The Head of Economic Regulation at the National Petroleum Authority (NPA), Abass Ibrahim Tasunti, has stated the Government of Ghana can only subsidise petroleum products if it can do so despite the hikes in petrol prices in the country.

“Subsidy in itself is not a good thing; but because you the consumer are only interested in the cheaper prices but you forget that if the price is cheaper and the product is not available, you will not like that,” he said.

He said, “For us, if the government wants to subsidise, the NPA, as a regulator, cannot say it would not allow the subsidy to be passed.”

According to him, it is up to the government to analyse or assess its capacity to subsidise “but you must have the money before you can subsidise so that we don’t go back to the issue where you have subsidised but there’s no money and there’s a shortage.”

He further explained that the NPA can only advise the government when it realises prices are rising to use the Price Stabilisation and Recovery Levy to cushion consumers which the authority did last year.

Giving a presentation on the Price Formula in Ghana at a day’s capacity-building training for journalists in the Northern Region on Monday, June 13, 2022, Mr Tasunti said Nigeria, as an OPEC country, after restructuring its petroleum industry last year, decided to scrap subsidies on petrol by June this year.

“Why is Nigeria scraping subsidy on fuel? Most countries in the world want to scrap subsidies on fuel. It is not an easy decision to scrap subsidies on fuel but it is very good for the economy. About 70% of vehicles in Nigeria run on petrol. In Ghana, we consume more diesel than petrol but in Nigeria, it is the other way round because everybody is using the fuel that is subsidised but because Nigeria produces a lot more crude oil than Ghana does, that is why they’re able to use the revenue they generate from the crude oil export to subsidise the petrol prices. And even that, they say they want to scrap the subsidy because they aren’t able to afford the subsidy,” he explained.

Meanwhile, the NPA Head of Economic Regulation said the Bank of Ghana is organising a special exchange rate options for the oil industry, asserting it used not to happen until three months ago so that the rate at which the oil industry gets the dollar becomes predictable to help stabilise the price for the public.

For his part, the NPA Head of Quality Assurance, Saeed Ubeidalah Kutia, gave an assurance that the authority would continue to put in quality control measures along the value chain to guarantee the integrity of petroleum products in the country.

The National Petroleum Authority also urged consumers to report issues of fuel adulteration within 48 hours for swift investigations and redress.

 

Source: https://energynewsafrica.com