Prices of petroleum products at the pumps are set for a marginal adjustment in the next pricing window which begins on Saturday February 1, 2025.
The price of diesel and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) will see an uptick while petrol prices expected to decrease slightly.
This is according to projections from the Chamber of Petroleum Consumers (COPEC) as it cites global crude price hikes and a depreciating cedi as key influencing factors.
COPEC’s analysis shows that, barring unforeseen fluctuations in international petroleum prices, petrol will drop by 2.93% from the current mean price of GHS15.141 per litre to GHS14.697 per litre.
Diesel, however, is expected to rise by 3.00%, increasing from GHS15.407 per litre to GHS15.869 per litre. LPG prices will also climb, with a 4.26% increase pushing the price to GHS17.224 per kilogram – meaning a 14.5kg LPG cylinder will sell at approximately GHS249.74.
The anticipated price changes follow a 5.68% surge in global crude oil prices, which have moved from $76.72 per barrel to $81.08 per barrel.
Additionally, the Ghanaian cedi has depreciated against the US dollar, moving from GHS14.85/$1 to GHS15.09/$1 (-1.58%), further impacting local pump prices.