Audio By Carbonatix
The Managing Director of the Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG), Samuel Dubik Mahama has given the assurance that the company has enough installed power to supply businesses and households in the country.
He acknowledged some distribution challenges leading to recent outages, noting that the company was embarking on various maintenance operations and investing to ensure that Ghanaians had uninterruptible electricity for use.
“Right now, there is no supply issue; if there is to be any outages, it will be a local fault, which people must inform ECG staff immediately for them to fix it,” Mr Mahama said in an interview with the Ghana News Agency on Friday, March 1.
He, therefore, encouraged Ghanaians to help the ECG provide better services to all consumers by paying their bills promptly, adding that debt owed by consumers is affecting ECG’s operations.
When asked about the debt consumers owed ECG, he said: “At the moment, we’re on an exercise, so I can’t speak to the figure now, but even if you owe us GHS5, it will have an impact on us because it will add to the commercial loses. Payment is the way to go, so just pay your bills.”
Commenting on outages that were experienced across the country last week, the Managing Director said, ECG carried out such an operation to urgently save the country’s gas plant, worth some US$200 million.
“The gas plant had an emergency; the gas valve needed to be replaced, and because it is gas it took some time to replace. So, if you make a mistake and there is a fire outbreak you will lose an asset that is worth US$200 million,” he said.
He encouraged individuals and businesses to inform ECG when they put up new buildings so that the company could take the necessary steps to connect them properly to the national grid.
“People are building more houses, which comes with more electricity demands and new industries are also springing up, putting more demand on the grid, which is the main reason for us having an overload on the system,” he said.
“There are overloads in the system because we’re growing so fast, but it’s not a supply issue, but it’s attitude that has taken us to where we are now. We’re not able to inform ECG of our building projects for ECG to work towards it,” Mr Mahama said.
“We’re in almost all the major cities, doing what we call intensification, especially in the new areas that are coming up for the middle-income families, including Tse-Addo, and Oyarifa, so we have no supply issues,” he said.
Latest Stories
-
GNFS warns first-time drivers over dangerous Asukawkaw road after fatal accident
16 seconds -
Ghana excels at International Chamber of Commerce international mediation
4 minutes -
UGCFL Week 2: Wilmar Africa,Union Ghana, NPA and Telecel execl in Group B
15 minutes -
Julius Kyazze’s African drift: from East Africa into Ghana and beyond
20 minutes -
Police arrest 6 Aggrey Memorial SHS students over brutal attack on ADISCO student
24 minutes -
ECG grants metre readers authority to cut power over unpaid bills
26 minutes -
Birim River shows improvement after EPA’s nanocopper technology trial
31 minutes -
Airport renaming doesn’t require parliamentary approval—Transport Minister
43 minutes -
Renaming of airport will not impose huge cost on state – Transport Minister
46 minutes -
Standard Chartered hosts business roundtable on capital markets
54 minutes -
Cocoa price reduction: Clerks cry over attacks by farmers, describes reduction as scam
58 minutes -
Cedi recovers modestly on external tailwinds; one dollar equals to GH¢11.70 at forex bureaus
1 hour -
Acute water shortages hit Kumasi as power outages cripple Barekese, Owabi plants
1 hour -
Accra Mayor calls on businesses to prioritise PWDs and youth in recruitment
1 hour -
40 Ghanaian languages at risk as GhLA calls for urgent preservation
1 hour
