The Ghana National Petroleum Corporation (GNPC) sold 73 cargos of oil, made up of 71.1 million barrels valued at US$5.2 billion, between 2011 and April 2020, the Natural Resource Governance Institute (NRGI) has said in a new report.


The report, titled “Ghana’s Oil Sales: Using Commodity Trading Data for Accountability”, used publicly available data to show the importance of GNPC’s oil sales and the need for greater accountability, as the country faces the challenge of responding to COVID-19 and debt sustainability issues exacerbated by the pandemic.


The report said the impact of the coronavirus pandemic and oil price crash on Ghana’s economy means that ensuring GNPC maximises its oil sales revenues is more important than ever.

NafiChinery, West Africa Manager for NRGI, in a press release accompanying the report said, “Oil sales transparency on the part of GNPC and the government has been an important step toward enabling citizens groups to demand effective and accountable management of revenue flows. Information on Ghana’s long-term sales contracts tied to resource-backed borrowing is especially important in the context of broader debt relief and renegotiation discussions,”

According to the report, GNPC has a long-term agreement, signed in 2017, to sell four cargos per year of oil from the country’s TEN field to Russian trader Litasco.

A second agreement, signed in 2012, obliges the state oil company to sell five cargos per year to Chinese state-owned Unipec Asia, tied to the Ghanaian government’s US$3 billion loan agreement with China Development Bank.

These two deals alone generated 59 percent of the government’s total oil revenue for 2019.


The report urged government to disclose its long-term oil sales agreements to further improve transparency, which it said is already high in Ghana.


The report commend the government for its release of information on the terms of the agreement with Unipec Asia, but advised that officials should disclose the long-term sales contracts with both Unipec Asia and Litasco in their entirety, and commit to disclosing any future similar agreements.

The report said Ghana is one of the most transparent countries in reporting on its commodity trading activities, with GNPC, the Ministry of Finance, the Bank of Ghana, the Public Interest and Accountability Committee, and Ghana Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative all disclosing information on the state’s oil sales activities.

By:Isaac Clottey

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

VW to start Ghana assembling operations in November

Volkswagen South Africa (VWSA) will start semi-knocked down (SKD) assembly in Ghana…

Provide Leadership That Will Benefit Ghanaians – Akufo-Addo Urges Ofori-Atta

The President, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has charged the Finance Minister, Ken…

Shareholders of GOIL approves partnership with ExxonMobil for Deep Water Cape Three Point oil block

Shareholders of Ghana Oil Company Limited (GOIL) have approved decision of the…