Audio By Carbonatix
The Northern Electricity Distribution Company (NEDCo) has recorded a notable improvement in its revenue collection performance in Tamale, reducing distribution losses from a high of 57% in January 2025 to 47% as of September 2025.
This 10-percentage point gain has been attributed to the enhanced revenue mobilisation drive embarked upon by the current management team.
NEDCo’s Managing Director, Ing. Yamoah, described the progress as a clear indication of growing public cooperation and the commitment of the company’s revenue task teams.
“This achievement is encouraging, but we are still far from our target. We need even greater collaboration from residents and traditional leaders to improve revenue collection and ensure reliable power supply across our operational zones,” he said.
He stressed that revenue generation remained vital, as it ensured the company could pay power producers and invest in the infrastructure required to guarantee stable electricity supply.
While acknowledging the progress, Ing. Yamoah cautioned that significant challenges remained, particularly in areas with high incidences of illegal electricity connections.
Such activities, he explained, not only undermined NEDCo’s revenue generation but also placed immense strain on power infrastructure, often leading to transformer failures.
“Illegal connections cause transformers to overload, which often leads to them blowing up. This disrupts power supply, inconveniences entire communities, and increases maintenance costs. We are appealing to those involved in such practices to stop immediately, not just because it is illegal, but because it hurts all of us,” he stated.
The Managing Director reaffirmed NEDCo’s commitment to improving service delivery but stressed that sustainable progress would depend on customer compliance, timely payment of bills, and a joint effort to curb power theft.
As part of its strategy, the company is rolling out a community engagement programme, working in partnership with traditional authorities, local leaders and residents to raise awareness about the economic and social impact of illegal connections and non-payment of electricity bills.
Latest Stories
-
‘Don’t put the President on the spot’ – Fifi Kwetey rebukes Majority over OSP Bill
31 minutes -
‘There is no conspiracy by NDC’ – Fifi Kwetey explains OSP Bill fallout after presidential intervention
42 minutes -
Nigeria allege DR Congo ‘fraud’ as they hunt World Cup reprieve
1 hour -
Alcaraz announces shock split with coach Ferrero
1 hour -
Two held over viral assault on minor
2 hours -
The Oscars to leave ABC and stream on YouTube starting in 2029
2 hours -
Starmer tells Abramovich to ‘pay up now’ or face court
2 hours -
FIFA video game to return after four years in Netflix exclusive
2 hours -
Ghana’s programme performance has been broadly satisfactory – IMF Board
2 hours -
Former chancellor George Osborne joins OpenAI
2 hours -
No bank has been cited, sanctioned by any regulatory or law enforcement agencies – Association of Banks
3 hours -
Ghana’s GH₵10m relief support to Jamaica grounded in compassion and solidarity – Ablakwa
3 hours -
Speaker, Ga Mantse to headline GJA Dinner Night
3 hours -
JoyNews to host National Dialogue on declining adherence to standards on Thursday
3 hours -
Newmont to fully fund 13 kilometers Ntotroso–Kenyasi road in 2026
3 hours
