Ghana To Strengthen Business Ties With France

President John Dramani Mahama has expressed the desire and determination of the government to strengthen business relations between Ghana and France in the coming years. He said although there were relations between the two countries in the areas of construction, natural resources and the sciences, more emphasis would be placed on the restructuring of the urban areas of Ghana, energy generation, education and the utmost development of technology. President Mahama expressed that commitment when he visited Dassault Systems and GNPC-Techniq companies that had been playing vital roles in Ghana over the years. While Dassault Systems has been engaged in training and general consultancy for the mining, oil and gas, water and eco-culture sectors in Ghana, Techniq, on the other hand, has been working with the Ghana National Petroleum Corporation (GNPC) in the areas of oil and gas. President Mahama advised Dassault Systems to collaborate with the Volta River Authority (VRA) to simulate wind energy as another alternative to solving the energy challenges facing Ghana. He expressed satisfaction with the intervention in gold, oil and gas co-operation, adding, �Ghana is a developing country, with attendant urbanisation challenges, and we would, therefore, want you to do the simulation for us to solve those challenges in the country.� At Techniq, President Mahama was taken round the pictorial projects that the company had collaborated with the GNPC in Ghana to undertake, especially an orphanage it had adopted at Dodowa in the Eastern Region as part of its corporate social responsibility. The company also displayed videos of some of the agreements it had signed with the GNPC and the projects it intended to execute for the next phase of the co-operation. The Chief Executive Officer of Dassault Systems, Mr Bernard Charles, who explained the company�s activities to President Mahama, said apart from Ghana, his outfit had, over the years, co-operated with 40 other countries. He said Ghana Manganese, Perseus Mining, Newmont Ghana, Adamus Resources and African Mining Services were some of the companies it had worked with over the years. �Over 200 people have been trained in software in Ghana each year to increase profitability, mining safety and general good working conditions in the mining and oil and gas industry,� he said. President Mahama also visited the headquarters of the International Organisation of La Francophonie where he held a meeting with Mr Abdou Diouf, the Secretary of the organisation. Although the meeting was held behind closed doors, President Mahama was expected to deepen his determination to make learning of French a major principle, on account of the country�s geographical location among French-speaking countries.