Audio By Carbonatix
The Ghana Water Company Limited (GWCL) on Tuesday explained that the 10-day water interruption in some parts of Accra has been necessitated by the need to work on a project to boost water supply in the capital.
Mr Kwaku Bowte, Acting Managing Director of GWCL, said at the end of the project water supply in the eastern Accra, including Adenta, Madina, Pantang, University of Ghana, GIMPA and surrounding areas would experience an enhanced water supply while it would be possible to link pipes from the Weija Dam to the Accra Booster Station at Okponglo.
Mr Botwe gave the explanation prior to a media tour of the Accra Booster Station at Okponglo to enable journalists know what is going on and what the project is about.
The project dubbed: "East-West Interconnection Project," would make it possible to link water supplied from the Weija Dam to the Accra Booster Station so that excess water from Weija could be channelled to the eastern parts which do not have constant water supply.
Water from the Kpong Dam and Weija would connect in a way that would make Wieja supplement supplies from Kpong. As part of the project GWCL would replace the old pumps at the booster station.
The old pumps, which currently have the capacity to pump about 130,000 gallons of water per hour, would be replaced with new ones, which have higher capacity to pump about 260,000 gallons of water per hour.
Mr Botwe said that an on-going expansion project at the Weija Dam would enable the dam to supply extra 15 million gallons of water a day. He said at the end of the 10-day work those in the eastern part of Accra would not have constant supply but would have more than they used to have.
For instance if Adenta is having one-day flow of water in a week, it would improve to about two days flow in a week.
Mr Theo Smit, General Manager in charge of distribution at AVRL, operators for GWCL, said to minimize the effect of the water shortage on the affected communities, 40 water tankers would supply water free of charge to those in the affected communities.
Affected areas include University of Ghana, GIMPA, Pantang Hospital, Achimota, Paraku, Dome Pillar 2, Haasto, Kwabenya, Madina and surrounding areas.
Source: GNA
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana must take strategic approach to increasing state participation in mining — Dr Owusu-Sarkodie
4 minutes -
Ghana’s music is going global, but who’s preserving the story?
13 minutes -
Ghana’s extractive sector needs clearer, stronger policies — Ayi-Owoo
14 minutes -
Boga Ali Hashim features Bisa Kdei on new single ‘Susuka’
21 minutes -
Ghana must tie industrialisation targets to mining contracts — Ayi Owoo
32 minutes -
Ghana not getting enough public finance returns from mining sector – Dr Adu Owusu Sarkodie
33 minutes -
GoldBod announces renewal process for gold trading licences
35 minutes -
Multinational mining firms pay higher royalties despite lower output — Ken Ashigbey
44 minutes -
Ghana cannot exploit mineral wealth alone without foreign investment — Ken Ashigbey
56 minutes -
Ghana holds vast untapped gold reserves — Ken Ashigbey
59 minutes -
Deploy National Service personnel for mineral exploration – Chamber of Mines CEO
1 hour -
Increase Ghana’s share in the value chain through partnerships, not isolation – Ken Ashigbey
2 hours -
AIB Ghana to release report on fatal Tema microlight aircraft crash today
2 hours -
Krachi East school feeding programme near collapse as cooks threaten boycott over unpaid allowances
2 hours -
Cedi’s depreciation does not make it world’s weakest currency — Hopeson Adorye
2 hours