By Adnan Adams Mohammed
Ghana’s petroleum sector is approaching a critical crossroads as new financial projections clash with a worrying downward trend in physical output.
According to the latest data from the Public Interest and Accountability Committee (PIAC), the nation is expected to rake in approximately $985 million in petroleum revenue for the 2026 fiscal year. This anticipated surge comes at a time when the country is celebrating a cumulative milestone: earning nearly $12 billion from the sector since commercial production began in 2011.
However, the optimistic financial outlook masks a deepening crisis in the upstream sector. PIAC’s most recent assessment reveals that Ghana’s crude oil output has declined for the sixth consecutive year, raising alarms about the long-term sustainability of the industry.
The Production Paradox
Since 2010, Ghana has produced a total of 694 million barrels of crude oil. While this volume has anchored the national budget for over a decade, the “gold rush” era appears to be cooling.
The decline, which began in 2019, has been attributed to a lack of significant new discoveries and the natural depletion of existing fields namely Jubilee, TEN, and Sankofa Gye-Nyame. Despite technical interventions by operators, the year-on-year drop in volume persists, threatening Ghana’s status as a rising African oil powerhouse.
A $12 Billion Legacy
The financial impact of the sector remains the backbone of Ghana’s infrastructure and social spending. Of the nearly $12 billion earned since 2011, funds have been disbursed into the Annual Budget Funding Amount (ABFA), the Ghana Heritage Fund (GHF), and the Ghana Stabilization Fund (GSF).
The $985 million projected for 2026 is expected to be driven primarily by favorable global oil prices and increased gas monetization, rather than an increase in the number of barrels extracted.
PIAC’s Warning
In its reporting, PIAC has consistently urged the government to prioritize “aggressive” exploration to reverse the production slump. The committee noted that while the $12 billion cumulative revenue is substantial, the lack of investment in new oil blocks could lead to a revenue “cliff” in the coming decade.
“We are essentially living off the successes of a decade ago,” a source close to the committee noted. “To hit nearly a billion dollars in 2026 is positive, but we must ask what happens when the current wells run dry if no new fields are brought online.”
As the government prepares its 2026 fiscal strategy, the pressure is mounting to move beyond just collecting revenue and focus on the technical revitalization of the upstream petroleum industry. Without a breakthrough in exploration, the $985 million windfall of 2026 may be one of the last major peaks in Ghana’s aging oil story.
