However, he lamented that this plan is impossible under the National Petroleum Authority’s (NPA) price floor policy, which sets a minimum price below which fuel cannot be sold. Tieku questioned the logic behind the NPA’s price floor, arguing that it undermines free-market competition in Ghana’s deregulated petroleum sector. Fuel prices drop to single digits across various pumps. Meanwhile, fuel prices have begun to drop across the country. Market leader Star Oil followed suit, announcing reductions with petrol now selling at GH¢9.97 per litre and diesel at GH¢10.97 per litre.
Source: GhanaWeb January 18, 2026 12:39 UTC