At the center of the reform is the Ghana Gold Board (GoldBod), established in 2025 to regulate and centralize the purchase of artisanal gold. Beginning in March 2026, the board will assume full responsibility for negotiating off-take agreements and marketing all ASM gold it acquires. The reform follows a remarkable expansion of Ghana’s artisanal mining sector. In 2025, ASM production surged by more than 60% to reach 96.4 tonnes, equivalent to 3.1 million ounces. For the first time, artisanal output surpassed that of industrial mines, which remained broadly stable at around 2.9 million ounces. Total national gold production rose to approximately 186 tonnes, consolidating Ghana’s position as Africa’s leading gold producer.
This acceleration has been largely driven by record global gold prices, hovering around $5,160 per ounce in early 2026. While higher prices have boosted production, they have also intensified informal trading and cross-border smuggling.
Despite its dominant position in African gold production, Ghana continues to face substantial losses due to illicit exports. Authorities estimate that roughly $11.4 billion worth of artisanal gold left the country through unofficial channels between 2019 and 2023, often routed through global trading hubs such as Dubai. These leakages deprive the state of critical foreign currency inflows at a time when the cedi has experienced prolonged pressure.
By targeting 127 tonnes annually through formal channels, the government aims to significantly curb smuggling while strengthening oversight and transparency across the supply chain.
A potential $20 billion annual revenue stream
At current market prices, 127 tonnes of gold translate into more than $20 billion in potential annual export earnings. This represents roughly 4 million ounces of gold and could substantially reinforce Ghana’s balance of payments position. For comparison, total gold export revenues reached $20.9 billion in 2025, including both industrial and artisanal production. Under the new framework, all foreign exchange proceeds generated through the program are expected to be transferred to the central bank, ensuring that the inflows directly support national reserves. To achieve its annual target, GoldBod plans to purchase at least 2.45 tonnes of artisanal gold per week. The institution will secure financing to maintain inventories equivalent to three to four weeks of purchases and deploy hedging instruments to manage exposure to international price volatility.
The government intends to strengthen licensing systems, enhance traceability mechanisms, expand local refining capacity, and introduce pricing incentives to encourage licensed miners to sell through official channels. Environmental safeguards and enforcement measures are also expected to be reinforced to address long-standing concerns surrounding mercury use and ecological degradation. Beyond mining reform, the initiative reflects a wider macroeconomic objective. Through GANRAP, Ghana seeks to build a financial buffer capable of covering up to 15 months of imports by 2028.
Following years of fiscal strain and an IMF-supported program, gold is being repositioned as a strategic monetary asset rather than merely an export commodity. The success of the strategy will depend on effective implementation, transparent governance, and careful coordination with large-scale mining operators, some of whom have raised concerns about parallel fiscal reforms that could affect investment conditions. Ghana’s approach could serve as a regional model for transforming artisanal mining from a source of revenue leakage into a structured pillar of macroeconomic resilience.

