Audio By Carbonatix
A critical segment of Ghana’s emergency medical supply chain has begun to collapse, threatening the lives of rural patients across the country.
Zipline, the global leader in instant logistics and medical drone delivery, has commenced the decommissioning of three of its operational centres, citing a crippling lack of funds from the central government.
The partial shutdown was brought to light during a heated debate on the 2026 Budget Statement in Parliament on Tuesday, November 25, exposing a severe fiscal gap in the health sector.
The Financials: A 89% Funding Gap
At the centre of the crisis is a staggering debt of GH¢175 million owed by the Government of Ghana to the service provider.
Despite this accumulation of arrears, the 2026 Budget has allocated a meagre GH¢20 million to the project.
This allocation represents just 11.4% of the outstanding debt, leaving a deficit of GH¢155 million and offering no pathway for the company to sustain its high-tech operations.
Dr. Ayew Afriye, the Ranking Member on the Parliamentary Select Committee on Health, broke the news to the House, accusing the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Health of negligence.
“The allocation for Zipline was only GH¢20 million, even though the government currently owes the company GH¢175 million,” Dr. Afriye revealed, brandishing the budget estimates.
Operational Impact: The “Golden Hour” at Risk
The shutdown of "Centres 4, 5, and 6" effectively severs the aerial lifeline for nearly half of the company's coverage area.
While the Ranking Member referred to them by their operational numbers, these distribution hubs typically service a radius of 80 kilometres each. A single Zipline centre is designed to serve approximately 500 to 2,000 health facilities, delivering critical supplies within 30 to 45 minutes—often referred to in emergency medicine as the "Golden Hour".
The decommissioning implies that hospitals and clinics in these catchment areas will no longer receive on-demand drops of:
- Life-saving Blood Products: Critical for haemorrhaging mothers during childbirth.
- Anti-Snake Venom: Vital for rural farming communities.
- Routine Vaccines: Essential for the Expanded Programme on Immunisation (EPI).
Dr. Afriye warned that the government’s silence has exacerbated the situation.
“Zipline is decommissioning three of its centres, Centres 4, 5 and 6. There has been no engagement and an inability on the part of the government to provide funds,” he stated.
A System in Retrograde?
The potential exit of Zipline from these regions marks a significant regression in Ghana's healthcare infrastructure.
Since its inauguration in April 2019, the drone delivery service has been touted globally as a flagship partnership, successfully completing hundreds of thousands of commercial deliveries.
Critics argue that reverting to road transport for emergency supplies in these specific areas—often characterised by poor road networks and island communities—will inevitably lead to slower response times and increased preventable mortalities.
The Minority Caucus has demanded an immediate intervention from the Ministry of Finance to halt the decommissioning process, warning that the cost of inaction will be measured not just in cedis, but in human lives.
Latest Stories
-
Every team is beatable – Otto Addo ahead of Austria clash
16 seconds -
French court hands Islam scholar Tariq Ramadan 18-year jail term for rape
38 seconds -
Understanding Autism: Empowering children with different abilities in Ghana
48 seconds -
Army commander convicted of Guinea stadium massacre dies in prison
1 minute -
Rescuers attempt to save stranded humpback whale off German coast
3 minutes -
Three escape unhurt as diesel truck overturns in Oti Region
4 minutes -
Empowering the next generation: ‘Roll up your sleeve 26’ inspires students to dream big and act now
8 minutes -
GCB Bank strengthens market leadership with record GH¢3.2bn profit in 2025
12 minutes -
GAMI students explore Ghana’s heritage with educational tour to Aburi Botanical Gardens
19 minutes -
ShEquity trains 15 Ghanaian SMEs to tap into carbon market opportunities
28 minutes -
‘Being the President’s brother shouldn’t stop Ghanaian ownership’ – Agyeman-Duah on Damang mine
30 minutes -
Fire breaks out at rubber recycling facility in Afienya
32 minutes -
Otto Addo anticipates tough contest against Austria
32 minutes -
GOIL MD backs fuel price competition, says consumers benefit
38 minutes -
Women’s Caucus Chair hints at motion to boost female MPs in Parliament
40 minutes
