Straight to content
Agyemang Duah Kweku Jr.

Gaslighting Ghana 

How World Bank-backed projects drive crippling energy debt and fossil fuel dependency in Ghana

Posted in category:
Publication
Written by:
Written by: Luis Scungio
Published on:
reading time 4 minutes

Key insights

  • By providing funding of about $2 billion in oil and gas projects, the World Bank has supported deeply harmful fossil and energy investments in Ghana.
  • Inconsistent gas deliveries through the West African Gas Pipeline have forced Ghana to continue to import more costly liquid fossil fuels than expected.
  • The Jubilee’s offshore production facility failed to function properly, leading to years of massive gas flaring. Additionally, Ghana had to borrow heavily from China to develop onshore gas processing infrastructure – a delay that cost the country at least $1 billion in fuel imports.
  • The Sankofa Gas Deal has locked Ghana into paying at least $600 million a year for gas regardless of need – this led to most of the $50 million in monthly gas payments to go unused between 2018 and 2019, in the hope to fully recover these costs by 2025.
  • Meanwhile, fossil fuel projects have driven the increase of other foreign-led, costly power production contracts that contribute to draining over $1 billion of Ghana’s public funds annually.
  • The World Bank has to account for enabling an investment climate that allows foreign investors in fossil projects to reap guaranteed profits, while failing to deliver affordable and clean energy to Ghanaian people.

While the World Bank touts its climate credentials on the global stage this week, its legacy in Ghana is one of debt, gas flaring, and unaffordable electricity. Our new research with ActionAid Ghana exposes how World Bank-backed projects have prioritised corporate profits while draining Ghana’s public funds. Instead of fostering sustainable growth, the Bank has locked the country into crippling debt, energy insecurity, and fossil fuel dependency. 

A rigged energy system that benefits corporations, not Ghanaians

Through controversial lending and questionable financial guarantees that shield foreign investors, the World Bank has played a key role in burdening Ghana with obligations it cannot afford. The country has paid for gas it could not immediately use and continues to pay for expensive excess electricity it doesn’t need, all while struggling to provide affordable energy for its people.

The World Bank claims to champion development. In Ghana, it has done the opposite—fueling debt while ensuring corporate profits come before public need. Ghanaians are paying high prices for electricity they can’t afford, while foreign oil and gas companies reap guaranteed profits.”

Joseph Wilde-Ramsing, acting Executive Director of SOMO

West African Gas Pipeline: A broken promise

The West African Gas Pipeline, one of the first major regional energy public-private partnerships, was meant to ensure a steady supply of affordable gas from Nigeria. Instead, since its launch in 2010, gas deliveries have been inconsistent, forcing Ghana to import costly liquid fuels that the pipeline was meant to partially offset.

Meanwhile, international oil giants like Shell and Chevron have enjoyed World Bank-backed financial guarantees, insulating them from financial risks.

Jubilee Project: Billions spent, power shortages remained

Led by oil multinationals Tullow Oil and Kosmos Energy, the Jubilee project was hailed by Western investors also for its potential to ease Ghana’s power crisis. However, this multibillion-dollar project didn’t cover the use of gas, and the offshore production facility failed to function properly, leading to years of massive gas flaring.

Ghana had to borrow heavily from China to develop onshore gas infrastructure —a delay that cost the country at least $1 billion in additional fuel imports. Meanwhile, foreign investors received hundreds of millions in World Bank-backed loans and guarantees.

Sankofa Gas Deal: A highly risky deal disguised as a solution

With over $1.2 billion in World Bank commitments, the Sankofa project was hailed by the Bank as a breakthrough for Ghana’s energy security. However, its take-or-pay contract compelled Ghana to pay $600 million annually for gas, whether it used it or not. Infrastructure delays meant that $50 million worth of gas per month went largely unused for over a year, with possible cost recoveries estimated only by 2025.

In the meantime, the World Bank’s guarantees helped European oil companies recover $360 million in missed payments, converting this amount into burdensome loans for Ghana.

Independent power producers: Excess power, excess costs

Between 2012 and 2016, Ghana rushed into independent power producer contracts to address power shortages. Many of these deals—some directly backed by the World Bank—were signed without public scrutiny and included rigid take-or-pay clauses. By 2022, Ghana had 850MW of surplus thermal power capacity but remained locked into expensive contracts that far exceeded actual demand, leading to an estimated $1.3 billion revenue shortfall in 2023.

The World Bank: Aiding development or profiting from Ghana’s debt?

Ghana’s debt was restructured under the G20 Common Framework for Debt Treatments, but this involves simply postponing debt with bilateral creditors ($5.2 billion) to 2040, while some of these governments’ banks had invested in the country’s fossil and power projects. Moreover, debt owed to multilateral banks, including $4.75 billion owed to the World Bank, is exempt from the process. 
 
The World Bank issued a new $250 million loan in June 2024, primarily aimed at reducing transmission losses, improving planning and expanding the use of metering systems. However, this fails to address the bigger structural problems, such as the renegotiation of expensive power charges and excessive installed capacity under the current agreements with independent power producers, some of which the Bank directly encouraged.

Without tackling disastrous take-or-pay contracts, Ghana risks remaining stuck in a cycle of fossil energy debt, further threatening struggling households who, following the IMF bailout, have already been hit by the doubling of electricity tariffs in 2023. 

Ghana has been compelled to enter into energy agreements that are unaffordable and unsustainable. These contracts seem to guarantee profits for oil giants while our government struggles to pay off debts. The burden falls on ordinary Ghanaians, who must endure high electricity prices while the promised energy benefits remain unfulfilled.

John Nkaw, Country Director of ActionAid Ghana.
Dumsor protest in Accra, June 2024. Photo by Agyemang Duah Kweku Jr.(opens in new window)

A call for accountability and fair energy deals

Instead of guiding Ghana towards sustainable energy solutions, the World Bank has locked the country into disastrous, high-risk contracts that benefit fossil fuel corporations at the expense of the people. This is utter negligence, exploitation, and a climate disaster rolled into one.

Ghana’s experience underscores the urgent need for greater transparency and fairness in global energy investments. All energy contracts that shift financial risk onto the country must be reassessed, and development finance institutions like the World Bank must acknowledge their role in fueling this crisis.

A step towards real accountability would be an independent process that assesses the historical and current levels of fossil-related debt affecting Ghana’s finances, followed by the cancellation of this debt as part of the ongoing restructuring process led by the International Monetary Fund.

As John Nkaw, Country Director of ActionAid Ghana, puts it,

“Ghana’s energy future must be climate-resilient, democratically governed, and free from exploitative fossil fuel arrangements.” 

Do you need more information?

Related news

Don't want to miss anything?

Sign up for our newsletter and always stay up to date on information and analysis on corporate power issues.