Audio By Carbonatix
Vice President of IMANI Africa, Bright Simons, has shed light on Ghana’s controversial Gold-for-Oil programme, explaining how its conception and execution deviated from sound economic logic and ultimately resulted in financial losses to the state.
Speaking on JoyNews’ Newsfile on Saturday, October 4, 2025, Mr. Simons provided a detailed analysis of how the policy was designed to stabilise the Cedi and reduce pressure on Ghana’s foreign reserves, but instead created inefficiencies that warrant further scrutiny and possible prosecution.
He explained that Ghana’s fuel consumption has been rising sharply over the years, yet weak industrial policy has prevented the country from refining its own crude oil.
Despite having two major refineries, neither operates at full capacity, forcing Ghana to spend between $250 million and $400 million monthly importing refined fuel.
He said this dependency created pressure on the local currency, prompting government officials in 2021 and 2022 to propose the Gold-for-Oil scheme as an innovative alternative.
The idea, he explained, was to use domestically purchased gold, paid for in Cedis, to acquire oil directly, bypassing the need for dollars and thereby easing pressure on the Cedi.
“The logic was that since we mine gold locally and can buy it in Cedis, we could use the gold to acquire oil without demanding dollars. The expectation was that this would moderate pressure on the currency,” he explained.
However, Mr. Simons noted that the model only makes sense if the gold-for-oil barter produces a better rate than selling gold for dollars and then buying oil with those dollars, something that, he argued, was never economically justified.
“The barter model would only make sense if you could show that trading gold directly for oil gives you a more favourable rate than selling gold for dollars and using those dollars to buy oil. That was never demonstrated,” he said.
He stated that the flawed implementation of the policy, coupled with poor oversight and lack of transparency, contributed to inefficiencies and financial losses that must now be examined.
“The programme’s structure and execution created conditions for losses that could have been avoided. These are material losses to the state that deserve investigation,” he stressed.
Latest Stories
-
BoG declares 2025 ‘Year of Restoration’ as inflation crashes and reserves hit 27-year high
6 minutes -
2026 is the ‘Year of Action’ for Petroleum Hub project – Dr Toni Aubynn
46 minutes -
Sedina Tamakloe set for January 21 US court hearing – Victor Smith
1 hour -
‘Ministerial signature is not ceremonial ink’ – CDM questions Education Minister’s role in curriculum saga
1 hour -
Multimedia Group Kumasi staff gathers to celebrate 31 years of broadcasting and community service
1 hour -
Bryan Acheampong is our ‘Kivo gari’, a ready leader for NPP – Pious Hadzie insists
1 hour -
I dismissed the former ‘Ayalolo’ boss for failing to expand fleet – Local Gov’t Minister
1 hour -
“Our PC candidates beat our presidential candidate” – Bryan Acheampong calls for unifying candidate to lead NPP
1 hour -
Gov’t seeks €1m spanish grant to expand ‘Ayalolo’ bus fleet – Local Gov’t Minister
1 hour -
Little Angels Trust donates to children admitted at Cape Coast Metropolitan Hospital
1 hour -
Victor Smith refutes claims Sedina Tamakloe is not in Nevada Detention Centre in US
2 hours -
“Let our boast be in Him ”alone”—Multimedia CEO to staff at thanksgiving service
2 hours -
US tightens border security as immigrant visa freeze hits 75 nations, including African allies
2 hours -
The invisible wall between Ghana’s economic gains, household reality
2 hours -
Hannah Affum: Breaking Barriers with Radiotracers and Resilience
2 hours
