Eni Ghana and its OCTP Partners, Vitol and GNPC, donate medical equipment to Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital to support the fight against COVID-19

Eni Ghana, on behalf of the OCTP Joint Venture, delivered medical equipment to the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital to enhance its capacity to provide support to Ghanaians in the fight against Covid-19. It is aimed at providing immediate relief and lasting support to Ghana’s health care delivery system.

The equipment includes a 30-bed capacity medical tent, 4 prefabricated washrooms/bathrooms for patients housed in the tent, 20 vital signs monitors, and 2 portable ultrasound machines with a cardiac probe.

This donation is part of an overall initiative of about $900,000 by Eni Ghana and its partners in the OCTP project – Vitol and GNPC and is designed to strengthen Ghana’s health care system to be able to respond to the health needs of the people in an efficient and effective manner. Similarly, last year Eni Ghana and its partners, Vitol and GNPC, donated to the Ghana Health Service, St Martins De Porres Hospital in Eikwe, and the Ellembelle District Health Directorate, medical equipment and personal protective equipment to help in the management of COVID-19 in the country.

Eni Ghana’s Managing Director, Giuseppe Valenti, commented, “Eni prioritises the health of its workers and the citizens of the host countries in which it operates by investing for the continuous improvement of their healthcare systems”.

Eni is a global integrated energy company operating in over 60 countries. It has been present in Ghana since 2009 with its upstream activity and currently accounts for a gross production of about 70,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day. The gas produced from OCTP’s Sankofa field ensures reliable, stable, and sustainable fuel for Ghana’s power plants, with a positive impact for the country: it develops local production, enhances access to energy, crates skills, jobs, revenues, and royalties while reducing reliance on imported fuel which weighs negatively on the balance of payments.

Eni Ghana, on behalf of the OCTP Joint Venture, delivered medical equipment to the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital to enhance its capacity to provide support to Ghanaians in the fight against Covid-19. It is aimed at providing immediate relief and lasting support to Ghana’s health care delivery system.

The equipment includes a 30-bed capacity medical tent, 4 prefabricated washrooms/bathrooms for patients housed in the tent, 20 vital signs monitors, and 2 portable ultrasound machines with a cardiac probe.

This donation is part of an overall initiative of about $900,000 by Eni Ghana and its partners in the OCTP project – Vitol and GNPC and is designed to strengthen Ghana’s health care system to be able to respond to the health needs of the people in an efficient and effective manner. Similarly, last year Eni Ghana and its partners, Vitol and GNPC, donated to the Ghana Health Service, St Martins De Porres Hospital in Eikwe, and the Ellembelle District Health Directorate, medical equipment and personal protective equipment to help in the management of COVID-19 in the country.

Eni Ghana’s Managing Director, Giuseppe Valenti, commented, “Eni prioritises the health of its workers and the citizens of the host countries in which it operates by investing for the continuous improvement of their healthcare systems”.

Eni is a global integrated energy company operating in over 60 countries. It has been present in Ghana since 2009 with its upstream activity, and currently accounts a gross production of about 70,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day. The gas produced from OCTP’s Sankofa field ensures reliable, stable, and sustainable fuel for Ghana’s power plants, with a positive impact for the country: it develops local production, enhances access to energy, crates skills, jobs, revenues, and royalties while reducing reliance on imported fuel which weighs negatively on the balance of payments.

 

 

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