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Ghana Stand To Lose Half Of Its Oil Revenue Due To Price Fall

Ghana Stand To Lose Half Of Its Oil Revenue Due To Price Fall

From GhanaWeb

Ghana will lose about 50 percent of its estimated revenue from crude oil exports this year if the price of crude oil on the international market continues to decline, Dr. John Gatsi, a Senior Lecturer at the University of Cape Coast Business School has said.

Speaking in an interview with Times Business in Accra on Wednesday, he said the government in its 2015 budget earmarked projects in road construction, educational infrastructure and modernisation of agriculture based on the expected revenue from crude oil exports.

“It would be very difficult, if not impossible, for the government to execute these projects if the price of crude oil continues to take a nose dive,” he said.

He said the government in its 2015 budget projected the price of crude oil to stabilise around $90, but the price has dropped to a record low of $50 per barrel.

According to the 2015 budget, the total revenue from oil is estimated at Ghc4.2 billion, or 3.1 per cent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

Meanwhile, Brent crude oil recovered slightly after falling below $50 a barrel for the first time since May 2009 on Wednesday, as traders reassessed their books after a sharp slide since the start of the year on a growing supply glut and weak global demand.

In choppy trade, benchmark Brent crude futures LCOc1 were down 25 cents at $50.85 by 0656 ET, having fallen as low as $49.66, a level last seen in May 2009.

Brent fell in the previous four sessions and is still down 8.6 percent this week. Prices have lost around 55 per cent since their peak above $115 last June, as stockpiles of oil mount with no signs of a cut in production from OPEC.

Demand for oil is also weak, with the outlook for the global economy remaining subdued.

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