LPG Marketers Association has kicked against a new directive by the government for the distribution of Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) across the country.
The Cylinder Recirculation Model of Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) distribution was rolled out by the government following the fatal gas explosion and fire that struck the Atomic Junction in Accra.
The incident, the eighth in three years, claimed at least seven lives.
Properties worth millions were also consumed by the raging fire, prompting calls for safety regulations at LPG infrastructure.
The introduction of the model, which is expected to take a year to be fully rolled-out across the country, means that LPG Bottling Plants will be sited away from congested commercial and population centres and will procure, brand, maintain and fill empty cylinders to be distributed to consumers and households through retail outlets.
However, the association of LPG marketers says the new directive will collapse their business.
Public Relations Officer (PRO) of the LPG Marketers Association, Bernard Owiredu-Donkor, said the new directive, which came along with nine other stringent policies was a knee-jerk reaction.
“Rather than being a bit sentimental, we must be scientific. If you take the explosion that happened at Atomic Junction, we have all sorts of theories coming up as to the cause of this fire. We have not as yet been able to get a detailed report from our emergency services.
“We have not had a detailed report but there has been a launch pad for the launch of a policy that is the Cylinder Recirculation Module. That is why as operators, as marketers it is a bit unfair to us. Because an incident happens, we are waiting for analysis to know the cause but a new directive has been introduced,” Mr Owiredu-Donkor said.
He said the safety issues at gas filling stations required a broader perspective to adequately tackle them.
Source: Today
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I was wondering why the government has not banned the use of motor vehicles in the country since FATALITIES from vehicle accidents account more death in the country and this has made our roads very unsafe in the world. The government decision to introduce cylinder re-circulation module in the awake of the accident at ATOMIC Junction is very sad. Long before that the Minister of Energy gave the hint when he met the American Chamber of Commerce and therefore was looking for a launch pad to kill the local gas business and hand it over to foreigners. In developed countries, the government would have come in to help the industry fix problem which normally comes with gas discharge from trucks and not when filling a domestic cylinder. The hard handiness of the task force going round closing gas and petrol stations is an illustration of an orchestrated attempt to kill Ghanaians in the downstream oil business. It is premediated action by the powers that. Let address this issue devoid of emotions. Vehicles are killing us, so the government should ban them likewise