The Ministry of Fisheries and Aquaculture Development (MoFAD) has intensified regulatory scrutiny over the country’s downstream marine fuel architecture, executing a strategic alignment with petroleum marketing actors to secure the state-backed premix fuel subsidy system.
In a decisive consultative meeting at the Ministry’s headquarters, the sector Minister, Hon. Emelia Arthur, and a high-level corporate delegation from the Chamber of Oil Marketing Companies (COMC), led by its Chief Executive Officer, Dr. Riverson Oppong, established a joint regulatory framework designed to neutralize cartels driving illicit diversion, hoarding, and supply-chain profiteering.
“During the meeting, Dr. Oppong emphasized that the premix fuel subsidy was originally introduced to support small-scale fishers and canoe operators by making fuel affordable and accessible, sustaining livelihoods in coastal and riverside communities, and helping families dependent on fishing activities.
“However, he noted that the purpose of the subsidy is being undermined as some individuals divert subsidized fuel meant for fishing communities and resell it at exorbitant prices for personal gain”
Ministry of Fisheries and Aquaculture Development
The administrative clampdown comes at a time when fiscal leakages in the distribution of specialized petroleum products threaten both micro-economic interventions and the stability of coastal artisanal fishing fleets. The initiative seeks to transition premix distribution from an easily manipulated analog supply chain into a highly audited, secure resource pipeline.
According to MoFAD, the subsidized premix fuel regime operates as an essential fiscal intervention to insulate small-scale artisanal fishers, outboard-motor canoe operators, and riverine communities from volatile global petroleum benchmark prices.

Heavily subsidizing the specialized fuel blend, actively lowers the overhead input costs associated with marine harvesting, directly stabilizing fish landing prices and protecting the livelihoods of roughly three million people dependent on the broader fisheries value chain.
However, the welfare objective of this public expenditure is increasingly being distorted by a network of unauthorized middlemen and predatory commercial actors. Because subsidized premix fuel sits significantly below the standard market rate for regular gasoline, arbitrage opportunities have attracted illicit syndicates.
These operators systematically hoard deliveries intended for landing beach landing sites, starve local fleets of essential fuel supplies, and smuggle the products back into commercial channels to resell them at inflated, non-subsidized rates to maximize personal profit margins.
For the formal downstream distributors, the unchecked black-market trade of subsidized fuel represents both a severe regulatory violation and a market distortion that undermines legitimate oil marketing practices.
Speaking on behalf of licensed downstream operators, Dr. Riverson Oppong emphasized that the persistence of unmonitored fuel losses, transit leakages, and localized hoarding requires a swift, law-enforcement-led response rather than basic administrative fine-tuning.
The Chamber’s intervention highlights a growing push among private-sector petroleum leaders for total systemic transparency. When subsidized fuels are unlawfully funneled into commercial industrial machinery or transport fleets, it creates unfair competition for legitimate dealers who sell standard petroleum products at full price.
To fix this, COMC is pushing for a tighter, closed-loop reporting mechanism where every single drop of fuel leaving bulk distribution depots can be digitally matched to verified local fishing committees.

“The subsidy is intended to support fisherfolk, not profiteering,” Dr. Oppong stressed, adding that the Chamber is seeking stronger collaboration with the Ministry to crack down on offenders and strengthen accountability within the premix fuel distribution system.
Deploying the FEU
In response to the industry’s tracking data, Hon. Emelia Arthur reaffirmed MoFAD’s commitment to clean up the distribution network and eliminate illicit syndicates, noting that MoFAD’s enforcement strategy relies on a multi-layered approach that connects the administrative oversight of the National Premix Fuel Secretariat with the physical security assets of the Fisheries Enforcement Unit (FEU).
The FEU, which operates with specialized enforcement personnel and police prosecutors, has been directed to expand its surveillance operations to actively target transit tankers and unauthorized coastal holding tanks. Furthermore, to permanently shut down these leakages, the Fisheries Ministry is accelerating its nationwide automation strategy.
The rollout of the Automated Premix Fuel Dispensing and Monitoring System – which uses smart-card tracking, biometric user verification, and digital fuel-level sensors at major landing beaches – is designed to take human manipulation completely out of the transaction process.
The government intends to ensure that only registered canoe owners with valid licensing details can purchase the subsidized product, through matching this technology with localized accountability drives.
As MoFAD and the Chamber of Oil Marketing Companies move into the operational phase of their new tracking pact, the primary goal remains ensuring swift legal consequences for supply-chain fraud.

Under current regulatory frameworks, including the Public Financial Management Act and specialized fisheries regulations, individuals or licensed marketing entities caught diverting or hoarding subsidized fuel face severe statutory penalties, including the immediate revocation of commercial marketing operating licenses, heavy financial fines, and prison sentences for convicted operators.
Maintaining a unified front with downstream industry leaders, MoFAD aims to secure the financial integrity of its social safety nets while insulating the local blue economy from artificial fuel shortages, and securing the premix fuel pipeline.
Hon. Emelia Arthur stressed that the goal is to ensure that state funds are directly converted into stable maritime production, lowering the cost of food for everyday Ghanaians and safeguarding the economic survival of vulnerable coastal and riverine communities nationwide.
READ ALSO: GoldBod CEO Grabs CEO of the Year Award at 2026 CEO Summit










