Connected Cities, Sekondi-Takoradi

Sekondi-Takoradi, Ghana 漏Barbora Nemcova.

In 2007, after offshore oil deposits were discovered near Sekondi-Takoradi, Ghana, industry observers noted the rise of West Africa鈥檚 newest oil city. A recent paper by , a research fellow at Australia鈥檚 University of Technology, Sydney, School of the Built Environment, surveys Sekondi-Takoradi鈥檚 post-discovery growth and suggests that the city鈥檚 past should inspire us to be more confident about its future.

Sekondi-Takoradi鈥檚 transformation has been well documented by Obeng-Odoom鈥檚 peers, but his review of their efforts presents a compelling snapshot of the city鈥檚 frenetic growth, which is as remarkable in capturing the scale of change as it is in finding the contrasts that exist between the city鈥檚 old urban forms and emerging new ones.

The 鈥渙il fever,鈥 as Obeng-Odoom describes it, in Sekondi-Takoradi has created new jobs as聽a result of more than 40 international oil companies establishing operations in the city since 2007. It has also spurred expanded university-level technical training programs and political and public discussions around how to best manage the resource opportunity. At the same time, greater investments in urban development, ranging from a new 180,000-resident satellite settlement to a municipal initiative to designate streets with names, are further signs of the city鈥檚 transformation into a center of wealth creation.

In observing what is happening in Sekondi-Takoradi, Obeng-Odoom believes the city is coming full circle, building on聽pre-oil achievements such as the聽city鈥檚 modern transport infrastructure network,聽assembled over the last century, including road networks (1895), railways (1898), and later Africa鈥檚 first artificial harbor (1975), which helped increase Sekondi-Takoradi鈥檚 national and international importance.

These antecedents, however, provide something more than just historic parallels. They offer, according to Obeng-Odoom, an important source of resilience to help the Sekondi-Takoradi manage the social and economic challenges associated with oil developments:

“Social relations are likely to become increasingly complex and new contours of adjustment and maladjustment may arise, but they will not necessarily cause ‘social disruption,’ a ‘resource curse’ or ‘rentier state’ pressures. Institutions 鈥攆ormal, informal, implicit and explicit 鈥 and rules, processes and customs matter: they shape, restrain and constrain the future.”

By attempting to show Sekondi-Takoradi鈥檚 case as a contrast to what he sees as a prevalent attitude shaping how we perceive the rise of Africa鈥檚 oil cities, Obeng-Odoom is not dismissing the challenges involved in growing economies that rely on resource extraction developments. Instead he is encouraging a more nuanced perspective on how oil will shape Sekondi-Takoradi鈥檚 future.

Franklin Obeng-Odoom鈥檚 appears in Urbani izziv, volume 23 (2012).

 

Micheal Fountain (micheal.fountain@aecom.com) is an editor of the Connected Cities blog.

Originally published Jul 29, 2013

Author: Micheal Fountain