Audio By Carbonatix
The government of Ghana signed the-now-suspended concession agreement with the Power Distribution Services (PDS) in a hurry to meet its contractual demands.
Explaining why the government did not wait to see PDS’ securities before handing over power distribution in Ghana to the company, Energy Minister, John Peter Amewu said there was a deadline by which the agreement should have started.
This, he told the AM Show on JoyNews Wednesday, was the reason the government fast-tracked the signing of the agreement that allowed PDS to take over the management of power distribution from the Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG) on February 27, 2019.
PDS Ghana secures license to aid takeover of ECG ECG takeover to happen Feb. 27
Under the circumstances, instead of the government going to cross-check the company’s guarantees before handing over Ghana’s GH¢18 billion asset to them, they opted to hand it over and cross-check that at a later time.
Ghana stood to benefit from about $500 million Millennium Challenge Account fund but on condition that it reformed the energy sector by bringing on private participation in the management of the sector by way of a concessionaire agreement.
Five months on, Information Minister, Kojo Oppong Nkrumah announced on PM Express on JoyNews on Tuesday that the said concessionaire agreement has been suspended; pending investigations..
The government says upon intelligence gathered, PDS has been found to double-cross the Ghanaian government.
Explaining this, Mr Amewu told Kojo Yankson on the AM Show that the company that PDS claimed was their security -- Al Koot from Qatar -- has denied having any such agreement with PDS.
So the signature was forged, he noted. The Minister said the official from Al Koot who forged the signature has been suspended by his employers.
Meanwhile, ECG has been asked by the government to resume its role as power distributors.
PDS suspension: Power distribution won’t be interrupted – Gov’t
The Minister said they would be under efficient supervision to ensure they don’t slip into the inefficiencies that plagued consumers before the advent of PDS.
A full-scale investigation into government’s allegations of fraud is expected to begin with Amewu hinting of possible prosecutions.
“We will leave that to the security agencies,” he said.
Latest Stories
-
John Boadu pays courtesy call on former President Kufuor, seeks guidance on NPP revival
6 minutes -
Emissions Levy had no impact on air pollution, research reveals
1 hour -
DSTV enhanced packages stay in force as subscriptions rise following price adjustments
1 hour -
Financial Stability Advisory Council holds final meeting for 2025
1 hour -
Education in Review: 2025 marks turning point as Mahama resets Ghana’s education sector
2 hours -
Nigeria AG orders fresh probe into alleged intimidation and assault of Sam Jonah’s River Park estate staff
2 hours -
Concerned Small Scale Miners commend GoldBod’s efforts in addressing gold smuggling
2 hours -
Haruna Mohammed claims Ghana Audit Service undermined
2 hours -
5 members of notorious robbery syndicate in Tema, Accra arrested
2 hours -
BoG, SEC and FIC hold Joint sensitisation workshop for Virtual Asset Service Providers
2 hours -
How Nico Cantor became one of the top voices in American soccer
3 hours -
Ghana colorectal cancer patients face low survival rates, KNUST study finds
3 hours -
Police arrest suspect in GH₵ 7.5m daylight robbery at Adabraka
3 hours -
Armwrestling: The Golden Arms’ 2025 Triumph and an Era of Unprecedented Victories
3 hours -
Ghanaian researcher wins ASCE editors’ recognition for modular construction study
3 hours
