Tuesday, 14 July

Act 1159: Ghana's Blueprint for a Sustainable Sporting Future

Feature Article
Belinda Plange

As a member of the Ghana Sports Fund, I am encouraged by the clear vision outlined by the Minister for Sports and Recreation. His focus extends beyond winning medals or qualifying for major tournaments. It is about building a sustainable sports ecosystem that creates lasting opportunities for future generations.

The Minister deserves recognition for acknowledging that sports infrastructure must not only be constructed but also properly maintained. His vision of transforming our stadiums into year-round business and community hubs is both practical and forward-thinking. Modern sports facilities should generate revenue through conferences, concerts, fitness programs, exhibitions, and other commercial activities rather than relying solely on football match days.

Equally commendable is the government's increased investment in sport and its commitment to constructing new multi-purpose facilities while upgrading existing ones ahead of the 2027 U-20 Africa Cup of Nations. These investments have the potential to strengthen youth development, increase community participation, create jobs, and promote national pride.

However, the long-term success of these initiatives will depend on one critical factor: the effective implementation of the Ghana Sports Fund Act, 2025 (Act 1159).

For decades, Ghana's sports sector has lacked a structured and sustainable financing mechanism. Act 1159 changes that. It provides a legal framework to mobilise, manage, and reinvest revenue generated from sponsorships, donations, international competitions, commercial activities, broadcasting rights, and other approved sources into the development of sport.

This means the Ghana Sports Fund is more than a funding institution—it is a vehicle for sustainability, accountability, innovation, and long-term strategic investment.

The Minister has consistently emphasised transparency, sound financial management, and stronger private-sector participation. These principles align perfectly with the objectives of Act 1159. Investors are far more willing to support sport when they have confidence that resources are managed responsibly, governance is strong, and investments produce measurable outcomes.

As members of the Ghana Sports Fund, we also have a significant responsibility. Our role goes beyond managing financial resources. We must demonstrate integrity, strategic leadership, and prudent stewardship to ensure that every cedi invested delivers meaningful value for athletes, sporting organisations, communities, and the nation as a whole.

If implemented effectively, Act 1159 has the potential to shift Ghana from a culture of reactive spending to one of strategic investments. It can reduce dependence on annual government allocations, attract private capital, improve sports infrastructure, strengthen grassroots development, support research and innovation, and create sustainable opportunities for athletes across all sporting disciplines.

The vision has been clearly articulated. The legal framework is now in place. The government has demonstrated its commitment, and the Ghana Sports Fund has been established. The next and most important challenge is execution.

Ultimately, resetting Ghana's sports sector will not be defined by the laws we enact or the facilities we commission. It will be measured by how faithfully we implement these reforms, the transparency with which we manage them, and the lasting impact they have on athletes, communities, and every Ghanaian who believes in the power of sport.

Source: Belinda Plange, member, Ghana Sports Fund board