Head of Corporate Communications at Ghana Gas Ernest Owusu Bempah has dismissed claims current challenges being experienced in some parts of the country is ‘Dumsor.’
He also dismissed reports in a section of the media to the effect that some faulty compressors at the company’s installations at the Takoradi Regulatory and Metering Station (TRMS) are the reasons for the power generation deficits and outages being experienced in the country in recent times.
According to him, the report is a desperate attempt to impress on the minds of Ghanaians that the dreaded erratic power supply has resurfaced.
The Energy Ministry had in an earlier release cited a gas compressor fault said to have been reported by Ghana Gas as part of the reasons for current intermittent power outages.
In a press briefing at Takoradi, Mr. Owusu Bempah said the power outages being experienced in some parts of the country have nothing to do with Ghana Gas.
He stressed that the company’s work schedule of supplying gas to the Volta River Authority in the Aboadze Power Enclave has not been interrupted.
Mr Bempah mentioned that the intermittent power outages being experienced are a result of some maintenance and upgrading of power distribution lines of the Ghana Grid Company Limited and the Electricity Company of Ghana.
Meanwhile the company has unveiled a reading project dubbed “Turn a page” with the aim of inculcating reading habit among school children between the ages of 6 to 15 years.
The turn a page is a literacy project He said the project has become necessary following research conducted by the Ghana Education Service (GES) in 2012.
The study found that only 2% of children in primary two (2) can read proficiently while 50 per cent of the pupils assessed could not pronounce a single English or Ghanaian word correctly, 44% could read without understanding what they read, 4% could read with some understanding.
The literacy project will target 27,000 to 30,000 pupils from some 30 basic schools from the Ellembelle District in the Western Region.
Latest Stories
-
Tens of thousands without water in Mayotte as curfew brought in
12 minutes -
ORAL: We won’t witch-hunt, we’ll focus on transparency, not revenge – Ablakwa
35 minutes -
Attempted robbery: Accused claims he carried cutlass for protection
52 minutes -
Excavator operator jailed for stealing
1 hour -
Embattled Liberian speaker questioned by police over parliament fire
3 hours -
‘I won’t be a judge in my own court; ORAL is about protecting public purse’ – Ablakwa
3 hours -
Bawumia joins thousands in Kumasi for burial prayers for Ashanti Regional Imam
3 hours -
Blue Gold Bogoso Prestea Limited challenges government actions in court
4 hours -
Verdicts due for 51 men in Pelicot mass rape trial that shook France
4 hours -
Syria not a threat to world, rebel leader Ahmed al-Sharaa tells BBC
4 hours -
Patrick Atangana Fouda: ‘A hero of the fight against HIV leaves us’
5 hours -
Trinity Oil MD Gabriel Kumi elected Board Chairman of Chamber of Oil Marketing Companies
5 hours -
ORAL campaign key to NDC’s election victory – North America Dema Naa
5 hours -
US Supreme Court to hear TikTok challenge to potential ban
5 hours -
Amazon faces US strike threat ahead of Christmas
6 hours