Former Dorma East MP and former member of the Nationwide Meeting Power Committee, Paul Aprek Tum Barima, referred to as for the entire elimination of the gas value flooring coverage, arguing that whereas current changes by the Nationwide Petroleum Authority are laudable, they don’t seem to be sufficient to offer significant reduction to customers.
In a press release responding to the NPA’s choice to cut back the minimal value requirements for petroleum merchandise, lawyer Tumu Barima acknowledged that the transfer was a step in the correct course, noting that it mirrored the extent of response of the authority’s management, particularly its chief govt, Edudzi Tamakloe.
Nonetheless, he argued that the fundamental coverage remained essentially flawed and wanted to be utterly abolished if Ghana was to reap the total advantages of a deregulated downstream oil sector.
“Whereas cheaper price flooring are laudable, the coverage itself must be utterly abolished for competitors to perform successfully,” he stated.
Tum Barima stated the continued enforcement of minimal costs distorts the market by stopping oil advertising firms from freely competing on value. He burdened that some business gamers have operational efficiencies and provide benefits that permit them to promote gas at decrease charges, however are constrained by regulatory restrictions imposed by the NPA.
“I do know that there are oil advertising firms that may promote gasoline and diesel under the present fee, however they don’t seem to be ready to take action due to the worth flooring coverage,” he stated.
Tumu Barima argued that eradicating value flooring would permit environment friendly operators to go value financial savings on to customers, significantly benefiting low-income households and transport operators who’re most affected by gas value fluctuations.
He additional defined that in markets the place petroleum merchandise are largely standardized, value turns into the primary foundation for competitors, and value limits would undermine the precept of deregulation.
Tumu Barima emphasised that value flooring create a state of affairs the place firms can not compete aggressively and result in virtually uniform pricing throughout the market. He added that this reduces incentives for innovation, effectivity and price discount, whereas additionally creating challenges for small companies and start-ups seeking to achieve market share.
He additionally expressed concern concerning the impression of this coverage within the face of declining international oil costs, noting that fastened minimal costs may forestall international value cuts from being transmitted to home markets, thereby stopping customers from benefiting from favorable worldwide developments.
Mr. Tumumu Barima additional pointed to continued geopolitical tensions involving america, Israel, and Iran as contributing components to fluctuations within the international oil market. He defined that in such an atmosphere, some oil advertising firms are capable of safe product at comparatively low prices by means of various provide preparations, however present pricing regimes forestall them from transferring these advantages to the pump.
He argued that the introduction of the gas value flooring coverage in April 2024, which was aimed toward curbing what the NPA referred to as unhealthy competitors and stabilizing the downstream sector, had as an alternative reintroduced components of value management right into a system supposed to be deregulatory.
“Deregulation is aimed toward selling effectivity and competitors. Worth flooring defeat that goal and restrict the advantages that might be gained by customers,” he stated.
On the coronary heart of the difficulty, Tum Barima argued, is the basic coverage alternative between market stability by means of regulation and client advantages by means of good competitors.
For him, the trail ahead is evident. He maintained that solely a completely deregulated regime with no value controls would improve effectivity, strengthen competitors and in the end result in decrease gas costs for Ghanaians.
