LPG consumption rises by 12.4% in 4 years

The increase in adoption rate of LPG as main source of cooking fuel, Dr Abdul-Hamid noted, is as a result of regulatory interventions focused on rural LPG promotions to distribute free cylinders, intensify public educations on safe usage of LPG, infrastructural development, improvement in supply and distribution and LPG pricing structure.

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Consumption of Liquified Petroleum Gas (LPG) among Ghanaians rose by 12.4% between 2017 and 2021.

According to Dr Mustapha Abdul-Hamid, Chief Executive Officer of the National Petroleum Authority (NPA), LPG consumption and use as the main source of cooking fuel, rose from 24.5% in 2017 to 36.9% in 2021.

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The increase in adoption rate of LPG as main source of cooking fuel, Dr Abdul-Hamid noted, is as a result of regulatory interventions focused on rural LPG promotions to distribute free cylinders, intensify public educations on safe usage of LPG, infrastructural development, improvement in supply and distribution and LPG pricing structure.

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Speaking at the 3rd West Africa LPG Conference and Expo under the theme “Towards Making LPG The Clean Fuel of West Africa”, the NPA Boss said the objective of government is to ensure at least 50% penetration by 2050.

Dr Abdul-Hamid said even though Ghana had made gains in LPG consumption over the past five years, there were challenges which have threatened the sustainability of the LPG market in Ghana

“Challenges such as slow uptake in particularly low-income areas, affordability, accessibility, non-adherence to safety requirements by some operators, old and unsafe cylinders, among others have threatened the sustainability of the LPG market in Ghana,

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“To remedy the situation, the government of Ghana in October 2017 launched the National LPG Promotion Policy with the objective of ensuring that at least 50 per cent of Ghanaians have access to LPG for domestic, commercial, and industrial use by 2030.

“The Policy is to be driven by the new marketing and distribution model, the Cylinder Recirculation Model (CRM),” he stated.

On his part, the Minister of Energy, Dr Matthew Opoku Prempeh said the LPG industry presents an attractive solution to leverage the shift to cleaner energy sources while promoting Africa’s industrialization agenda.

“And I believe it will take the collective efforts from academia, the industry and government to prudently push West Africa to maximize the economic gains across the entire LPG value chain,” he added.

Source: norvanreports.com

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