Business News of Saturday, 4 April 2020

Source: www.ghanaweb.com

Introducing new LPG levy is untimely – Alex Mould

Alex Mould , Former Chief Executive Officer of the Ghana National Petroleum Corporation (GNPC) Alex Mould , Former Chief Executive Officer of the Ghana National Petroleum Corporation (GNPC)

Former Ghana National Petroleum Authority boss Alex Mould is questioning the rationale behind the introduction of a new Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) levy by the National Petroleum Authority.

His comment follows numerous concerns raised by various stakeholders about the newly introduced tax.

In a statement issued by Alex Mould and copied to Ghanaweb, he said “we understand the National Petroleum Authority (NPA) introduced a GHp 13.5 Cylinder Recovery Margin during the last Petroleum Pricing window. This is bad timing by the Authority”

According to the former GNPC Chief, considering the current health crisis the last thing the consumer needs is to be burdened with this margin during such difficult and tumultuous times.

He further indicated that “the NPA owes the general public a thorough and detailed explanation. We understand they’ve engaged stakeholders in 10 out of the 16 regions but I still can’t fathom why the rush to introduce the new margin when there’s not enough literature out there to educate and prepare the minds of LPG consumers.

“For starters, why the decision to immediately burden all consumers (even those outside of CRM pilot and operational regions), with the margin? Why should consumers outside the new system’s pilot regions pay now?” he added.

Below is the full release

We understand the National Petroleum Authority (NPA) introduced a GHp 13.5 Cylinder Recovery Margin during the last Petroleum Pricing window.

This is bad timing by the Authority; considering the current health crisis the last thing the consumer needs is to be burdened with this margin during such difficult and tumultuous times.

As such, the NPA owes the general public a thorough and detailed explanation. We understand they’ve engaged stakeholders in 10 out of the 16 regions but I still can’t fathom why the rush to introduce the new margin when there’s not enough literature out there to educate and prepare the minds of LPG consumers.

For starters, why the decision to immediately burden all consumers (even those outside of CRM pilot and operational regions), with the margin? Why should consumers outside the new system’s pilot regions pay now?

This distribution system is being given a trial run in the following pilot sites: Kade in the Eastern region and Obuasi in the Ashanti region, which currently account for less than two percent of total LPG usage.

However, as the Cylinder Recovery Margin has been introduced nation-wide, this connotes 98 percent of consumers are paying for the benefit of the two percent i.e. those within the two pilot regions.

Silently slipping the Cylinder Recovery Margin into the pricing model with no prior communication is not only unfair but comes across as deceitful.

Especially at a time when prices have fallen and the benefit should accrue to consumers!!!

Some other questions that the NPA needs to answer include the following:

– Is there a roadmap that can be shared with the public to understand the complete rollout plan? – How will the margin be collected, and what accounting mechanisms are in place to ensure transparency and effective disbursement measures? i.e. Payment Accounts, Responsible parties for disbursement, etc. – Is there a communication plan for the public to learn the guidelines regarding usage, phase-out, and replacement of current cylinders? – Clarity on why consumers who have already invested in ownership of cylinder(s) are being unlawfully charged for new ones with no additional benefits? – How will current cylinder owners refill their cylinders in this new recirculating model? – Are cylinder owners now stuck with redundant cylinders that can not be filled? There should be some sort of cylinder exchange or replacement plan, with a buy-back or exchange mechanism; so existing cylinders will automatically be replaced, free of charge, in this recirculation exercise.

These are mind boggling questions that I’ve researched myself but surprisingly found little or no answers on the internet nor the NPA’s website.

The LPG Marketers have called for a withdrawal of this new LPG margin. Yet, the NPA continuously insists that the new LPG margin did not result in LPG price hikes.

It’s a disingenuous and inconsiderate Regulator who disregards the plight of consumers!!!