Ghana Starts Construction Of STEM Academy

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Ghana has begun the construction of a Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) Academy at East Legon, a suburb of Accra, Ghana’s capital. President of Ghana Nana Akufo-Addo, on Wednesday, performed a sod-cutting ceremony to begin the construction of the STEM Academy. According to him, this is part of efforts by the government to reorient the educational system to focus more on science and technology. The President decried the country’s pace in terms of science and technology. He, therefore, stated that the construction of STEM schools across the country would make Ghana more competitive on the global scene. “Ghana has been blessed with the best and brightest on the continent who can unleash our potential and make us an active participant in the fourth industrial revolution. The time has come for us to reorient our education system to equip students with the right technological skills needed to succeed in the 21st century,” he said. He revealed that the government has commenced the development of 20 STEM centres and 10 model STEM Senior High Schools across the country, which are at various stages of completion. Some of these schools would be operationalized this year. President Akufo-Addo also expressed concerns about the total number of engineering graduates who are churned out annually in the country. According to him, compared to a country like Vietnam, Ghana must progress from the total number of 6,000 annual engineering graduates to at least 30,000 engineers. The construction of STEM schools in Ghana has been necessitated by calls from stakeholders and industry experts on the need for the country’s curriculum to reflect the demands of the industry. President Akufo-Addo reiterated the government’s commitment to tweaking the educational system for the desired level of socio-economic transformation. He also used the occasion to commend the Education Minister for his efforts in the formulation of the STEM policy. “I am delighted that the school dedicated principally to the teaching and learning of Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) is being brought under the presidency of Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo. I thank all stakeholders especially my erudite Minister of Education and Member of Parliament for Bosomtwi, the Honourable Dr Yaw Osei Adutwum, for the conception of this brilliant idea and for working out to bring it into fruition,” Akufo-Addo said.  

 

Source: https://energynewsafrica.com  

Nigeria: Gov’t Allocates US$195 Million To Improve Power Sector

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Nigeria has budgeted about N806,103.6 billion ($195,000,174.20) for various power projects in the country in 2022. This is a deliberate move to try and fix the country’s ailing power sector. The billion Naira power sector budget/intervention is coming at a time when stakeholders have opposed the continuous support for privatised entities by the Federal Government, saying the move was counterproductive to the ideals of privatisation. Some of the projects as highlighted in the 2022 budget included: N1 billion ($2,4 million) for a rural electrification access programme in federal universities; N220.5 billion ($533,468,218.50) for multilateral and bilateral funded projects (Zungeru, NEP, Abuja power feeding scheme and transmission access, among others). Others are the N800m ($193,548,5.60) for the distribution expansion programme projects to utilise the stranded power from the grid, N114bn ($275,806,698) funding (inclusive of multilateral loans) to the Rural Electrification Agency (REA) for the completion of renewable energy interventions for rural electrification projects nationwide, N303m ($733,065.17) for construction of 215MW LPFO/Gas Power Station, Kaduna and N470bn ($113,709,779) for Kashambilla transmission.

 

Source: https://energynewsafrica.com            

Kenya: Power Supply Restored In Kenya After Nationwide Blackout

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Power supply has been restored in all parts of Kenya after the East Africa nation was hit with a nationwide outage on Tuesday morning. The nationwide outage followed the collapse of some towers of the high voltage transmission line connecting the capital to the Kiambere hydroelectric dam. The country’s power utility company, Kenya Power, said in a statement that as of 1435 GMT, power had been restored in all parts of the country except in three administrative regions known as counties and whose supply was expected back by 1500 GMT. “Work has also commenced on reconstructing the collapsed electricity towers,” Kenya Power said.

 

Source: https://energynewsafrica.com  

Kenya Suffers Nationwide Outage As Transmission Tower Collapses

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Kenya has been hit with a nationwide power outage after a high voltage transmission line connecting the capital collapsed. The country’s power utility company, Kenya Power, announced on Tuesday that the blackout occurred after towers supporting a high voltage power line connecting the capital to the Kiambere hydroelectric dam collapsed. “We have lost power supply due to collapsed towers on Kiambere – Embakasi high voltage transmission power line at 10:45 a.m.(0745 GMT) this morning,” Kenya Power said in a statement on its Twitter account. “Our engineers are working to restore electricity supply as the repairs are being undertaken.” The Corporate Communications Officer at Kenya Power, Immaculate Kubai, told Kenyans.co.ke,that the issue had affected major parts of the country but affirmed that it would be resolved soon. “Yes, a transmission power line has collapsed around Embakasi but it is being worked on. It’s a national blackout, so when the main line collapses most of the time it affects the supply, hence, they are trying to stabilise the grid before they embark on supplying to the country,” she noted. Kenya Power has been trending for the past 48 hours with the majority of Kenyans taking to their social media platforms to lament the power outage that had caused blackout in some parts of the country. The power outage comes days after the Ministry of Energy confirmed a 15 per cent reduction in electricity cost in order to cushion Kenyans from the high cost of living. This was also to fulfill a pledge by President Uhuru Kenyatta. The Ministry noted that the reduction of power cost took effect on January 1, 2022, and would run till December 2022. “The Ministry of Energy hereby confirms that the Kenya Gazette of January 7, has effected a 15 per cent reduction in power tariffs. The reduction will boost livelihoods and economic growth by reducing the cost of living,” read part of the Ministry’s statement.         Source: https://energynewsafrica.com

Morocco: Chariot Makes Significant Gas Discovery Off Morocco

Oil and gas company Chariot has made, what the company described as, a significant gas discovery at the Anchois-2 well located on the Lixus license off Morocco. Chariot has a 75 percent interest and operatorship of Lixus in partnership with the Office National des Hydrocarbures et des Mines which holds the remaining 25 percent. The company said that the Anchois-2 well was safely and efficiently drilled to a total measured depth of 8,240 feet by the Stena Don drilling rig in 1,250 feet of water. A comprehensive evaluation of the well was done through wireline logging, including petrophysical evaluation, subsurface formation testing including reservoir pressures and gas sampling, sidewall cores, and wellbore seismic profiles. Preliminary interpretation of the data confirms the presence of significant gas accumulations in the appraisal and exploration objectives of the Anchois-2 well with a calculated net gas pay totaling more than 330 feet, compared to 180 feet in the original Anchois-1 discovery. The appraisal target – Gas Sand B – has a calculated total net gas pay of more than 165 feet in two stacked reservoirs of similar thickness. The upper reservoir is a continuation of a reservoir drilled in the original discovery well, Anchois-1, with the lower reservoir being newly identified. As for exploration targets – Gas Sands C, M, and O – were successfully encountered with multiple gas-bearing intervals across a gross interval of 820 feet measured distance with no water-bearing reservoirs identified, materially exceeding pre-drill expectations. The previously discovered Gas Sand A was not targeted in the Anchois-2 well, due to the intention of evaluating it in the subsequent Anchois-1 re-entry operations. However, Anchois-2 encountered gas-bearing sands at this level providing important additional subsurface data. According to Chariot, high-quality reservoirs were encountered in all gas sands. Further analysis will be undertaken to fully understand the positive implications on gas resources within the expanded Anchois field and the scale of the potential gas development. De-risking of numerous additional material exploration prospects within the Lixus license area with similar seismic attributes to the Anchois discovery is now considered to be low risk. Chariot said that the well would be suspended for potential future re-entry and completion as a production well in the development of the field. The Stena Don rig will then move to the Anchois-1 gas discovery well to perform re-entry operations with the objectives of assessing the integrity of the previously drilled well, and if successful, providing a future potential production well for the development of the field. “I am delighted to announce that Chariot, as well as conducting a successful appraisal well operation, has made a significant gas discovery at the Anchois-2 well which materially exceeds our expectations. We continue to conduct further analysis on the data collected from the well, but as it stands, we believe the result is transformational for the company,” Adonis Pouroulis, Acting CEO of Chariot, said. “This is a tremendous outcome[…]. With the recently announced key terms of gas offtake with a prominent international energy group, interest from two highly regarded institutional lenders to provide debt finance, an ongoing collaboration with a leading constructor of offshore gas projects, and now this successful gas well result, the Anchois project is getting closer to helping provide a clean transitional fuel to support Morocco’s industrial and economic growth,” he added.
Ghana: BOST To Build LPG Tanks Across Its Depots-MD
   

 

Source: https://energynewsafrica.com    

 

Source: https://energynewsafrica.com

Nigeria: Scrap Toothless NERC-Group To Buhari

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A group calling itself All Electricity Consumers Protection Forum is pushing for the scrapping of Nigeria’s Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC). The group’s call follows the displeasure expressed by President Muhammadu Buhari about the performance of the power sector in the West African nation. Last week, President Buhari expressed his unsatisfactory state of electricity supply in Nigeria. And that, to the group, is an indictment on the country’s electricity regulator and, therefore, advised the President to take a bold step to scrap it for failing Nigerians. “Our advice to the President is to scrap NERC for not living up to its responsibilities of regulating the industry,” National Coordinator of All Electricity Consumers Protection Forum, Adeola Samuel-Lori said during an interview with News Agency of Nigeria in Lagos. He suggested to the President to move the responsibilities of NERC to the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC). “The government should put the sector under the supervision of the FCCPC which has, in recent times, showed that it has what is required to protect the interest of Nigerians. “If we have a regulator that cannot only bark but can bite, all the stakeholders in the electricity value-chain, especially the DisCos, will sit up.” Samuel-Ilori noted that the DisCos had for several years ignored NERC’s directives without sanctions, which had encouraged impunity in the sector. He said, for instance, NERC’s order on capping of Estimated Billing was not obeyed by some DisCos, thus compelling the All Electricity Consumers Protection Forum to institute a suit against NERC and the DisCos before an Ikeja High Court. According to him, the Meter Assets Providers scheme also stipulates a 10-day period for customers to be metered after making payment but some of the Discos are not adhering to the directive. Samuel-Ilori decried the slow pace of metering of electricity customers across the country, adding that Nigerians should be allowed to procure their meters directly from any source by the DisCos.

 

 

Source: https://energynewsafrica.com      

Nigeria: AEDC, NAPTIN To Collaborate On Staff Training – MD

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The Managing Director of Abuja Electricity Distribution Plc (AEDC), Engr. Akin Bada says the company will collaborate with the National Training Power Institute of Nigeria (NAPTIN) to raise the competency profile of its workers to improve service delivery to the customers by taking advantage of the training opportunities that the institute offers.  Engr. Bada, who gave the assurance when he received the Director-General of the Institute, Alhaji Bolaji Nagode, on Friday, in his office in Abuja, noted that NAPTIN has transformed itself into an international brand such that it has become the first port of call for utilities seeking to train its personnel in the electricity industry across the African continent. According to Engr. Bada, human capital is the most critical asset of any organisation. Given that fact, every organisation must continually ensure that the capacity of its most critical asset is constantly positioned to deliver on its mandate. “I am happy that NAPTIN, which was established by the Federal Government of Nigeria to offer a wide range of manpower development programmes consistent with the needs of the industry, has shown itself to be able to respond to these needs of the training needs of the power sector. With your mandate and your pedigree as the foremost power training institute in Nigeria and the African continent, therefore, AEDC will take good advantage of this opportunity to build the capacity of its workers,” he said. In his response, the DG of the Institute, Alhaji Bolaji Nagode congratulated Engr. Bada and the Interim Management team made up of Sani Usman, Donald Etim, Babajide Ibironke and Fem Zacchaeus on their appointment. Alhaji Nagode said the appointment of Engr. Bada, a veteran of the industry, was indicative of the need to reposition AEDC for optimal service delivery to its customers. “In this regard, we are prepared to work with your management for the repositioning of AEDC as a critical asset in the country through training.” Alhaji Nagode said the institute offers not only a wide range of human capacity training programmes, which are apt for the industry but also E-Learning programmes in response to the safety protocols of the COVID 19 pandemic and its different variants. “Since this pandemic is not about to leave us anytime soon, as a training institute, we adopted e-Learning to ensure that the capacity of the workers in the sector is continually enhanced.”  

 

Source: https://energynewsafrica.com

Ghana: BOST Makes Gh¢55M Profit Pre-Tax In 2021

Ghana’s petroleum strategic stock-keeping company, Bulk Oil Storage Transportation (BOST) Company Limited, has posted a pre-tax profit for the second time after recording losses. The company made GH¢30 million profit in 2020, but after auditing of its account, the figure dropped to Gh¢2 million. Speaking at a media engagement to present how the company fared in 2021 and the way forward for 2022, Managing Director of BOST, Edwin Nii Obadai Provencal revealed that the management account of the company shows a profit of GHc55 million at the end of December 2021. Mr Provencal, however, told energynewsafrica.com that it is likely the 2022 pre-tax profit margin would drop if their accounts are audited, noting that some margin of the profit would cater for payment of taxes. The last time the company posted profit was in 2012. Since then, the company had been wobbling in debt with its infrastructure suffering decay. However, the company has seen a transformation over the last three years under the current management led by Edwin Alfred Nii Obodai Provencal. According to the MD, the company has increased its revenue-earning assets from 17 per cent to 75 per cent over the last two years. He said BOST, in the past few years, underwent a financial restructuring that allowed it to carry out its core mandate and generate the needed revenue for the government. He said the financial turnaround strategy implemented at the fuel logistics company will be able to transform the company from a loss-making state enterprise to a profit-making entity such that it can pay dividends to shareholders. He said BOST has been able to pay some $585 million out of the $624 million which was in arrears back in 2017, stressing that about 73 per cent of these liabilities were offset using internally generated funds by June 2021.

  Source: https://energynewsafrica.com          

OPEC Secretary-General On A Mission In Iraq

OPEC Secretary-General, H.E Mohammad Sanusi Barkindo, has arrived n Bagdad, capital of Iraq, following the gracious invitation of H.E Ihsan Abdul Jabbar Ismael, the country’s Minister for Oil and Head of its Delegation to the Organization. The Secretary-General and the accompanying OPEC delegation were received at the Baghdad International Airport by Mr Feras El-Sader, Senior Director General at the Ministry of Oil, and other senior officials. A statement issued by OPEC said the Secretary-General will hold bilateral meetings with H.E Mustafa Al-Kadhimi, Prime Minister of Iraq; the Oil Minister and other Iraqi leaders. Barkindo will also visit several historical sites in Iraq, the cradle of ancient civilizations including the Ancient Hall. Iraq is one of OPEC’s five Founder Members. It hosted the seminar ‘Baghdad Conference’ between 10 and 14 September 1960 in the Al-Shaab Hall in the Bab Al-Muaatham District, which led to the establishment of the organization. The country has also played an instrumental role in the consultation and implementation phases of the Declaration of Cooperation between OPEC and 10 non-OPEC oil-producing countries, which was adopted on 10 December 2016.   Source: https://energynewsafrica.com

European Union’s Landmark Proposal To Label Natural Gas As ‘Green’ Energy Is Good For Africa –AEC

Africa’s call for a just and inclusive energy transition has been answered through the European Union’s landmark proposal to label natural gas as a ‘green’ energy source. Historically, Africa has always fought for sustainable development because we know, first-hand, the ravaging effects that even minute changes in climate can have on the continent and its populations. But to develop sustainably, Africa must first industrialize itself. It must have the same opportunities as Europe and other western countries. The point that natural gas serves as a transitional energy source is one that has been promoted by African nations for a long time and therefore, the African Energy Chamber hails the EU’s proposal as a landmark development that justifies a positive outlook for an inclusive energy transition. It has taken a crisis in energy availability to bring about policies that could increase Africa’s energy supply. The current pressure from The West to acclimatize to cleaner energy systems has so far been exclusive in recognizing that the transition may differ in form and timing from one region to another. By restricting investment into energy sources, such as gas, Africa has stood the chance of being left behind during the energy transition, which is counterproductive and regressive. “We have had our disagreements with our European friends, however, there has always been constructive, behind-the-scenes dialogue with European policy makers. They listened, worked, and let us make the case for Africa’s low-carbon LNG and these discussions have been critical in getting us to see eye-to-eye on gas, a lot of work still needs to be done to make this a reality” stated NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman of the African Energy Chamber, who added, “The demonization of Africa’s gas industry needs to stop, and investments need to come into the sector. While we continue this engagement, it is important that the oil and gas industry focuses its investment on further reducing carbon emissions within the gas value chain. Sustainable development and making energy poverty history will require Africa to increase gas within its energy mix, which will give us a fighting chance to reduce the continent’s carbon footprint, even when we are still under 4% of global emissions.” Africa faces unique challenges and must be allowed to time its own energy transition according to its own needs. The proposal to label natural gas as ‘green’ energy is what a just energy transition looks like, and now, we need to finance it. To capitalize on this, the African Green Energy Summit, to be held at African Energy Week this year, will clearly outlined initiatives and positions ahead of this year’s COP27. Now, at the dawn of a new year, Europe and Africa can collaborate and cooperate and stride in allegiance towards a brighter future. The two continents can set aside their differences and strive towards sustainable development together, paving the way for a new approach to Africa’s energy industry, one that serves the whole world and all its people as opposed to a privileged few. Should most EU members back the proposal, then it will become law from 2023, which the African Energy Chamber hopes will stand to help the U.S. recognize natural gas as a clean fuel, which it unfortunately does not under the Biden Administration’s current clean power plans. This new proposal will pave the way for new European investments in natural gas in Africa and will therefore allow Europe to unlock billions of euros in finance and sustainable energy funds to support gas as a transitional energy source. The EU will want to import whatever natural gas Africa develops, which is constructive for project funding and will open doors to have candid discussions about furthering energy availability across the continent. Some countries, like Senegal, Mozambique, South Africa, Tanzania, Nigeria, Angola, Ghana, Mauritania, Libya, Cameroon, Algeria, and Equatorial Guinea, have taken steps to monetize their natural resources to develop and industrialize independently. Thus, we need to give them time to realize the benefits of their strategic efforts and facilitate their own sovereignty when adhering to the energy transition. By using natural gas as a feedstock to create other value-added products, like petrochemicals, from fertilizers to ammonia, revenue can be used to build infrastructure, from pipelines to ports and roadways, and we can therefore open the doors to economic diversification for other African countries as well. “Despite predictions that demand for African LNG is expected to grow for the foreseeable future, investments in gas exploration have been hit hard by a short-sighted bias against our low-carbon natural gas resources. This has led to a reluctance towards investing in supply projects because of the fractured global outlook towards natural gas,” continued Ayuk, concluding that, “African nations must be more pragmatic. If exploration and production companies must wait one or two years before their proposed projects are sanctioned, then the prospects for a sustainable African energy future will diminish rapidly. These practices, which help protect the interests of oil-producing nations, made sense when crude sold for $100 per barrel and before the energy transition took center stage, but they don’t make sense now.” Concluded Ayuk While the African Energy Chamber hails the proposal as a win for Africa, it is not a time to regress to the continent’s old ways. Now is the time for African oil and gas producers to do everything in their power to encourage as much exploration and production activity as possible, particularly through International Oil Companies, National Oil Companies and African Independents. In the long term, African producers of oil and gas will continue to rely on the industry’s revenue to sustain economic growth and guarantee a just and inclusive energy transition, and should lobby for knowledge transfers, training, gas monetization programs, and other strategic opportunities so that their oil and gas operations can create pathways towards sustainable development and diversification.      

 

Source: https://energynewsafrica.com      

Nigeria: I Am Not Happy With The State Of Power In Nigeria–Prez Buhari

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The unreliable and poor power supply situation in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country, is one of the myriads of problems giving the country’s leader, H.E Muhammadu Buhari, a sleepless night. President Muhammadu Buhari, who is unhappy about the current situation, said: “I am not because I identify that no country can develop without infrastructure and infrastructure means road, rail and power,” President Buhari said in response to a question to him during an interview with Channels Television on Wednesday, January 5, 2022. Nigeria can produce 13,000 megawatts of electricity but currently, West Africa’s Africa’s most populous nation produces just 4,000 megawatts on the national grid. According to President Buhari, his administration is working hard to provide infrastructure for Nigerian including improving electricity. The President also shared more light on why the electricity supply is yet to be stable in the country. While noting that the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) is 100 per cent government-owned, he said his government inherited the Distribution Companies (DisCos). According to the President, the owners of Discos bought them based on geo-political zones rather than merit. He added, “The people that own them, who are they? They are not electrical engineers; they don’t have money; it is just a political favour. “To remove a system and reintroduce one is no joke. Luckily, we have the TCN and that is the transmission. If we can get our technology right, we will cut the cost on transmission and the likelihood of sabotaging the lines and so on.”   Source: https://energynewsafrica.com    

Ghana: GOIL Adjusts Fuel Prices By 5 Pesewas, Shell Maintains Prices

Ghana’s leading oil marketing company, GOIL Company Limited, has adjusted its fuel prices at the pump by five pesewas. As of Wednesday, GOIL Company Limited was selling both Super XP and Diesel XP at Gh¢6.65 per litre. It is not clear whether Shell, which is one of the leading Oil Marketing Companies, will adjust its fuel prices upward as GOIL and TotalEnergies have done. Currently, TotalEnergies is the only OMC selling Super and Diesel at Gh¢ 6.80 and gh¢6.85 per litre respectively. GOIL and Shell are selling at Gh¢6.65, 20 pesewas lower than TotalEnergies. Some OMCs like Frimps Oil is selling a litre of diesel and petrol at Ghc6.27 per litre while Pacific sells at Ghc6.29 per litre. Frimps sells at GHc6.43 per litre. Earlier this week, COPEC predicted that the ex-pump prices of petrol and diesel would surge by 3.7 per cent and 2.5 per cent respectively on the local market. “In nominal terms, ex-pump prices of petrol and diesel are expected to increase by 24 pesewas and 17 pesewas respectively. “The average surge for both products in nominal terms is 20 pesewas, representing 3.1 per cent. Some OMCs could increase their prices less than the 20 pesewas due to competition,” COPEC concluded in a statement.      

 

Source: https://energynewsafrica.com      

OPEC+ Sticks With Plan To Gradually Boost Output, Despite Omicron

OPEC+ announced on Tuesday that it is sticking with its plan to gradually boost oil output next month, as the group brushed off concerns about Omicron’s impact on global crude demand. The 23-nation member group encompassing Saudi Arabia-led OPEC and the cartel’s allies led by Russia agreed at the end of its meeting on Tuesday to adhere to its previous decision to increase oil production by 400,000 barrels a day in February. In August, OPEC+ started incrementally opening the taps each month to roll back severe production cuts introduced during the opening months of the pandemic when oil prices crashed. As economies cast off COVID restrictions last year, crude prices revived sharply, compelling United States President Joe Biden to urge OPEC+ to accelerate its production boost to cool soaring energy prices. But the cartel and its allies resisted Biden’s calls – fuelling a rally that saw global benchmark Brent crude gain roughly 50 percent last year and open 2022 on a strong note. Brent is currently trading at $80.05 a barrel, while US benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude is trading near $77.10 a barrel. If OPEC+ stays on its current production trajectory, its 2020 cuts should be erased by September. While oil prices dipped late last year as news of the Omicron variant swept the globe, OPEC+ thinks its impact on crude demand will be “mild and short-lived” Reuters news agency reported, citing a technical report it had seen. OPEC+ decision to stick with its production plans was widely expected and there was little reaction in oil markets. “For now, the new Omicron variant, although highly transmissible, is not leading to the same rates of hospitalisation and death associated with earlier variants,” said Capital Economics chief commodities economist Caroline Bain in a note to clients on Tuesday. “As a result, for the most part, governments have not imposed the widespread lockdowns or travel restrictions which significantly dent oil demand.” Bain also noted that reduced oil output from Libya would provide extra cushion for OPEC+ as it stays the course with production increases. “With Libyan output likely to be about 500-600,000 bpd lower in the coming weeks, this more than offsets the planned monthly increase in OPEC+ production. Indeed, if sustained, the Libyan outages could even lead to calls for larger increases in OPEC+ output,” she said. OPEC+ is set to hold its next meeting on February 2.   Source: Al Jazeera      

 

 

Ghana: Gov’t Suspends Price Stabilisation & Recovery Levy For Another One Month

The Government of Ghana has extended the two months’ suspension of the Price Stabilisation and Recovery Levy (PSRL) to one more month. The PSRL is one of the tax components of the petroleum price build-up in the Republic of Ghana. Consumers pay 16 pesewas as PSRL on a litre of petrol and 14 pesewas on a litre of diesel and a kilogramme of LPG. President Akufo-Addo directed the country’s petroleum downstream regulator, NPA, to suspend the PSRL for two months from November to the end of December 2021. The move was intended to cushion Ghanaians from the rising cost of fuel on the local market as crude oil prices on the world market continued to skyrocket. In October, International Benchmark Brent hit $86 per barrel. The PSRL was expected to be reintroduced in January 2022. However, the Communications Manager at NPA, Kudus Mohammed said the government has extended the suspension of the Price Stabilisation and Recovery Levy to the end of January 2022. Meanwhile, some Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs) had already adjusted their fuel prices at the pump with TotalEnergies currently selling super at Gh¢6.80 per litre while diesel is sold at Gh¢6.85 per litre from an earlier GHc6.65 per litre for both products.     Source: https://energynewsafrica.com