The Executive Director of the Chamber of Petroleum Consumers (COPEC), Duncan Amoah, has delivered a scathing critique of Ghana's current oil and gas strategy, describing it as counterproductive and deeply flawed.
Speaking at the 2025 Citi Business Forum on Thursday, under the theme "The Global Tariffs Dispute: Navigating Ghana's Recovery Strategy", Amoah didn't hold back as he condemned the country's continued reliance on foreign nations for refined petroleum products, despite possessing its own hydrocarbon reserves. "If as a country with hydrocarbons we cannot integrate the upstream, midstream and downstream to give our people competitive advantage, then I don't know what we are doing.
Because this is where it gets sickening," he lamented.
Amoah was particularly critical of how International Oil Companies (IOCs) are allowed to extract Ghana's crude oil, export it to the UK and Holland for refining, and then sell the refined products back to Ghana-costing the country hundreds of millions of dollars monthly. "You produce all the hydrocarbons here, you allow the IOCs to ship everything back to the UK, to Holland.