The Bulk Oil Storage and Transportation (BOST) Company Limited will spend almost GH¢200 million on a number of projects this year to help transform the petroleum sector.
The investment, which will start with the procurement process this quarter, is also to bring greater efficiency into the transportation of petroleum products within the country and for export.
The projects will include the automation and upgrade of all the company’s depots to bring them up to modern standards to deliver improved efficiency.
The six depots are located in Tema in the Greater Accra Region, Buipe in the Gonja District in the Savanna Region, Kumasi, the Ashanti Regional capital, and Bolgatanga, the Upper East Regional capital.
The rest are in Akosombo and the famous Maame Water Depot at Adome, both in the Eastern Region.
In an interview with the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of BOST, Mr Edwin Provencal explained that “These projects are expected to generate jobs for players in the private sector, as well as protect Ghana’s highways against deterioration as a result of the movement of heavy-duty trucks transporting fuel products from Accra to Kumasi”.
“We will start out this quarter; we will start with the procurement processes this quarter to ensure that we get the right companies to help us update and automate our depots,” Mr Provencal said.
“Despite the achievements we have chalked up, we still think we need to go full-blown automation to be able to become more competitive,” he added.
Again, he revealed that BOST was likely to go into the supply of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) throughout the country.
“Wherever we have a depot, we will put an LPG plant there to help in the transition from fossil fuel to gas, in line with climate action plans and the President’s initiative on clean fuels,” he said.
AfCFTA
Mr Provencal said in the quest to leverage every opportunity to make the company more relevant on the continent, BOST would also take advantage of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) to do a lot of business with neighbouring countries offshore.
“In that regard, we are happy to say that the National Petroleum Authority (NPA) is playing a key role to ensure that there is an organisational policy so that trucks do not have to move all the way from Burkina Faso and Mali to Accra to pick fuel.
“When they do that, they destroy our roads; they increase our social cost. So if the NPA assists by implementing that organisational policy, it will help us save money on our roads,” he explained.
He said BOST was determined, together with the NPA, to do away with all the illicit trade and adulteration of products to ensure that quality was maintained.
Financial performance
On the company’s financial performance over the last five years, Mr Provencal said he took over an organisation that had a $624-million debt hanging on its neck.
On top of that, there was another GH¢284 million domestic legacy loan on the books, he said.
Then, he said, each of the company’s transportation assets, including the transmission pipelines and barges, was 100 per cent out of service.
“We were virtually hanging on a noose, basically, and then you are asked to perform,” he recounted.
The BOST CEO indicated that much as the job virtually looked impossible, management and the board and staff were determined to turn around the situation.
“Today, all our marine assets are working and generating income for the company. We have our pipelines, especially the one connecting Buipe to Bolga, working, and we have all but one of our depots working, for which reason we are able to export to neighbouring countries,” he said.
Mr Provencal said in the 2020 audited accounts, the company made about GH¢10 million profit before tax.
Last year, he said, the forecast was to make about GH¢30 million profit before tax.