
Audio By Carbonatix
The Economic Policy Advisor to the Vice President, Prof. Sharif Mahmoud Khalid, has described as unfair the growing criticism directed at the current government over Ghana’s ongoing power challenges, arguing that the crisis is deeply rooted in systemic issues inherited from the past.
Speaking in defense of the government’s handling of the power situation, Prof. Khalid pointed to the enormous financial burden on the Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG), including outstanding debts and a tight budget that leaves little room for meaningful negotiations with Independent Power Producers (IPPs) and service providers.
“I looked at the list of debts ECG has to pay and their budget allocation and there's no headroom to even negotiate properly. At some point, these service providers are so strained that people begin to suspect sabotage, but it’s not sabotage—it’s just the severity of the challenges we face,” he explained in an interview on JoyNews' Newsfile on Saturday, May 17.
He stressed that resolving Ghana’s power crisis is not a task that can be completed overnight, even with the best intentions and resources, adding that the government has shown commitment and transparency in confronting the problem.
“In the past, we were denied access to the full picture—no load-shedding timetables, no public engagement—but today we have a Minister and a President who are tackling the issue head-on five months down the line so to put the blame on the government, I think would be a very unfair,” Prof. Khalid stated.
He praised the Energy Minister for providing regular updates on the situation, including efforts to secure crude oil and the Ministry of Finance’s role in supporting these interventions.
While acknowledging that more needs to be done, Prof. Khalid stressed that the power sector’s problems are systemic, including inefficiencies in power distribution, energy losses, and fragmented revenue collection systems. “ECG is a beast in and of itself,” he noted, underlining the complexity of reforming the sector.
His comment follows Former Board Member of the Public Utilities Regulatory Commission (PURC), Ishmael Agyekumhene, who has taken a swipe at Energy Minister John Jinapor over Ghana’s deepening power crisis, urging him to take full responsibility rather than offer repeated excuses.
Speaking on JoyNews’ The Pulse on Thursday, May 15, Mr Agyekumhene criticised the Minister for failing to secure adequate liquid fuel supplies nearly four months into his tenure.
“Telling us today that we have only two and a half days of liquid fuel? I could understand if this was immediately after he took office, but he’s had enough time to make arrangements. The Minister should stop giving excuses—it’s long enough for us to have secured the liquid fuel.”
Latest Stories
-
Iran accuses US of hitting civilian infrastructure
3 minutes -
Queiroz can build stronger Black Stars capable of competing at AFCON and World Cup – Mahama
12 minutes -
Richie Mensah launches Orbra, a life operating system created for the masterminds community
18 minutes -
‘A true miracle of destiny’ – Messi and Lamine Yamal’s incredible first meeting
21 minutes -
Mahama delivers medical equipment to Ho District Hospital to boost Free Primary Healthcare programme
36 minutes -
Beads, not screens: How Ancient Abacus is rescuing Ghana’s children from digital distraction
48 minutes -
MPs must put Ghana ahead of party loyalty and personal ambition – Justice Atuguba
51 minutes -
Police end rescue efforts for more victims of fatal Odumase accident
52 minutes -
What if society had a memory for kindness
52 minutes -
Trump to attend World Cup final as Argentina face Spain
1 hour -
Credit-to-GDP gap remains negative, signals credit contraction – BoG
1 hour -
Road contractors should voluntarily help build Volta Cardiac Centre – Agbodza
1 hour -
Mahama lauds Black Stars’ World Cup performance
1 hour -
Two killed, several injured in accident on Fodoa–Nadeso road
1 hour -
I will commit 3 more months of my salary to Volta Cardiac Centre – Agbodza
1 hour