VEMAG petitions Transport Minister to suspend digitised number-plate rollout — warns 3,000 jobs at risk

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Embossers caution against rushed implementation of new RFID number‑plate system, call for six-month pause for stakeholder consultation

The Vehicle Embossment Association of Ghana (VEMAG) has formally petitioned the Transport Minister to suspend the planned nationwide introduction of digitally-enabled vehicle number plates, citing potential job losses for over 3,000 workers in the embossment industry and alleging inadequate stakeholder consultation.

  • VEMAG argues that the digitised number-plate rollout — spearheaded by the DVLA — threatens the livelihood of more than 3,000 workers who currently depend on the embossment industry for their income.
  • The group claims that, historically, they have been the legally recognised embosser of vehicle plates in Ghana, having pre-financed past productions for the DVLA and regularly fulfilled tax obligations.
  • VEMAG said the transition appears to favour foreign contractors, sidelining local businesses, and called the proposed rollout “poorly coordinated” and lacking in proper local stakeholder engagement.
  • As a result, VEMAG is requesting a six-month suspension of the digitisation programme to allow for planning, training, and thorough engagement with affected parties before implementation.
  • According to the DVLA, the new number plates will be equipped with RFID chips and digitised features beginning with vehicles registered after 1 January 2026, with full re-registration for existing vehicles expected to commence on 1 April 2026.
  • The reform aims to improve vehicle identification, support electronic tolling, speed monitoring, and enhance road safety and security — in line with the broader digitisation agenda for Ghana’s transport sector.
  • As part of the reform, the traditional display of the year of registration on license plates will be replaced by a regional/zonal code system, and new “owner-based” registration rules will be introduced to strengthen accountability and curb plate duplication or smuggling.
  • They argue that the lack of local stakeholder consultation undermines the legitimacy and smooth implementation of the reform.
  • The association warns that a rushed rollout could result in chaos on the roads — confusion among vehicle owners, disruption for embossers, and potential delays as demand surges once older plates are phased out.
  • They call for a gradual — not abrupt — transition that allows time for training, public sensitisation, and integration of existing local embossers into the new system.
  • Whether the Transport Ministry and DVLA will respond to VEMAG’s petition and consider delaying the rollout.
  • The reaction of other stakeholders — commercial transport operators, private vehicle owners, and civil-society groups — especially regarding job security and public interest.
  • How DVLA plans to integrate local embossers (if at all) into the new system, or whether outsourcing/foreign contracting becomes central.
  • Broader impact on Ghana’s transport-digitisation plans: will reforms proceed despite resistance, or be adjusted to accommodate local players?

 

Source: My News Ghana

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