Audio By Carbonatix
Fuel prices are set to rise sharply from April 1, 2026, with petrol and diesel expected to surge at the pumps.
According to the latest outlook report by the Chamber of Oil Marketing Companies (COMAC), a litre of petrol could rise by 8.06% to about GH¢15.19.
Diesel is projected to rise by 9.76%, pushing the price to around GH¢17.85 per litre.
Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) is also expected to increase marginally, with a litre likely to sell at about GH¢16.59.
This will be the fifth projected increase in fuel prices since January 2026, and the second time this year that consumers are facing such a steep hike.
The development is likely to trigger fresh calls for transport fare adjustments by operators across the country.
The price surge has been driven largely by developments on the global market. Crude oil prices climbed sharply from $86.55 per barrel to $109.66 per barrel, amid rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and supply risks along key shipping routes such as the Strait of Hormuz.
International petroleum product prices have also risen significantly. LPG recorded the highest jump at 36.90%, followed by diesel at 27.84% and petrol at 24.48%.
At the same time, the Ghana cedi weakened slightly against major currencies. For the April 1 pricing window, the exchange rate moved from GH¢10.913 to GH¢11.050 to the US dollar, representing a 1.24% depreciation.
Analysts attribute the currency pressure to increased demand for foreign exchange by importers, high liquidity in the system and rising global oil prices, all of which are pushing up the cost of imports.
Meanwhile, the National Petroleum Authority has revised its minimum price floors for the new pricing window.
Petrol’s price floor has been increased from GH¢11.57 to GH¢13.30 per litre, while diesel recorded the largest adjustment, rising from GH¢14.35 to GH¢17.10 per litre — a jump of GH¢2.75 within two weeks.
LPG has also been adjusted slightly upward to GH¢10.71 per kilogramme.
In a directive to oil marketing companies, the Authority urged them to comply with the new price floors under the Petroleum Products Pricing Guidelines.
It clarified that the stated prices exclude additional premiums from international oil traders and margins set by bulk distributors and retail marketers, which will be determined independently.
The latest projections point to increased pressure on consumers and businesses, as rising fuel costs ripple through the economy.
Latest Stories
-
Kojo Bonsu applauds Mahama’s $270m AI drive, calls it Ghana’s ‘only way forward’
6 minutes -
Mahama sets November 2027 deadline for La General Hospital completion
1 hour -
‘Statesmanship over partisanship’ – Sam Jonah hails Otumfuo for honouring Kufuor, Mahama and Akufo-Addo
2 hours -
China car giant BYD says it can thrive without US
2 hours -
GSE market cap hits GH¢279billion as total value traded surges 40% week-on-week
3 hours -
Armed police shut down Assemblies of God Church amid leadership dispute
4 hours -
Ghana Gas CEO pushes for tariff hike to avert infrastructure collapse
5 hours -
Asantehene honours Mahama, Kufuor, Akufo-Addo and others with gold coins at his 27th anniversary gala
5 hours -
Global leaders descend on Manhyia as Otumfuo marks 27-year reign with Executive Gala
5 hours -
Alleged student rape and extortion did not occur on campus – KNUST replies
6 hours -
23-year-old man jailed 7 years for defiling 12-year-old girl
6 hours -
Assin Fosu Assembly commends Zoomlion’s waste collection efficiency
7 hours -
Prime Insight to spotlight LGBTQI+ Bill debate and Black Stars campaign this Saturday
7 hours -
Newsfile to tackle S.A. xenophobia, galamsey, mine tensions and dumsor this Saturday
7 hours -
Ernest Chemists supports Ghana Prisons Service as medicine shortage deepens healthcare crisis
7 hours