Panafrican News Agency

Ghana hit by widespread power outages

Accra, Ghana (PANA) - Ghanaians are experiening intrmittent power cuts reminiscent of the 'dumsor' era when the entire country went several hours a day without electricity.

The Ghana Grid Company (GRIDCo) said  in a statement Thursday the blackouts were due to gas shortages at a major power facility.

GRIDCo did not, however, indicate when power would be restored to affected areas or communities.

“Limited gas supply” at a power installation in Tema, located east of the Ghanaian capital, Accra, has led to “a supply gap of 550MW at peak time”, the statement said.

Recent studies expect the country’s energy crisis to worsen over the coming years, starting from this year.

“Ghana’s energy supply requires urgent, purposeful and significant investment to undo the current precarious situation the country finds itself,” said research and policy think tank, Centre for Socioeconomic Studies (CSS).

A CSS study released in June said “available data shows the country’s current energy provision is critically unhealthy and tottering towards a power crisis”.

The government of Ghana (GoG) has reportedly reached an agreement with the West African Gas Pipeline Company (WAPCo) to settle a US$20 million debt.

The major gas supplier cut supply this week, resulting in the widespread unannounced power outages.

The Ghana Grid Company (GRIDCo) in a statement announced that the disruption was as a result of a gas supply gap of 550MW at peak time.

Local media reports indicate that despite the tentative agreement reached between GoG and WAPCo, some outages are expected to happen since the agreement does not guarantee that there will be gas from Takoradi to Tema shortly.

Addressing the outage and its cause as contained in the GRIDCo statement, a member of the Mines and Energy Committee of Parliament, Edward Bawa, tasked government to quickly deal with the lingering debt.

“Government must find a way or make an arrangement with WAPCo as to how that debt can be paid. If WAPCO begins to have some comfort that government has kept in touch to do the payment, then, I believe that it will work."

“Government must be working to see how they can give WAPCo some level of comfort to continue transmitting gas from Obuasi to Tema or else we are going to be in trouble. If the gas does not come, what it simply means is that the plants cannot run because they use fuel. And if they cannot run, you’d have that 'dumsor',” he said.

Bawa stated that WAPCo has not been paid since January 2023, hence the accumulation of bills and the resort to cutting supply.
-0- PANA RA 28Oct2023.