
Audio By Carbonatix
The National Petroleum Authority (NPA) is set to commence the regulation of the importation, storage, processing and marketing of bitumen in the country effective January 2024.
The new regulatory framework, which will have inputs from the Ghana Standards Authority (GSA), the Ghana Highways Authority (GHA), and the Customs Division of the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA), seeks to streamline the bitumen supply chain and to ensure compliance with National quality standards.
The new framework spells out who qualifies to obtain a license, the National standards for Bitumen and guidelines to follow for the supply of the product among other things.
The Director of Economic Regulation and Planning at NPA, Alpha Welbeck, who made the disclosure at a media briefing in Accra, urged industry players to use the remaining period of 2023 to regularize their operations with the Authority.
“Existing bitumen facilities and new entrants will have to acquire a license before they will be allowed to operate in the industry beginning 2024” she emphasized.
The bitumen industry possesses enormous potential to contribute to the growth and development of the economy due to its use in road construction.
Although bitumen is a petroleum product, little has been done in terms of monitoring and regulating the product compared to the other petroleum products such as petrol, diesel, LPG etc.
By way of background, in 2014, a study was carried out to ascertain the supply chain practices and to obtain some baseline information of happenings in the bitumen industry.
Following the study, the NPA together with stakeholders such as the GHA, GRA – Customs Division, GSA and some existing players, have collaborated in the development of guidelines for the supply of Bitumen, culminating into a new regulatory framework set to be implemented in January 2024.
A public notice is set to be issued on the requirements for obtaining a license in the coming weeks to enable existing players and new entrants alike to take the necessary steps in regularizing their operations ahead of the 2024 deadline.
Latest Stories
-
Ford rehires human engineers after AI fails to match quality checks
2 hours -
British American Tobacco to cut 9,000 jobs
2 hours -
South Korea unveils $880bn chip and AI investment plan
2 hours -
Supreme Court blocks Trump’s attempt to fire Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook
2 hours -
Salah an injury doubt for Egypt’s last-32 tie
2 hours -
Zoomlion Chairman Dr Joseph Siaw Agyepong tours flood hotspots as Accra grapples with drainage crisis
2 hours -
Paraguay stun Germany on penalties to reach last 16 of World Cup
2 hours -
Senior South African police officer survives assassination attempt
3 hours -
GHS outlines four priorities to strengthen Free Primary Healthcare delivery
3 hours -
People-centred healthcare begins with access, not policy – WHO to Ghana
3 hours -
CHAG indispensable to Ghana’s Free Primary Healthcare rollout – WHO
3 hours -
GHS commends CHAG for delivering healthcare to hardest-to-reach areas
3 hours -
Trump’s final appeal of E Jean Carroll sex abuse case rejected
3 hours -
South African leader warns anti-migrant protesters ahead of unofficial deadline
3 hours -
ECG Ashanti West plants trees to boost greenery in Kumasi
3 hours