Parliament’s approval of the Ghana Investment Promotion Authority (GIPA) Bill, 2025, marks an important moment in the evolution of Ghana’s investment governance framework. Once assented to by the President, the Bill will repeal the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre Act, 2013 (Act 865) and formally transition the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre into the Ghana Investment Promotion Authority (GIPA), positioning it as the country’s lead investment promotion and facilitation institution.
While the Bill applies broadly across Ghana’s investment ecosystem, several of its provisions could carry important implications for new investments and businesses operating within the clean energy, climate technology, electric mobility, and broader sustainable infrastructure sectors.
A More Coordinated and Facilitative Investment Framework
At its core, the Bill seeks to create a more coordinated, transparent, and facilitative investment environment by expanding the mandate of GIPC beyond investment promotion alone. Under the Bill, the new Authority to replace GIPC would play a more active role in investment facilitation, investor support, grievance resolution, technology transfer oversight, investment monitoring, and coordination across government institutions.
For clean energy businesses, one of the longstanding operational challenges has been navigating fragmented institutional processes involving licensing, permitting, taxation, import procedures, incentives, regulatory approvals, and engagement with multiple Ministries, Departments, and Agencies. The Bill attempts to respond to this broader challenge by positioning the Authority as a coordinating institution capable of facilitating engagements between investors, enterprises, and relevant public institutions.
Investor Grievance Mechanism: Improving Predictability
The Bill establishes a formal investor grievance mechanism to receive and process grievances submitted by investors in relation to investment-related administrative actions or omissions by government institutions (Clause 43). For businesses operating in sectors where regulatory clarity and implementation consistency are essential for long-term investment decisions, the establishment of a grievance resolution framework could help improve investor confidence and predictability, which, if effectively implemented, could address longstanding investor concerns around administrative uncertainty and regulatory delays in infrastructure sectors such as clean energy.
Technology Transfer Oversight
Another area with relevance for the clean energy sector relates to technology transfer arrangements. Renewable energy and climate technology deployment often involve international partnerships, technical services agreements, software systems, intellectual property arrangements, engineering services, and operational management agreements. The Bill introduces expanded provisions governing the registration and regulation of technology transfer agreements and grants the Authority oversight responsibilities (Clause 51). Agreements are valid for five years and are subject to renewal in consultation with the relevant sector regulator (e.g., the Energy Commission for clean energy technologies). Notably, unregistered technology transfer agreements are not legally enforceable, and payments under them cannot be remitted abroad or treated as deductible tax expenses.
Sustainability and Local Content Obligations
The Bill further places emphasis on sustainable development, environmental responsibility, local content, skills development, and responsible business conduct (Clause 4(a) and Clause 46). Enterprises operating in Ghana and covered by the Authority’s investment facilitation and regulatory mandate would be expected to operate in compliance with environmental standards and support local capacity development through employment creation and skills transfer initiatives. This direction aligns strongly with GCCE’s advocacy and ongoing discussions around how clean energy deployment can simultaneously support industrial development, local participation, job creation, and domestic technical capacity.
Minimum Capital Requirements: A Nuanced Picture
The Bill retains the US$500,000 minimum capital requirement for foreign participation in trading enterprises under Clause 38(1)(a). However, the Bill does not prescribe similarly detailed minimum foreign capital thresholds across many other sectors and investment categories, including areas such as manufacturing, project development, and technology-driven investments. This creates room for greater flexibility through future sector-specific regulations, strategic investment designations, and incentive frameworks under the Authority.
This flexibility could become particularly relevant for the clean energy sector, where investment models are often innovation-driven, partnership-based, and not always dependent on large upfront capital commitments.
Strategic Investments
The Bill further introduces provisions relating to strategic investments and investment incentives (Clauses 35 and 36). Cabinet is empowered to determine priority investment areas eligible for strategic incentives (Clause 36(1)), while the Authority would subsequently publish the criteria and qualifying sectors (Clause 36(2)). Although the Bill does not explicitly identify clean energy as a priority sector, the framework creates potential pathways through which renewable energy, electric mobility, clean technology manufacturing, battery systems, and climate-resilient infrastructure investments could benefit should they be classified under strategic investment priorities by Cabinet.
Investor Protections
In addition, the Bill strengthens provisions relating to investor protections, including guarantees against discrimination (Clause 40), transferability of capital and profits (Clause 42), dispute resolution procedures (Clause 44), and protections against expropriation under applicable law (Clause 41). These protections remain important considerations for both domestic and foreign investors seeking to deploy long-term capital into infrastructure-intensive sectors such as renewable energy and clean transportation.
Offences, Penalties, and Compliance Risks
Clean energy enterprises and companies should also be aware of new compliance obligations and penalties under the Bill. The Bill criminalizes “fronting” for foreign investors (Clause 55(1)(c)) and submitting false or misleading information to the Authority (Clause 55(3)), with significant fines (up to 10,000 penalty units). Additionally, enterprises with foreign ownership must register with GIPA before commencing operations (Clause 33), while wholly Ghanaian-owned enterprises may register voluntarily to access incentives (Clause 34). Registration must be renewed every two years, with administrative penalties for non-compliance (Clause 56). The Bill also imposes an expatriate quota system based on paid-up capital, ranging from 2 persons (500,000) to 12 persons (above $10 million) (Clause 48(2)).
Regional Context and Competitiveness
The legislation also signals Ghana’s broader attempt to reposition itself within a changing regional and global investment environment. The Bill specifically references the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) framework and the need to strengthen Ghana’s competitiveness in attracting and retaining investment. This may become increasingly important as African countries compete to attract investment into emerging energy transition value chains and green industrial opportunities.
Implementation Will Determine Impact
On the whole, the effectiveness of the Bill when it becomes law will ultimately depend on implementation. To strengthen and attract more investments into the clean energy space, practical outcomes such as improved coordination across institutions, faster administrative processes, clearer incentive frameworks, and more efficient investor support mechanisms will likely determine the Bill’s long-term impact on the investment environment.
Recommendations
GCCE encourages government and implementing institutions to ensure that the new investment law prioritizes:
- Clearer guidance on strategic investment incentives and consideration of clean energy, including renewable energy, climate technology, electric mobility, and related green industrial activities as priority sectors.
- Stronger inter-agency coordination to reduce regulatory and administrative bottlenecks.
- Efficient investor support and grievance resolution mechanisms.
- Streamlined technology transfer, permitting, and licensing processes; and a more sector-sensitive approach to foreign participation and investment structuring, particularly for innovation-driven and capital-constrained clean energy businesses.
As global competition for energy transition capital intensifies, a more targeted investment facilitation approach for clean energy businesses could help improve investor coordination, accelerate project development timelines, strengthen technology transfer partnerships, and enhance Ghana’s competitiveness in attracting long-term climate and infrastructure investment.
The Ghana Chamber of Clean Energy (GCCE) will continue monitoring developments around the Bill and engaging stakeholders on the implications for clean energy investment, technology transfer, private sector participation, and Ghana’s broader energy transition agenda.
