Passage of Ghana Shippers’ Authority Bill to help streamline operations  

 

Parliament’s passage of the Ghana Shippers’ Authority Bill, 2024, will go a long way to streamline operations in the shipping industry, Mr Emmanuel Kofi Arku, the Director of Business Development and Commercial Service, Ghana Shippers Authority (GSA), has said.

The Bill, which amends its 50 years old establishment law, NRCD 254 (1974), will regulate commercial activities of shippers and primarily address unfair and excessive charges that burden traders who use Ghana’s sea and airports, as well as land borders to ply their international trade.

Speaking to the Parliamentary Press Corps at Parliament House in Accra, Mr Arku described the passage of the new law as a welcome news for the shipping industry in Ghana.

He noted that the law was an enabler, in the sense that it would empower the Authority to better adapt to emerging trends and complexities within the shipping and logistics industry.

He reiterated that the Authority was not going to implement the law unilaterally, and that they were going to engage industry players, who were all experts in the industry.

He said: “Once, we agree on certain variables and agree with certain rates, that is what we will apply, and the law too sets the power to implement and enforce what we have agreed upon.”

He added that the law gave them the provisions to make further regulations as to how demurrage, among others, was to be charged.

“So, this is the law for everybody; for stakeholder, for freight forwarder, for the shipper, even for the shipping line, hither too when shipping lines have issues they have nobody to complain to but with this law, a shipping line can have recourse with Ghana Shipper’s Authority and complain if another service provider is treating them unfairly,” Mr Arku said.

Madam Sylvia Asana Dauda Owu, the Director of Operations, GSA, said the new law would introduce transparency in the determination of port fees and charges, and ensure better accountability in the legal movement of international trade cargo across all of borders of Ghana.

The law further aims to make Ghana a preferred transit trade route for her landlocked neighbours, Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger and overall, enhance the sector’s revenue contribution to the national purse.

GNA

Parliament's passage