidents in the West African  sub-region.
Disclosing this to participants on the second day of  the three-day Ghana Summit on oil and gas held at the Accra  International Conference Centre (AICC) last week, Mr. Kojo  Agbenor-Efunam, Principal Programme Officer (Oil and Gas) of the  Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), said recent industry activities  and discoveries in other West African countries such as Liberia and  Sierra Leone, have increased risk levels and therefore stakeholders have  been discussing the need to pool resources together to effectively  respond to any spillages.
In a presentation that focused on  Ghana’s capacity building and preparedness to dealing with oil spillage,  Mr. Agbenor-Efunam said following initial studies undertaken as far  back as 1986, with the assistance of the International Maritime  Organization (IMO), to assess the country’s risk level, the country  started building capacity for dealing with any eventual oil spillage. 
According  to him, the study, which covered the country’s 550 kilometres of  coastline, helped in determining the ecological diversity, the brisk  economic activities along the coast, which is densely populated with  important cities, revealed the country was at risk and risk zones were  determined.
Complete Post at: 
http://business.myjoyonline.com/pages/news/201204/84480.php    
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