
Audio By Carbonatix
Boss of the National Petroleum Authority (NPA), Alex Mould has rubbished allegations that government is perpetrating a fraud on Ghanaians in the recent fuel price hikes announced in June.Ex-Deputy Energy Minister, KT Hammond had accused government of fraudulently charging GH¢1.00 more on some petroleum products and stashing the accrued revenue into an ‘unknown’ account.The charges according to Mr. Hammond were in a form of an ex-refinery differentials which he said were levies imposed on Ghanaians.The evidence of his accusation was a June 5, 2009 letter signed by the acting NPA boss, directing the Oil Marketing Companies (OMCs) to pay the said differentials into the account numbers.But in an interaction with the media on Thursday, the NPA boss admitted writing the letter but said no illegality had been done.The ex-refinery differential, according to the acting NPA boss, was instituted in November, 2006 as a “harmonizing mechanism” and “has been in the petroleum pricing since then.”He explained the differential is not a levy but “to ensure that premix does not go up by 102% whereas gas oil goes by 20 % or kerosene by 52%. It will be quite chaotic to allow prices to move up in different mechanisms."“There is nothing fraudulent about this account,” he insisted.Mr Mould produced as incontrovertible evidence, letters signed by his predecessor, requesting the OMCs to pay the ex-refinery differentials revenue into the said accounts.Alex Mould said the accounts into which the revenue is paid had also been in existence since 2006 and were no new ‘secret’ accounts opened to stash away public funds.“The account is not owned by the NPA. It is an escrow-account to accumulate funds and pay the short falls and swings in prices of petroleum products."The ex-refinery differentials was also to pay for under recoveries incurred in the sale of petroleum products.He was surprised the ex-deputy Energy Minister was not aware of the ex-refinery differential, or at least claimed not to be, but did not question the motive for his allegations.On why Ghanaians are still paying GH¢5.10 on a gallon of petrol even when crude oil prices had fallen to $70 per barrel Mr. Mould attributed it to the increase in exchange rates and other charges paid on the international market before crude oil is procured.Story by Nathan Gadugah/Myjoyonline.com
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Publican AI system doesn’t determine values, it flags suspicious transactions – GRA Boss
8 minutes -
Balancing the scales: McDan Aviation, E&P, and politics of opportunity in Ghana’s economy
12 minutes -
GRA credits Publican AI system for exposing GH¢11bn port leakages
16 minutes -
Owabi, Barekese water plants face shutdown threat over pollution and power outages
23 minutes -
Catholic Bishops call for national dialogue on LGBTQ debate
28 minutes -
Softcare FM Manufacturing Ltd backs Consumer Health Week, pushes science-driven care agenda
29 minutes -
The Eyes of Ghana to premiere in April, spotlighting rare Nkrumah-era footage
32 minutes -
$31bn transferred without matching imports in five years — GRA boss
45 minutes -
JoyNews Impact Maker, Williams Akongbabre, presents award to people of Bawku West
46 minutes -
Kenya backs Morocco’s autonomy plan for Western Sahara, signals push for implementation
53 minutes -
Hip-hop pioneer, Afrika Bambaataa, dies aged 68
1 hour -
Let OSP defend itself in Supreme Court case — Prof Prempeh
1 hour -
Emmanuel Kweenu Haizel aka Simpa Panyin
1 hour -
Police foil planned highway robbery in Ashanti Region, one suspect shot dead
1 hour -
Sunyani Technical University dismisses 3 students over examination malpractice
2 hours