
Audio By Carbonatix
The long-awaited Karpower barge from Turkey expected to help address the country's energy crisis has finally arrived in Tema.
According to Joy News’ Israel Laryea, the barge arrived at the Tema port Saturday morning.
Background
The power barge is expected to add 225 MW to the country’s electricity supply and ease the current energy crisis facing the country.
It was billed to arrive September, after it failed to meet an April deadline.
The vessel carrying the power barge, the Black Marlin, set off from Turkish waters on 6th November, 2015.
Power minister, Dr. Kwabena Donkor had always maintained the barge would be in Ghana twenty-one days after its commissioning on October 27, 2015.
That was eleven days after a ceremony attended by a government delegation in Istanbul to inaugurate the barge.
Officials of the Power Ministry had indicated the barge was on its way to Ghana at the time, but it later emerged it was only being moved to another location also in Turkey.
The twenty-one days deadline by the Minister elapsed when the destination log on the marine traffic website showed that the ship was at Mauritania, 1787 nautical miles away from Ghana.
It got to Ivory Coast on the 22nd of November and finally arrived at Takoradi yesterday, November 27.
Payment of power
The Power Ministry says consumers will be responsible for paying for power from Karpower barge.
Deputy Energy Minister John Jinapor confirmed to Joy News that government is only a facilitator and will not play any role in paying for the services of the power barge from Turkey.
“The payment will be done by the end-user. It will not be done by the government” he stated emphatically.
He, however, explained that experts would have to do inter-connection, after which test-runs would be conducted for weeks before the barge is connected to the national grid.
“If everything proves successful then we will be thinking of connecting it to the national grid and so, it is a process and not an event,” Jinapor said.
But being keen to avoid providing deadlines, the deputy Minister said the barge is expected to be operational in some weeks.
Latest Stories
-
Prudential Life settles GH¢100,000 medical bills under its PRUCares Valentine Experience Initiative
37 minutes -
Wa West Picnic: Peter Lanchene Toobu champions peace, health and unity in landmark celebration
48 minutes -
Dr Mensah Market flooded after downpour in Kumasi
56 minutes -
Armed men reportedly storm Adjen Kotoku Onion Market amid tensions
2 hours -
Tecco Mensah writes: Why football fans must look beyond statistics
3 hours -
Police recover stolen Honda CR-V in Kumasi within 48 hours
3 hours -
Apetorku Gbodzi 2026 Festival opens in Dagbamete with development focus
3 hours -
President Mahama arrives in Lyon to co-chair One Health Summit
4 hours -
Beverly View Plus Hotel draws crowds amid coastal Easter rush in Volta
4 hours -
Maiden Zongo Festival held in Wa amid calls to tackle drug abuse among the youth
4 hours -
FDA warns of fake HIV test kits on Ghanaian market
4 hours -
Africa urged to build resilient health systems as donor support tightens
4 hours -
Easter gesture: Ablakwa settles medical bills for 85 North Tongu constituents
6 hours -
Africa must harness its population strength—Titus-Glover
6 hours -
Visa-free access doesn’t mean unlimited stay – Lom Ahlijah
6 hours