You are here: HomeNews2017 11 14Article 600585

General News of Tuesday, 14 November 2017

Source: rainbowradioonline.com

Previous, current Finance Ministers breached Petroleum Management Act - Manteaw

Ken Ofori-Atta, Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta, Finance Minister

It has emerged that former Finance Minister and the current one breached the Petroleum Revenue Management Act in the funding of projects with Ghana’s oil revenue.

The Act mandates the Finance Minister to report on all oil-funded projects in the year under review.

But both the past and current Ministers breached the process, a member of the Public Interest and Accountability Committee (PIAC), Dr. Steven Manteaw has lamented.

“Over the period since we started producing oil in this country, the past ministers and the current Minister [of Finance] have not complied with that provision in terms of giving us update on the stage of completion of oil projects. A project inspection undertaken by PIAC recently has revealed that a lot of the projects are non-existent and those that are in existent, are deteriorating barely a year into their completion raising serious concerns about the quality of spending and value for money considerations that underpin the use of oil revenues,” Dr. Manteaw said.

Parliament in 2015 passed the Petroleum Revenue Management (Amendment) Bill, 2015 into law.

The Bill amended an existing Act to provide for the allocation of Funds for the Ghana Infrastructure and Investment Funds, address some issues with the Ghana Stabilization Fund, the benchmark revenue projection, and further empower the Ghana National Petroleum Company (GNPC) to become a commercial entity and a strong operator in the oil and gas sector.

The law was expected to also provide a legal framework for the collection, allocation and management of petroleum revenue in a responsible, transparent, accountable and sustainable manner for the benefit of Ghanaians in accordance with Article 36 of the 1992 Constitution.