Audio By Carbonatix
Chirano Gold Mines is set to inaugurate a 90 MegaWatt thermal plant at its mining site by the end of next month.
The company engaged Independent Power Producer, Gensar in the construction of the plant. The initiative is expected to support the company’s operations amid the power crisis whilst complementing efforts at addressing the country’s energy challenges.
The Chief Executive of the Chamber of Mines, Sulemana Koney has been explaining to JOY BUSINESS how the impact would be realized.
“If you have a capacity of about 90, you’ll typically start by ramping up gradually and therefore the impact may not be immediate. It would provide some relief, not just to the mining company but to the general system. If the plant is running on full throttle, it could take some pressure off the entire system. I understand the company may be in a position to share with other interested parties given the capacity of the plant” he said.
He added “If you have a capacity and you are able to generate far more than you require, the excess should go into the grid if you do not have to share with any consumer. In our country, it is quite novel. It’s something which applies in other jurisdictions. It actually happens in residential applications where individuals have solar panels on their rooftops used to run power in their homes and the excess is sold into the grid, not just for commercial applications but also residential as well”.
The World Bank recently impressed on mining companies in Africa, the need to work more closely with the Independent Power Producers (IPP’s) to meet the growing energy demands of the country’s they operate in rather than supplying their own energy on site.
Mr. Koney in response says, the companies in Ghana are already taking steps in this direction except that they have had to take precaution in this because of the possible negative implications.
“The key challenge is what would happen to our national generator, VRA. The mining companies tend to be the best players and they pay at a premium and they pay on a timely basis. If the companies divert away from VRA, its regular and reliable source of income would dry up. There should be a means of diversifying but not completely.
"We have already stated discussions. The various IPPs have not been able to convince us. Power is quite critical for the mining sector so we cannot just go into agreement with the IPPs. You do that at our own peril especially because they don’t have the reputation and they are not able to deliver as expected” he added.
Latest Stories
-
Kennedy Agyapong leads final NPP delegate poll with 52%; Bawumia trails at 36%
9 minutes -
Today’s front pages: Monday, January 19, 2026
30 minutes -
Ghanaian family disowns relative after fraud conviction in Australia
40 minutes -
GoldBod data shows 98.8% of Ghana’s small scale gold exports went to Dubai and India in 2025
41 minutes -
Kofi Bentil says Ofori-Atta is hesitant to return over treatment, not charges
47 minutes -
GSA debunks cement price hike claims, says Jan. 19 increase is false
52 minutes -
Driver rams into robbers, foils MoMo robbery at Darkuman
56 minutes -
Smallholders at the centre: Why innovation and diversification are pivotal for Africa’s food future
1 hour -
Plans underway to establish museum on northern Ghana’s slave history in Navrongo
1 hour -
4 killed including two children as runaway truck ploughed into Salon at Kumawu
1 hour -
Open letter to Chief Justice on judicial security, specialised prosecution and extradition
1 hour -
NACSA warns of arrests as final gun amnesty deadline approaches
1 hour -
Eastern NPP Chairman backs Bryan Acheampong for 2028 flagbearer slot
1 hour -
WEF flags unemployment as Ghana’s biggest economic threat in 2026
1 hour -
Fire guts warehouse at Ashaiman Gulf City
1 hour
