Audio By Carbonatix
Professor Ivan Addae Mensah, Chairman of the National Petroleum Authority, says until government comes out to change the petroleum deregulation policy, the authority will have no choice but to run it.
Speaking on Joy FM’s Super Morning Show, he said the rising crude oil prices on the world market has been a regular subject at the NPA’s board meetings and believes it is time for the government to re-look the policy.
Prof. Addae Mensah said however that calls of government to reduce taxes it has imposed on petroleum products may not make much difference, and called for a debate for what options would best serve the Ghanaian economy.
“Previously the taxes were percentages of ex-refinery price, but now we have the taxes fixed so really at this stage with the way the world price of crude oil has gone up, and for that matter finished products have gone up on the world market, the taxes have become relatively insignificant,” he advanced.
He said even if the taxes were removed, there were still some of the products that were being subsidised by government and asked what would become of those subsidies.
“Are you also going to remove the subsidies on some of the products like the LPG? So these are some of the questions we need to answer as a nation. Do we want government to put money into subsidising petroleum products again and go into economic recession as happened previously or should we rather take measures to cut down on our personal fuel consumption?”
He said it is about time motorists looked at their own lifestyles and the way they use fuel.
According to Prof. Addae Mensah, Ghanaians previously consumed more premium than diesel, and the difference was used to subsidize diesel, “but now with the SUVs and the huge vehicles that have come onto the roads as well as the big articulators, we are now consuming almost twice as much diesel as we are consuming premium. So even what we get out of premium for subsidising diesel has become insignificant. We are consuming a lot of diesel and that is bringing in inequities or disequilibrium into the pricing system.”
Predicting that the options for government are indeed very limited, he said it is still worthwhile for government to sit with the experts to see what could be done, adding that it appears crude oil price forecasts for the year, which predicted price recessions around this period, appear to have been thrown out of gear with the continued price hikes.
He said among the suggested options is hedging, but given Ghana’s situation presently, he would not advice that hedging is considered a necessary risk because it can throw the country out of gear.
“I would still want to believe that there is a limit beyond which the world prices cannot go because the developed countries themselves would begin to suffer and things are likely to start cutting down. Let’s give ourselves a month or two, after that maybe government can start looking at other options.”
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DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
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