Ghana’s Hidden Petroleum Taxes Cost Consumers Billions, Says Policy Think Tank ACEP
A damning report from the Africa Centre for Energy Policy (ACEP) has revealed that Ghana’s downstream petroleum sector is burdened with excessive regulatory margins and inefficient levies that cost consumers over GHS 17 billion annually, with limited benefits for national development.
The report, presented by ACEP’s Policy Lead for Petroleum and Conventional Energy, Kodzo Yaotse, shows that only GHS 2.4 billion of the GHS 9.7 billion collected in petroleum taxes is available for development projects, with the remainder earmarked for debt servicing in the energy and road sectors.
Of particular concern is the dramatic increase in regulatory margins between 2019 and 2024. The Unified Petroleum Price Fund saw a staggering 429% increase, while the Bulk Oil Storage and Transportation (BOST) margin, Primary Distribution Margin, and Fuel Marking Margin rose by 300%, 247%, and 350% respectively.
The report criticizes BOST’s deviation from its core mandate of maintaining strategic fuel reserves to becoming a commercial player through its Gold for Oil Program, which now controls 20% of the petroleum import market. “BOST receives margins of nearly GHS 600 million annually while operating tax-free assets and competing with private businesses that pay taxes,” Yaotse noted.
The investigation also uncovered significant inefficiencies in the premix fuel subsidy system, with consumption patterns suggesting widespread smuggling. Almost all of the GHS 680 million in annual revenues from the Price Stabilization and Recovery Levy is reportedly being siphoned through the premixed fuel subsidy “by cronies without direct benefits to the fisher folks.”
ACEP recommends converting the regulatory margins into tax revenues, which could free up GHS 6.3 billion annually for critical infrastructure and social programmes. The think tank also calls for BOST’s commercialization and listing on the stock exchange to ensure transparency and accountability.
“The current system is essentially a hidden tax on consumers that primarily serves vested interests rather than national development,” said an industry analyst who requested anonymity due to the sensitive nature of the findings.
The report also recommends reforming the National Petroleum Authority’s (NPA) role, suggesting it should focus on monitoring fuel quality and quantity rather than maintaining what it calls “cumbersome fuel tracking systems” and price controls in what is supposed to be a deregulated market.
These findings come at a crucial time for Ghana’s economy, which is still recovering from recent debt restructuring. The government has yet to respond to the report’s recommendations, but pressure is mounting for reform in a sector that directly impacts the cost of living for millions of Ghanaians.
The report concludes that addressing these inefficiencies could significantly reduce fuel costs for consumers while generating more revenue for development projects, presenting a rare win-win opportunity for both the government and citizens.
This is very revealing especially the amount of revenue siphoned through margins that their expenditures cannot directly control by the government to impact the sector infrastructure or debt liabilities. The recommendation to convert the margins to tax is in the right much especially if that tax revenue can be ringfence for the government transition agenda.
But please, where can l get the full report for a read?