Audio By Carbonatix
The Energy Ministry is expected to meet the National Petroleum Authority (NPA) in September to finalize a cabinet memo on the lifting of ban on construction of new Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) outlets.
Chief Director at the Ministry, Lawrence Apalsee said NPA in the last few years has placed a ban on the construction of new LPG outlets, causing discontent among marketers.
“Within the first week of September's we are going to finalize a cabinet memo on the lifting of the ban on LPG refilling plants. We will meet with NPA and iron out the differences in it and roll it out,” he said.
He disclosed this to Joy Business at Kpone where he represented sector minister, Matthew Opoku Prempeh at the swearing-in ceremony of new executives for Ghana National Petroleum Tanker Drivers Union.
According to him, with the Cylinder Re-circulation Model (CRM) coming in, there have been issues as to how to roll-out the programme with one of them being the new refilling plants.
He said LPG marketers have been appealing to the ministry to lift the ban.
After the Atomic Junction gas explosion in 2017, construction of new LPG refill outlets was banned, citing safety concerns.
This drew bad blood between LPG marketers and gas tanker drivers on one hand and NPA on the other.
To express their dismay over the impact of the decision on business and livelihood, the drivers put down their tools among other actions to drum home their concerns but government held its grounds.
For the Energy Ministry and NPA, one of the reasons for the delay is the planned implementation of the Cylinder Re-circulation Model which was being piloted at Kade in the Eastern region and four other districts.
Over 38,000 cylinders were scheduled to be used in the piloting phase.
It is expected that the model will help push the use of LPG from 25% to 50% by 2030.
Energy Minister, Dr. Matthew Opoku Prempeh in July this year revealed that cabinet had approved rollout of CRM which will help reduce domestic use of charcoal.
Although some players in the downstream petroleum sector fear job losses over the implementation of the model, government maintains it will help create more employment.
After several calls from stakeholders to lift the ban, government will decide their fate at the said meeting in September 2021.
Latest Stories
-
Asempa FM RTI request reveals previous Gold-for-Reserve programme losses, 2025 figures outstanding
4 minutes -
Police recruitment underway in Greater Accra with documentation and body Checks
8 minutes -
BoG Governor urges unified national action to reform gold sector and halt economic losses
27 minutes -
Wendy Shay wins Best Female Artiste Western Africa at 2025 AFRIMA
27 minutes -
NPP Karaga delegates endorse Bawumia massively as hundreds turn up to receive him
34 minutes -
Sarkodie wasn’t aware Ebo Noah would be at 2025 Rapperholic – DJ Mensah
35 minutes -
Passenger arrivals at airport drop marginally in 9-months of 2025, but container traffic at habours up 20.6% – BoG
36 minutes -
Water crisis in Teshie enclave worsens as desalination plant remains shut over debts
44 minutes -
Implications of US withdrawal from Global Climate Treaties for Ghana and Africa
44 minutes -
KATH forced to detain patients over unpaid bills amid rising cost pressures
49 minutes -
Underground Mining Alliance awards GH¢504m in scholarships to 57 students, apprentices in Ahafo Region
51 minutes -
Construction sector activities declined by 4% in quarter 3, 2025 – BoG
52 minutes -
Prince Amoako Jnr set to wear iconic No.10 jersey at FC Nordsjaelland
54 minutes -
Deposit mobilisation strategy strengthens NIB PLC’s financial performance
56 minutes -
Manufacturing sector activities improved in 9-months of 2025; direct taxes collected increased by 18%
60 minutes
