
Audio By Carbonatix
The President of the Ghana Institution of Engineering (GIE), Ing. Ludwig Annang Hesse, is calling on the Minister of Finance to urgently address what he describes as the growing financial exposure within Ghana’s road sub-sector.
He warns that resolving persistent funding and payment challenges is critical to improving the delivery of road infrastructure nationwide.
Delivering the institution’s 53rd presidential address, Ing. Annang Hesse painted a sobering picture of the state of road infrastructure across the country, stressing the need for sustainable standards and stronger stakeholder collaboration.
He noted that delayed payments to contractors, escalating project costs, and uncertainty around funding flows continue to stall projects and erode confidence among industry players.
According to him, the financial strain facing contractors and consultants is not only slowing ongoing works but also increasing the long-term cost of infrastructure delivery. He urged the Finance Ministry to take decisive measures to stabilise financing mechanisms, clear outstanding obligations, and restore predictability to road sector funding.
“The MRH and MoF are urged to take decisive steps to resolve the financial exposure of the road subsector by reducing the project portfolio to levels consistent with available resources. The finance ministry must assume responsibility for outstanding contractor payments and negotiate structured settlement," he said.
Ing. Annang Hesse further emphasised that sustainable road development requires more than capital injections. He noted that adherence to quality standards, transparent procurement processes, and timely disbursement of funds are essential to ensuring value for money and durability of projects.
He also appealed to the National Road Authority to implement an integrated system for the routine collection of road traffic data. Reliable and up-to-date data, he explained, is indispensable for effective planning, maintenance scheduling, and investment decisions.
The GhIE President cautioned that without urgent and coordinated intervention, Ghana risks widening infrastructure deficits, deteriorating road conditions, and rising maintenance costs.

Latest Stories
-
Financial literacy must become part of Ghana’s anti-fraud strategy – Economist
35 minutes -
Interior Minister urges GIS Commanders to develop sustainable solutions to service delivery
44 minutes -
$65m flood protection cash was diverted to Covid under Akufo-Addo – Finance Ministry
50 minutes -
Build Ghanaian coaches – ADC urges after Black Stars World Cup exit
1 hour -
GTA engages Tema stakeholders on new draft regulations, GTIS, tourism levy
1 hour -
Mason, 45, remanded over alleged defilement of two-year-old
1 hour -
GNFS recovers body of man from flooded drain at Kpando-Gabi
1 hour -
China-Ghana friendship built on strong historical ties, mutual trust – Ambassador
1 hour -
Hohoe MP cuts sod for construction of bridges in constituency
1 hour -
Treasury bill rates edge up in latest BoG auction
2 hours -
Ghanaian students abroad to hold global forum on national development
2 hours -
Alcohol, drugs are not the solution to stress – doctors caution
2 hours -
TWMA urges youth to avoid drugs during Homowo celebrations
2 hours -
UBIDS School of Law among 19 schools to run one-year pre-bar course
2 hours -
Opoku-Agyemang receives update on Ghana National Research Fund
2 hours