Audio By Carbonatix
The Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG) says they cannot account for more than 69,000 electricity meters believed to have been distributed through political influence.
The Ashanti regional ECG Public Relations Manager, Erasmus Kyere-Baidoo complained that the company loses revenue because it is unable to identify and bill such consumers for the power they consume.
He told a forum of metropolitan, municipal and district assemblies in Kumasi that 25,000 meters went missing in 2014, a loss that nearly doubled in 2015 when at least 44,848 meters could not be accounted for.
These meters by pass the company’s system of identification and subsequent billing, Mr. Kyere-Baidoo revealed.
In addition to the political distribution of meters, organised and widespread theft of electricity continues to be a longstanding problem crippling the efforts of the ECG despite the deployment of its prepaid metering system.
ECG, in the last three and a half years, identified 9,537 illegal electricity connections across the country.
In 2011, the company detected 2,929 illegal connections and was able to recover over ¢5.6 million as revenue to the state. In 2012, the power utility company identified 3,425 illegal connections, out of which over ¢9 million in revenue was recovered.
In 2013, 2,242 were identified, out of which ¢11.8 million revenue was recovered by the state. As of March 2014, ECG had detected 941 illegal connections, recovering ¢3.3 million.
ECG meters are strictly not for sale and remains the bona fide property of the Company.
A teacher was arrested in Amasaman in Accra for stealing 35 meters in 2014. He had sold 18 electricity metres for a ¢100 each.
There is renewed public scrutiny of the operations of ECG following weeks of complaints about the billing system of the meters.
The Company has been ordered by the Public Utility and Regulatory Commission (PURC) to suspend the use of a billing software believed to be the cause of high electricity bills and fast vanishing credit.
Meanwhile, another round of erratic power supply has renewed pressure on government to solve the country’s energy challenge.
Government has announced a near end to the power crisis in Febuary 2016 after bringing on some more independent power producers to augment the supply of power.
With consumers complaining again about the availability of power, government faces fresh criticisms over its handling of power problems.
An energy think-tank, African Center for Energy Policy believes the current power situation will decide which party will be elected to govern the country in the November 2016 general elections.
Latest Stories
-
High Court quashes GTEC directive derecognising UNEM degrees
48 minutes -
Family demands independent probe into disappearance of newborn baby at Salaga Hospital
1 hour -
Al Qaeda-linked militants curb their brutality in seized Malian territory
1 hour -
Photos: How Accra West uses ‘aboboyaa’ to transport waste on muddy roads to McCarthy Hills dumpsite
2 hours -
Yaya Touré seals surprise new job with Champions League club
2 hours -
Anthropic suspends new AI tools over US government security concerns
2 hours -
New Somanya Methodist JHS to get major facelift
2 hours -
KNUST, NADMO begin dredging works after assessment reveals blocked stream and wetland encroachment
2 hours -
Ghanaian Mecca pilgrims back home after 2026 Hajj
3 hours -
Stakeholders unite in Ahafo Region to flash red card against child labour
3 hours -
Royal Family watch Red Arrows flypast on palace balcony
3 hours -
NAB Consulting announces completion of €250m structured finance facility for Niger
3 hours -
UG Vice Chancellor leads global push for better representation of African languages in AI revolution
3 hours -
World Vision partners Wa East Assembly to launch Children’s Parliament against child labour
3 hours -
Israel carries out air strikes on Lebanon, state media says, as Iran claims deal with US near
3 hours