Fuel prices in Ghana are once again caught between global oil swings and the structure of domestic pricing. Crude markets have eased, but pump prices have not yet caught up. Earlier in the year, before tensions between Iran, Israel and the United States escalated, Ghanaian consumers were briefly seeing relief. Petrol was selling at about GH¢10 per litre, while diesel hovered between GH¢11 and GH¢12, among the lowest levels in months.

The situation shifted quickly when geopolitical tensions escalated. At the peak of the disruption, crude prices surged sharply, at one point approaching $120 per barrel. The impact filtered through to Ghana’s fuel market. Diesel prices rose above GH¢17 per litre at some stations, with petrol also moving higher across the country. Now the direction has reversed again. With a ceasefire and easing tensions, crude oil has fallen back to around $72 per barrel.

In theory, that should bring relief to consumers at the pump. In practice, it has not yet done so. The reason lies in how Ghana’s petroleum pricing system is structured. The National Petroleum Authority operates a two-week pricing window for fuel pricing. Within each window, oil marketing companies are bound by a price floor that cannot be undercut, even if international prices fall in the meantime.

The current pricing window runs until next Tuesday, June 30. That means the recent decline in crude prices is not yet reflected in domestic pricing decisions. The adjustment only takes effect once the window expires. At that point, the NPA reviews global oil prices, exchange rate movements and other cost factors before setting new price floors for the next cycle. That is when consumers are more likely to see changes at the pump, potentially from Wednesday, July 1.

Most oil marketing companies are not selling fuel at current international prices. Instead, much of the fuel at stations today was imported and stocked days or weeks earlier, when crude prices were higher. As a result, firms need to recover the cost of existing stock before lower global prices can fully pass through to retail prices. The relative strength of the cedi is adding further support to potential price declines.

Oil prices have eased, and cost pressures are declining. But Ghana’s pricing system transmits those changes with a delay. The result is a familiar one for consumers. Relief tends to arrive, but not immediately. It is absorbed first through pricing windows and inventory cycles before it reaches the pump.

For now, the key point is timing rather than direction. Prices are moving lower in the global market. Ghana’s pump prices are likely to follow, but only from the next pricing cycle, rather than immediately.