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Gov’t draws hard line on fronting as mining reforms deepen

 


Government has issued a strong warning against the practice of “fronting” in Ghana’s mining sector, declaring it will not tolerate foreign companies using Ghanaian names as mere fronts to secure contracts while retaining control and benefits.

Speaking at the maiden Mining Local Content Summit 2026 in Takoradi in the Western Region, the Minister for Lands and Natural Resources, Emmanuel Armah- Kofi Buah said the renewed push for local content and indigenisation under President John Mahama’s Reset Agenda will prioritise genuine Ghanaian participation not cosmetic compliance.

He cautioned: “This platform we are creating, this great opportunity we are opening for Ghanaian participation, comes with a solemn warning: We frown on, and we will not condone, any form of fronting using Ghanaians.”

He added that: “The practice where foreign companies hide behind Ghanaian names, using our people as mere masks to satisfy regulatory requirements while retaining all the control and all the benefits, is a theft of opportunity and a betrayal of everything this summit stands for.”

The Minister said Ghana’s mining sector, despite contributing about 43 percent of total merchandise exports and employing millions directly and indirectly, has largely operated as an enclave economy for over a century.
“For all these decades, despite all this wealth, the mining sector has largely operated as an enclave. It has existed alongside our economy, but not yet fully within it. We have been prolific producers, yet passive participants,” he said.

Why should our local businesses, despite their immense potential, capture less than 40% of the procurement spend in a sector that generates billions of cedis in expenditure annually? Why should over 70% of high-value services-engineering design, equipment supply, specialized technical support still be sourced from outside our borders?” he questioned.

He further disclosed that the Minerals Commission has developed a Mining Local Content and Local Procurement Policy Framework that prioritises Ghanaian participation as a strategic imperative, while the establishment of a Special Purpose Vehicle to drive sustainable partnerships and industrialisation is underway.

He also challenged Ghanaian businesses to rise to the occasion: “The time has come to earn contracts because we are competent and competitive—not merely because we are Ghanaian”.

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