Audio By Carbonatix
The Independent Power Producers, Distributors and Bulk Consumers are threatening to cut power supply to the national grid by the end of June 2023 if the government fails to settle its debt.
This could create a huge power shortfall as the IPPs control over 65% of the available thermal generation capacity in the country.
Joy Business understands a letter to that effect will be sent to the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, tomorrow May 29, 2023.
Joy Business further learned that as of April 2023, the government owed the IPPs $1.630 billion.
Ghana aims to cut $10.5 billion in interest payments on its external debt in three years to be able to successfully implement a $3 billion loan deal from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
According to the IMF Staff Report on Ghana, there will be a renegotiation of contracts with the IPPs that are expected to further reduce costs, adding, “Beyond 2023, the programmes baseline projections conservatively assumes that the sector shortfall will be gradually reduced to reach 1.7 percent of Gross Domestic Product in 2026 (assuming modest tariff adjustments and a slight improvement in grid/recovery losses)”.
But Elikplim Kwabla Apetorgbor, the Chief Executive Officer of the Chamber of IPPS, told Reuters the restructuring proposal had been "corporately and individually rejected".
According to him, the producers, were unwilling to make concessions and were also almost on the verge of switching off their plants.
Minister of State at the Finance Ministry, Dr. Mohammed Amin Adam earlier said the government would make every efforts to restructure the country’s energy debt.
“We will continue with the engagement with the individual IPPs in a transparent and pragmatic manner and threats of shutdown when you are in negotiations cannot be accepted at this stage.”
The IMF in its report urged the government to aim at a more rapid reduction in the sector shortfall under the ESRP to create fiscal space for priority spending. This could be notably achieved through additional ad-hoc tariff increases while protecting vulnerable households.
The IPPs are made up of Twin City Energy, AKSA, Karpowership, Sunon Asogli, CenPower and Cenit
Latest Stories
-
Mahama commissions Odumase Krobo Divisional Police HQ, boosts operations with vehicles
30 minutes -
Roads Minister urges contractors to stay on site, assures prioritised payments
34 minutes -
Suhuyini credits Ameri plant for averting 2024 power crisis in Kumasi
36 minutes -
Thirteen killed in Israeli strikes on southern Lebanon, health ministry says
50 minutes -
Tano North MP sounds alarm over galamsey devastation, accuses officials of shielding perpetrators
51 minutes -
World Relays: Ghana miss automatic qualification after finishing 4th in heat
58 minutes -
NACOC disrupts suspected drug network in Winneba ahead of Aboakyiri Festival
1 hour -
You don’t need to incur GH¢15.6bn loss to stabilise the economy – Dr Boako tells gov’t
1 hour -
Video: Dr Gideon Boako explains why he thinks BoG’s 2025 losses is more than GH¢15.6bn
2 hours -
The Bank of Ghana has not made any losses that should be a topic for discussion — Sammy Gyamfi
2 hours -
AMA to reintroduce Town Councils to enhance sanitation enforcement
2 hours -
Central bank’s inflation fight since 2022 came at a cost – Prof Turkson
2 hours -
If BoG isn’t a profit-making institution, it also can’t be a loss-making one – Kofi Bentil
3 hours -
Rethinking intelligence in the age of Artificial Intelligence
4 hours -
‘Every day is about survival’ – Workers demand action beyond May Day celebrations
4 hours