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Arthur Energy Advisors Adjudged Energy Consultancy Company of the Year

By Emmanuel Ajarfor Abugri
Headlines Arthur Energy Advisors Adjudged Energy Consultancy Company of the Year
DEC 4, 2018 LISTEN

Arthur Energy Advisors (AEA) has been adjudged the Energy Consultancy Service Company of the year at the 2018 Ghana Energy Awards held in Accra.

The company was recognized for its excellence in consultancy service in the Energy Sector.

AEA has been delivering technical energy sector advisory and consultancy services in the areas of Project Definition and Development, Project Management and Execution, Energy Strategy and Resource Planning, Energy Regulation and Policy Development.

Mr Jabesh Amissah-Arthur, the former CEO of Bui Power Authority, who is now the Managing Partner of AEA said the company’s success was as a result of the hardworking and dedicated staff members at AEA.

While celebrating this achievement, he noted that the recognition inspires them to work harder to offer more satisfactory services to their clients in the energy sector.

“We have done a lot of work in the energy sector for Ghana and across ECOWAS that have contributed immensely to the advancement of the sector. We also recently worked on a Solar Corridor Road Map and initiatives for enhancing the efficiencies of utilities in the Power sector. It is in no doubt that these have all contributed to us emerging as the consultancy company of the year,” Mr. Amissah-Arthur stated.

He stressed that the main objective of AEA is to assist their clients with world class strategies mixed with local insights to enable the agencies achieve both their long- and short-term Energy Sector goals in Ghana and West Africa sub-region.

AEA is a consultancy and advisory services firm based in Accra, Ghana, serving the African energy sector especially countries within the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).

AEA was set up in 2001 in response to the growing need for professional business advisory and technical services needs in Africa’s energy sectors to enable them anticipate impending fundamental changes in the industry environment.

Most of these changes have resulted from deregulation, private participation, technology change and globalization as well as the need for major infrastructural developments. African countries will therefore benefit from expert advice and professional engineering capacity to manage their energy sector efficiently.

Emmanuel Ajarfor Abugri
Emmanuel Ajarfor Abugri

Editor

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