Audio By Carbonatix
Hundreds of Ghana Grid Company (GRIDCo) staff have hit the streets Tuesday to protest huge debts owed the company by power transmitters.
The agitated staff of GRIDCo massed up at the Black Star Square on Tuesday to begin the protest march to the Finance Ministry and the Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG).
GRIDCO leadership has been pushing for millions of debts owed it by ECG, the Northern Electricity Distribution Company (NEDCo) and the Volta Aluminum Company (VALCo) to be settled.

Clad in red and black attires, protestors brandished placards to drum home their concerns.
Angry GRIDCo staff say as of March 1, 2019, ECG's outstanding debt to GRIDCo stood at GH¢607 million and another GH¢94,204,903.17 while VALCO owed it GH¢32,567,974.05 and NEDCo's debt stood at GH¢177 million as at September 30, 2019.
National Chairman of Staff Group of GRIDCo, Raphael Kornor, said at a press conference recently that the unavailability of funds to the company had forced it into rationing fuels for their staff's travel for maintenance works while hoteliers have refused to make their facilities available to staff who travel for work due to their indebtedness.
He added that government had also not paid some GH¢250 million requested by the management of GRIDCo while it took steps to raise bonds to settle the legacy debt in the energy sector although the president had directed the Ministry of Finance to release the money.
“The first Energy Sector Levy Act bond which was raised by this present government in 2017/2018, our sister company, the VRA had over $550 million to settle their indebtedness with the banks but not a dime was given to GRIDCo to offset the ECG and VALCO indebtedness to us,” Mr Kornor lamented.
He, therefore, called on the government to as a matter of urgency settle the ECG and VALCO indebtedness to GRIDCo which he says has stalled some new projects being undertaken by the company.
Mr Kornor said if the government failed to settle the debts, then they would be left with no choice but to embark on industrial action, beginning with treating all emergency works as normal work within the normal working hours.
The association said if by close of work on December 4, the debts were not cleared, they would embark on a sit down strike and impress upon their management to cut power supply to all customers which are indebted to it.
Latest Stories
-
U.S. airstrikes in Nigeria signal major shift in West African security
22 minutes -
Too young to lead? – Prof H. Kwasi Prempeh says Ghana’s Constitution undervalues its youth
39 minutes -
Let the people decide – Constitution Review Chair pushes back against fear of ‘young presidents’
59 minutes -
Both of these influencers are successful – but only one is human
1 hour -
‘We suffered together’ – Amorim changes style as Man Utd win
5 hours -
‘I have never prayed before in my life’ – Seun Kuti
6 hours -
AU flatly rejects Somaliland bid, reaffirms Somalia’s unity
6 hours -
Mali rally to claim draw against AFCON host Morocco
6 hours -
Man City players ‘incredibly disciplined’ – Guardiola
6 hours -
How to get rid of unwanted Christmas presents – without being found out
6 hours -
Zelensky plans to meet Trump on Sunday for talks on ending Russian war
7 hours -
Thousands of US flights disrupted as winter storm looms
7 hours -
US judge blocks detention of British social media campaigner
7 hours -
Gun Amnesty: Greater Accra leads in weapons surrendered
7 hours -
Dave Bishop outlines vision as he seeks Ghana Boxing Federation executive board position
7 hours
