Audio By Carbonatix
The Tema Region of the Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG) has adopted swoop as part of measures to help account for power customers are using illegally aside other challenges.
Of the 99 customers visited at Spintex in the Nungua District of the Region, the power distributor detected 48 illegal connections which included meter bypass, meter tampering among others over a two-day period.
The company led by the Revenue Protection Unit is leaving no stone unturned to recover 10.91 gigawatt hours (GWh) of power which translates into ¢11.5 million this year.

This year’s figure is slightly higher than that of 2022 which stood at 10.20 GWh translating into about ¢10.9 million.
The exercise by the region forms part of a national revenue mobilization approach to reduce losses.
Revenue Protection Manager for ECG Tema Region, Zita Kyei-Gyamfi told Joy Business the exercise had personnel divided into nine teams visiting homes, shops and other places where power is used.

“We have decided to embark on this visibility project because we realized a lot of leakages in the system and have also realized that we have meters that need to be checked”.
“We are checking integrity of the meters and possible anomalies that can be corrected,” she continued.
Customers have been issued with notice but ECG’s next line of action will depend on how it pans out.

“They will have to come to our office and then other penalties will follow. There are times that we have to pursue them in conjunction with our legal team. So it depends on how the whole thing goes after they have reported at our office”.
According to Zita Kyei-Gyamfi, the Revenue Protection Unit is mandated to visit customers and identify leakages.

“And so per our activities, every time we move out, we come across culprits. There are times that you see a sharp increase in irregularities and other times, there is a decline”.
She wonders why customers allow electricians to connect power for them illegally only to pay later apart from penal actions they will be subjected to.
“I want to caution against such practices as users of the meters are the ones who will pay the price”.
Latest Stories
-
Africa’s 1.3bn market will shape 21st century global economy – Mahama
9 minutes -
We look forward to making sure government executes its promises – Manhyia South, MP
11 minutes -
Russia hits Ukraine energy sites in ‘most powerful blow’ so far this year
19 minutes -
‘Where are the jobs?’ — Minority slams government over youth unemployment
24 minutes -
Russian hits Ukraine energy sites in ‘most powerful blow’ so far this year
31 minutes -
2nd edition of Canada-Africa Agribusiness Summit set for July 15–16
32 minutes -
Kwadaso MCE warns artisans against burning refuse following mechanic shop fire
33 minutes -
Banks courting firms with cheaper loans as interest rates ease – Majority Leader
33 minutes -
Constitutional reform is about people, not law
34 minutes -
FirstBank opens two new branches at Dzorwulu and North Industrial Area to deepen SME and Retail Banking Services
47 minutes -
2 banks remain undercapitalised as of December 2025 – BoG
49 minutes -
Joint bank accounts can spark conflict in marriages – Kweku Frimpong
53 minutes -
Scheduled exit from IMF programme, others could influence capital flows, exchange rate dynamics – BoG Governor
54 minutes -
Kwame Sowu Jnr urges focus on commercial interests over social interests for wealth creation
55 minutes -
Paris prosecutors raid France offices of Elon Musk’s X
59 minutes
