By Adnan Adams Mohammed
Publican AI eliminates human discretion at the ports, smashing initial targets; May collections on track to eclipse April’s record milestone.
In what has been described as a structural turning point for public sector revenue collection, the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) has recorded an unprecedented financial windfall, capturing an additional GH¢1 billion in customs revenue for the month of April 2026 alone.
The record-breaking fiscal surge directly follows the aggressive deployment of “Publican AI” a cutting-edge artificial intelligence infrastructure integrated into the nation’s ports and borders to automate risk management and eliminate deep-seated trade discrepancies.
Speaking before an audience of international investors, policymakers, and corporate executives at the 10th Ghana CEO Summit in Accra, the Commissioner-General of the GRA, Anthony Kwasi Sarpong, revealed that the early-stage performance of the technology has completely shattered initial econometric projections.
“Indeed the results for the first two months of deploying the AI is amazing and promising,” Mr. Sarpong disclosed. “In the month of April alone we added GHS1 billion to our revenue generation for customs.”
Dismantling the ‘Human Discretion’ Loophole
For decades, Ghana’s gateway ports have been plagued by systemic under-valuation, fraudulent misclassification of cargo, and deliberate under-invoicing. Prior to the technology’s rollout earlier this year, a heavy reliance on manual invoicing systems and human inspection left state coffers vulnerable to massive revenue leakages.
The Publican AI system intercepts trade data in real-time, matching cargo manifests against international trade metrics, global pricing indexes, and cross-border risk-analysis frameworks. By instantly tracing the true origin and value of goods, the algorithm has effectively automated the assessment process, creating an un-bypassable digital sieve.
The GRA boss emphasized that the rollout represents a broader philosophical shift toward corporate equity and public transparency, setting a digital precedent for the rest of the continent.
“We want to claim that GRA is the first public institution to use AI across the board, affecting many businesses,” Sarpong stated. “The purpose is to reduce human discretion, make faster assessment, create a fairer basis for all import and import assessment.”
The April-May Revenue Trajectory
April 2026 (Actual): +GH¢1.0 Billion First full month of optimized Publican AI integration.
May 2026 (Projected): >GH¢1.0 Billion Mid-quarter data indicates cross-border compliance is accelerating.
Navigating Private Sector Friction
The transition has not been entirely seamless. The deployment initially triggered severe operational friction, drawing protests from local freight forwarders, clearing agents, and port-logistics stakeholders who complained about rigid compliance demands and adjustments to digital customs clearance workflows.
However, the revenue authority has remained firm, maintaining that the financial metrics vindicate the strict policy shift. Far from a temporary bump, the revenue growth has shown a sustained upward trajectory.
“We are on course in the month of May and the results as of yesterday is showing that we are going beyond GHS1 billion for the month of May,” Mr. Sarpong revealed to the summit, indicating that the technology’s efficiency is compounding weekly.
Deepening Private Sector Engagement
Acknowledging that long-term compliance requires corporate consensus, the GRA leadership has moved swiftly to transition from strict enforcement to strategic collaboration. The authority recently held a high-stakes stakeholder engagement with the Ghana National Chamber of Commerce and Industry (GNCCI) to address private sector anxieties surrounding digital revenue platforms.
Led by GNCCI President Stephane Miezan, the forum allowed physically and virtually present business leaders to seek direct clarity on Value Added Tax (VAT) administration, automated customs interventions, and the synchronization of the new AI with the existing Integrated Customs Management System (ICUMS).
Commenting on the rationale behind the dialogues, senior customs officials noted that the engagement forms part of broader efforts to refine the digital interface, making it easier for honest businesses to comply while keeping the tax net tightly secured.
With May’s revenue totals already poised to eclipse April’s historic milestone, the Ministry of Finance and the GRA are reportedly advanced in plans to expand the Publican AI architecture beyond maritime borders, scaling it across broader sectors of domestic income and corporate tax mobilization. For Ghana’s economic recovery programme, the message from the port is clear: the future of revenue mobilization is digital, automated, and absolute.
