Audio By Carbonatix
The Ghana Chamber of Shipping has called for a three-month grace period to allow businesses to adjust to the mandatory local cargo insurance directive. This was scheduled to take effect on February 1, 2026.
The call was made during a stakeholder roundtable on the enforcement of the local marine cargo insurance policy. Industry players met to deliberate on the directive and its implications for trade and logistics.
The Ministry of Finance recently announced that all commercial cargo imports into Ghana must be insured by insurance companies licensed in the country. This is a move aimed at strengthening the local insurance industry and retaining premiums within the domestic economy.
Although the directive has now been formally communicated, it is not new. The requirement is already captured under Section 222 of the Insurance Act, 2021 (Act 1061), which mandates that imported cargo into Ghana be insured locally.

Despite this legal backing, the Chief Executive of the Ghana Chamber of Shipping, Dr. Emmanuel Kofi Mbiah, says businesses require additional time to align their operations with the directive to ensure a smooth and disruption-free implementation.
“For those who want to have this implemented smoothly, we will have to give ourselves some time. A period of three months with which we can enforce because this comes with sanctions. If anything happens to the cargo, they can make their claim directly here in Ghana,” he said.
Meanwhile, Chartered Consultant and Lawyer, Larry Jiagge, has expressed confidence in Ghana’s ability to successfully implement the policy. He believes the country has the institutional and technical capacity needed to carry out the directive.
According to him, “all training on marine cargo insurance use the institute cargo clauses anyway, so there is no issue with capacity or experience. We want to assure trade bodies that this market has the capacity, it has experience marine cargo personnel to underwrite and it’s even cheaper to buy marine cargo insurance here in Ghana”.

Stakeholders at the forum agreed that continuous engagement and a carefully managed transition will be critical to ensuring the cargo insurance directive achieves its intended objectives while supporting business continuity and trade facilitation.
Latest Stories
-
EOCO freezes ¢1.5bn in assets linked to corruption investigations – Kwakye Ofosu
16 minutes -
Wildlife to replace historical characters on British banknotes
38 minutes -
China and North Korea to resume passenger train service after 6-year halt
48 minutes -
Meghan to headline ‘girls’ weekend’ in Australia for 300 women
57 minutes -
Congo Republic’s Sassou set to extend long rule, focus on succession
4 hours -
At least six dead in Switzerland bus fire
4 hours -
GH¢50m frozen in Wontumi’s accounts – Gov’t spokesperson Felix Kwakye Ofosu reveals
4 hours -
Brent to trade above $95 for next two months on Iran war, EIA says
5 hours -
US nears deal to resume intelligence operations in Mali
5 hours -
Al Qaeda-linked group killed at least 12 truck drivers in Mali, HRW says
5 hours -
US warns citizens in Nigeria of possible ‘terrorist threat’
5 hours -
Nigeria prioritises local gasoline supply, suspends import licences
5 hours -
MLS bans Yeboah & Jones for betting offences
6 hours -
He called me traitor 50 times – Mourinho sent off after celebrating goal
6 hours -
Eni Aluko wins Joey Barton libel case over X posts
6 hours
