The Ghanaian Authorities recently took deliberate action toward implementing LPG's sustainable clean energy. Yet, this comes hand in hand with ensuring the highest quality and safety cylinders for the Ghanaian market.
The Ghanaian authorities will certify local manufacturers based on the quality and safety of the LPG cylinders. They will sanction those culpable of not meeting the standards.
Sigma Cylinders welcomes GSA's effort to certify all imported products and guide consumers. Furthermore, it is grateful for GSA efforts aimed at safeguarding Ghanaian lives.
When confronted with a buying decision, customers don’t just look at the price or the label of the product to make up their minds, there are 2 factors highly considered in this process: Quality & Safety.
When we talk about LPG cylinders, these 2 attributes can’t be overlooked, because the lives of the people depend on them!
Some nations like Tanzania, Ivory Coast, and Ghana had their share of suffering after massive LPG cylinder explosions in a record time, leaving a question mark about the manufacturing process.
The truth about this process is that it can only be measured, tested, and rated; monitored, improved, and sustained by the traceability process!
When the pandemic hit the world, it disrupted all the ecosystems and forced businesses to reconsider their way of working.
Due to the worldwide lockdowns, production and distribution worked at historically low levels, while the demand for some commodities rose unexpectedly due to a shift in consumer behaviour, exceeding the supply, which led to a spike in prices.
Steel’s production is no exception; It is rather the example that concerns you the most. When the steel mills were forced to shut off in 2020, a sharp drop-off in demand for steel occurred, but it didn’t last long!
One of the key advantages of LPG is its portability.
Regardless of how it’s delivered, LPG is there when people need it.
Clean, safe and reliable energy for everyone everywhere.
Every household has an LPG connection for cooking purposes. Today one cannot imagine a life in cities without LPG. However, the most used cooking gas is flammable, and users need to take care while using it in their homes.
Africa is paying a massive price for global warming which it didn’t cause. While it only contributes 3 per cent to greenhouse gas, it loses 5 per cent to 15 per cent of its GDP every year. The UN’s recent COP27 Energy Day, focused on solutions to help Africa alleviate the drastic consequences of global warming on its climate and economy, by primarily relying on clean and renewable energy sources.
Approximately 3 billion people rely on solid fuels such as wood, charcoal, and kerosene for their cooking needs.
Exposure to household air pollution from burning these fuels is estimated to account for approximately 3 million premature deaths a year. Cleaner fuels such as liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) have the potential to alleviate much of this significant health burden.
To reduce household air pollution, improve health outcomes, save nonrenewable biomass, and support local economic development, developing countries are seeking to increase the use of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) as a clean cooking solution. In the absence of targeted subsidies, LPG will not be the solution for the world’s poorest people. But many developing countries, especially in SubSaharan Africa, are recognizing it as key to increasing access to clean cooking energy and making progress on Sustainable Development Goal 7; they are adopting ambitious targets to scale up its use across the continent.
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