ADVERTISEMENT
Get Started
  • About Homebase Tv | Hbtvghana.com
  • Advertise
  • Broadcast Live
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Vacancies
  • Contact Us – Connect With Us
Homebase Tv - Hbtvghana.com
  • Home
  • General News
  • Business News
  • Health
  • Life & Style
  • Politics
    • Press Release
    • Parliament
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • General News
  • Business News
  • Health
  • Life & Style
  • Politics
    • Press Release
    • Parliament
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
Homebase Tv - Hbtvghana.com
No Result
View All Result
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Bankable energy: Why Africa’s downstream sector is the next global investment frontier

Sat, Dec 20 2025 4:29 PM
in Ghana General News
bankable energy why africas downstream sector is the next global investment frontier
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on TelegramShare on Whatsapp
ADVERTISEMENT

Anibor Kragha

Investors do not chase potential – they chase predictability. Africa has plenty of the former and is steadily building the foundations for the latter.

The downstream sector is at a make-or-break moment. Population growth, industrialisation and urbanisation are pushing fuel and LPG demand to unprecedented levels. The opportunity is immense – but it will remain theoretical unless the continent addresses regulatory fragmentation, infrastructure gaps and financing hurdles that continue to undermine investor confidence.

This is where the African Refiners and Distributors Association (ARDA) is taking the lead: building a modern, coherent ecosystem for Africa’s downstream industry – one where projects are structured, transparent, compliant and investment-ready.

Capital flows to discipline, bankability, and credibility—not uncertainty. That’s why, to turn Africa’s downstream potential into real investment, ARDA is advocating for concrete action: harmonised fuel standards, upgraded infrastructure, and a proven track record of delivering projects on time and within budget.

Africa’s Energy Demand: The Demographic Boom Demanding Investment

ReadAbout

Working Capital Management: Do’s and don’ts to consider for 2026

Nigerian aircraft and crew detained by Burkina Faso released

Bright Simons rises as key figure in evidence-driven public policy in Africa

By 2050, one in every four people on earth will live in Africa. This demographic reality will either power prosperity or deepen dependence. The decisive factor will be investment in the continent’s downstream sector – refining, storage, distribution and end-use fuel systems.

Current trends make the opportunity impossible to ignore:

  • Crude oil consumption in Africa is set to rise from 1.8 million barrels per day in 2024 to 4.5 million barrels by 2050. Yet downstream investment has stagnated even as upstream production grows, leaving Africa stuck in the costly paradox of exporting crude and importing refined products at a premium.
  • OPEC estimates that Africa will need over $100 billion in refining investment between now and 2050 – a mix of upgrades, expansions and greenfield projects in order to meet the continent’s booming demand for petroleum products over the same period.

The opportunity is immense. But the barriers are equally real.

Why Downstream Projects Fail: The Bankability Gap

Across the continent, downstream projects rarely advance beyond the drawing board because they fail the first test applied by global investors: bankability.

Investors want clarity, not chaos. They look for predictable feedstock and offtake arrangements, stable regulation, enforceable contracts and credible technical and financial modelling. They expect realistic timelines, professional project preparation and ESG compliance that can unlock lower-cost capital. Instead, they often encounter inconsistent policies, market fragmentation, shallow ports, congested depots, inflationary pressures, exchange-rate volatility and mismatched fuel specifications.

Fuel Specifications: A Hidden Barrier to Investment

Across the 54 African countries, 46 maintain national fuel specifications, yet the continent still has 12 different gasoline grades with sulphur levels ranging from 10 to 2,500 ppm, and 11 diesel grades ranging from 10 to 10,000 ppm. Closing these gaps is essential: upgrading existing African refineries to meet cleaner fuel standards would require about $16 billion – an investment that would unlock regional trade, improve efficiency and create economies of scale.

Infrastructure Challenges: A Drag on Africa’s Energy Potential

A 2024 whitepaper by CITAC and Puma Energy, highlights major logistical constraints. Many African ports are too shallow for large vessels, berths are congested, storage capacity is often inadequate, and roads and pipelines are over-used, with widespread single points of failure. Collectively, these shortcomings add $20–30 per tonne to landed fuel costs and erode investor confidence in the system’s reliability.

Despite the expansion of refining capacity, with the Dangote refinery and others coming onstream, this alone will not close the supply shortfall or enable the continent to deliver cleaner fuels at scale.

Africa faces broader challenges in moving fuel efficiently across the continent, which results in inefficient and incomplete supply chains from coast to inland zones of consumption, including the mining sector, stifling economic growth.

Addressing Africa’s energy security challenges depends equally on transport infrastructure. Both coastal and land-linked countries require coordinated investment in pipelines, roads, and rail networks to ensure that petroleum products can reach markets reliably and at lower cost to the consumer.

Clean Cooking: A Massive Untapped Market

More than one billion Africans still rely on biomass for cooking, and the number has grown by 220 million since 2010. The health, environmental and social consequences are enormous – and so is the opportunity. The scale of unmet demand positions Africa as one of the most attractive markets for LPG investments globally.

The conclusion is unavoidable: Africa must modernise its downstream industry to attract global capital, and ARDA is leading this transformation.

ARDA’s Blueprint for Investment-Ready Downstream Markets

As the continent’s leading voice for the downstream sector, ARDA advocates for technical standard-setting, acts as an investment catalyst and partners on policy. Its mission for Africa is clear: build a bankable, future-ready downstream sector capable of attracting global capital at scale.

The association has identified five strategic priorities designed to create a fully investment-ready ecosystem.

1. Harmonising Fuel Specifications

ARDA is driving adoption of low-sulphur AFRI standards, including AFRI-6 (10 ppm), to enable regional markets, reduce supply-chain costs, improve public health, support refinery upgrades and align Africa with global norms. Through partnerships with the African Union Commission, IPIECA, UNEP, and regional economic communities, ARDA is advancing a continent-wide shift to cleaner fuels.

2. Rebuilding Infrastructure End-to-End

ARDA advocates a comprehensive upgrade of the downstream value chain – including deeper ports and modernised jetties, offshore SPMs and CBMs, expanded storage facilities with tanks exceeding 150,000 m³, new and rehabilitated pipelines, and multimodal logistics systems designed for redundancy. These improvements are essential for achieving economies of scale and giving investors the confidence that supply systems can perform reliably.

3. Embedding Regulatory and Investment Discipline

To ensure projects are fundable, ARDA promotes transparent, long-term regulatory frameworks; turnkey, fixed-price EPC contracts; bankable offtake agreements; and rigorous project preparation covering scope, cost, schedule, technology, economics and compliance. ARDA also advances ESG-aligned project design, enabling access to the sustainable finance instruments increasingly favoured by global capital markets.

4. Delivering Clean Cooking at Scale

Recognising LPG as both a health and climate priority, ARDA supports the rollout of large-scale LPG and bio-LPG infrastructure, advocates policy reforms that accelerate adoption, and drives partnerships such as the innovative ARDA-GLPGP drive to mobilise public and private sector capital into a $1 billion LPG Fund that will identify, conduct due diligence and finance bankable LPG projects to propel sustainable LPG market growth across Africa.

5. Building a Pipeline of Bankable Projects

Through seven thematic workgroups – Refining & Specifications, Storage & Distribution, LPG, Regulation, Sustainable Financing, HSE & Quality (HSEQ) and Human Capital – ARDA is promoting standardised frameworks, sharing best-in-class technical expertise and championing the building of a resilient workforce to achieve Africa’s energy transition ambitions.

A register of investable downstream projects is being built, with clearly defined feedstock, offtake structures and governance, while ARDA’s platforms – including high-level forums such as the recent Storage, Distribution & Jet Fuel Forum in Dakar, Senegal and the LPG Forum in Lusaka, Zambia – are used to highlight key bottlenecks and accelerate policy reforms that attract investment.

Additionally, a Training School – the Human Capital Centre-of-Excellence at ARDA’s Headquarters in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire – offers capacity-building programs for the ecosystem and maintains a database of pan-African industry professionals to support project execution across the continent. This initiative is helping to develop the leaders and professionals of tomorrow who will drive the industry’s growth and advance Africa’s energy transition.

The Bottom Line for Investors

Africa’s downstream sector is one of the world’s last large-scale, high-growth energy investment frontiers. The demand curve is defined by demographics. The supply deficit is structural. The capital requirement exceeds $100 billion. And the economic upside is transformative.

One thing is certain. For investors seeking long-term returns anchored in real demand, Africa’s downstream sector is not just an opportunity – it is the next frontier.

But capital will only flow where discipline is demonstrated, and that discipline is precisely what ARDA is building through a harmonised, integrated, ESG-ready downstream ecosystem designed for investment.

By: Anibor Kragha

Executive Secretary, African Refiners and Distributors Association (ARDA).

  • President Commissions 36.5 Million Dollars Hospital In The Tain District
  • You Will Not Go Free For Killing An Hard Working MP – Akufo-Addo To MP’s Killer
  • I Will Lead You To Victory – Ato Forson Assures NDC Supporters

Visit Our Social Media for More

About Author

c16271dd987343c7ec4ccd40968758b74d64e6d6c084807e9eb8de11a77c1a1d?s=150&d=mm&r=g

hbtvghana

See author's posts

Discover interesting ones too

Lands Minister, NAIMOS mourn fallen soldier killed during anti-galamsey operation in Obuasi

Lands Minister, NAIMOS mourn fallen soldier killed during anti-galamsey operation in Obuasi

0
Ghana Impact Project donates $20k to restore mobility for children

Ghana Impact Project donates $20k to restore mobility for children

1

JoyNews’ Kwaku Asante named Best Radio and TV Journalist in Parliamentary Reporting

Education Ministry updates EMIS indicators to strengthen ICT integration in schools

Education Ministry updates EMIS indicators to strengthen ICT integration in schools

Interior Ministry declares Christmas, Boxing Day and New Year’s Day public holidays

Interior Ministry declares Christmas, Boxing Day and New Year’s Day public holidays

President Mahama directs Finance Ministry to disburse $78m for completion of Takoradi–Agona-Nkwanta road

Interior Minister lauds NIA staff for dedication, pledges continued government support

First Atlantic Bank will run a “proper and decent business” to protect shareholder value – CEO

  • Dr. Musah Abdulai: If the Chief Justice returns: Will it lead to reset, redemption, or rupture?

    Dr. Musah Abdulai: If the Chief Justice returns: Will it lead to reset, redemption, or rupture?

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Haruna Iddrisu urges review of salary disparities between doctors in academia and health service

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • No justification for higher GAF entry age – Col. Festus Aboagye (Rtd.)

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • East Airport land tensions escalate as residents reject “Attorn Tenancy” notices; court orders show no evictions pending

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Parliament not clothed to declare Kpandai seat vacant – Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Follow Homebase Tv

  • About Homebase Tv | Hbtvghana.com
  • Advertise
  • Broadcast Live
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Vacancies
  • Contact Us – Connect With Us

© 2014 Total Enjoyment & Proper News

No Result
View All Result

© 2014 Total Enjoyment & Proper News

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Cookie settingsACCEPT
Privacy & Cookies Policy

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may have an effect on your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT

Add New Playlist

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.