
Audio By Carbonatix
The Managing Director of the Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG), Samuel Dubik Mahama, says the company has in recent times witnessed a steady growth in its operations.
He says this has partly accounted for the company's ability to negotiate with the Chamber of Independent Power Producers (IPPs), to rescind their decision to cut down power supply by June 30 over the government's indebtedness.
Speaking on JoyNews' Newsfile, he said “ECG is seeing some level of growth now. It's seeing some changes in the way it's performing its duties, and through all of this we believe strongly we can close a certain gap.”
He explained that the company had for months been negotiating with the IPPs, however, this time ECG used its current performance to strike a deal with the IPPs which resolved the potential power crisis the country would have been plunged into.
“We shared certain numbers with them for certain periods moving forward. In effect, we have ring-fenced up to June debt."
“We are going to make sure that from July going forward we stay current based on some form of negotiation that we have with them concerning how power is going to be dispatched and how the energy capacity has gone. So we have a very good working formula,” he told host, Samson Lardy Anyenini.
When asked if payment has been made to the IPPs, he retorted, “would you be surprised we have not given them anything?
“We have agreed on numbers across board for anybody. Everybody knows what they have to do and get back to us by the middle of the week and when they do that whatever needs to be credited to them will be credited to them immediately," he said.
On May 28, the IPPs and distributors threatened to cut power supply to the national grid by the end of June 2023 if the government failed to settle its debt.
This could create a huge power shortfall as the IPPs control over 65% of the available thermal generation capacity in the country.
Independent Power Producers threaten to cut power supply by June 30
Despite several calls by stakeholders for IPPs to reconsider its decision, it still maintained that until the 30% of the $1.73 billion owed is paid, they would shut down power.
Pay 30% of $1.6bn energy debt by June 30 – IPPs to government
However, on June 30, the IPPs released a statement to suspend the planned shutdown of power plants following fruitful engagements with the ECG
The Chamber had in a memo, directed its members to shut down their plants from July 1 to July 8 if the government fails to pay 30 percent of the 1.73 billion dollars owed them.
But according to a statement released by the chamber on Friday, June 30th, the IPPs have agreed to keep operating their power plants after July 1.
IPPs agree to suspend shutdown after engagement with ECG
As part of the understanding reached, all the IPPs have received an offer of payments from ECG to enable them to operate in the interim thereby providing the government of Ghana and ECG the needed grace period to address the outstanding arrears in the energy sector and to meet their contractual obligations.
Latest Stories
-
Anti-LGBTQ+ Bill: Ghanaians demand expedited passage, not dialogue – Ntim Fordjour to Mahama
5 minutes -
EU airline industry warns of fuel shortages if Strait of Hormuz stays closed
8 minutes -
White House staff told not to place bets on prediction markets
16 minutes -
Auctioneers petition Prez Mahama over ‘interference’ in public auctions
23 minutes -
GEA, Mastercard Foundation drive market access for MSMEs at Kwahu Business Forum
25 minutes -
Education Ministry begins review of Ghana Library Authority law
33 minutes -
Ghana U-15 girls clinch back-to-back CAF Schools titles
38 minutes -
Rev. Ntim Fordjour urges Mahama to issue directive to fast-track anti-LGBTQ+ bill
40 minutes -
GPL 2025/26: Stoppage-time penalty hands Aduana FC win over leaders GoldStars
43 minutes -
Ntim Fordjour rejects call for more dialogue, says anti-LGBTQ+ bill has faced a decade of debate and delay
44 minutes -
Catholic Bishops say moral values must match economic priorities in Anti-LGBTQ+ debate
1 hour -
IGP Yohuno urges merit and hard work ahead of Police Academy exams
1 hour -
Queendalyn Yurglee releases debut album ‘Clouds of Glory’
2 hours -
UDS moves to clear MPhil student wrongly linked to robbery case
2 hours -
Vodza Regatta 2026: Prof Audrey Gadzekpo rallies investors for coastal tourism growth
2 hours