
Audio By Carbonatix
There is widespread illegal importation and sale of non-compliant energy saving lamps (Compact Fluorescent Lamps) in the country, the Executive Secretary of the Energy Commission (EC), Dr Ofosu Ahenkorah, has said.He told the Daily Graphic yesterday that the importation of the illegal CFLs was contrary to the energy efficiency standards and labeling requirements stipulated by the Energy Standards and Labeling Regulations of 2005.He named some of the CFLs on the market as Elbee, Global, Crabtree Tribe, Ling, Tong Lighting, Harbour, Crystal, Osram Dulux and Economy Hongyao.The rest are: Gava, Vyba, Oscar Mettro, Miracle Koshi, SL-Prismatic, Ouqi, Philips, Bruder, Ground, Sunsea, Focus, Marksonic (Fine) and Eurolite.Dr Ahenkorah explained that in 2002, the government, upon the recommendation of the Energy Foundation, removed import duties and Value Added Tax (VAT) on energy saving lamps.The objective, he said, was to ensure that the sale of energy saving lamps were affordable to the people instead of the incandescent bulbs, which consume four times the energy of CFLs.According to him those inferior lamps are not durable, and do not bright enough, thereby compelling people or consumers to use more of such lamps at one place.Ahenkorah said tests conducted on the illegal lamps showed that instead of them lasting 6000 hours, they lasted 600 hours.He said the discovery of the illegal sale on non-compliant CFLs was made by the Ghana Standards Board (GSB) during a compliance monitoring exercise, saying that in the course of the exercise, it was realised that the illegal lamps did not have labels, a key requirement under the 2005 Legislation.Dr Ahenkorah said any person who contravened any of the requirements on labeling in the regulations committed an offence and was liable to summary conviction of a fine not exceeding 250 penalty units, or a term of imprisonment not exceeding one year or both.Such a practice, he said, affected the consumer the more, and that “once the consumer loses confidence in the lamps he/she turns to the use of incandescent bulbs, which consumes more energy”.On the state of the country’s energy situation, Dr Ahenkorah said it was okay.
“I don’t think we would run into the energy crisis again,” he pointed out.
Story by Emmanuel Bonney
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
-
Only 6% insured locally – Prof. Gyampo exposes cracks in import regime
54 minutes -
Thousands of containers lost at sea – GSA’s Prof Gyampo warns importers are exposed to risk
1 hour -
Keep the money in Ghana – Gov’t enforces local cargo insurance
2 hours -
US Army veteran charged with leaking classified information to journalist
2 hours -
Dr. Dre joins Forbes billionaires list as second-richest hip-hop artist with $1 billion fortune
2 hours -
Trump administration cannot nix legal status of 5,000 Ethiopians, US judge rules
2 hours -
Libya announces new oil and gas discoveries with three major energy companies
2 hours -
Oil rises as investors remain wary US-Iran ceasefire will open supply flow
2 hours -
Police arrest suspect over church threat video
4 hours -
Eight appear in court as police intensify crackdown on illicit drugs in Tamale
5 hours -
Motorist remanded in custody for hitting four-year-old girl
5 hours -
Mobile money vendor robbed at Ziope
5 hours -
Benin’s Finance Minister Wadagni seeks his own mandate in election
5 hours -
GNFS retrieves body of unidentified man from Asylum Down drain
5 hours -
CAF’s Motsepe to visit both Senegal and Morocco amid AFCON fallout
6 hours