The government has reportedly come to an agreement with the West African Gas Pipeline Company (WAPCo) to settle the country’s debt of $20 million.
The company had cut off the gas supply required for power generation, causing power outages in some parts of the country.
The Ghana Grid Company (GRIDCo) announced a supply gap of 550MW during peak time.
Although an agreement has been reached, some power outages are still expected as it doesn’t guarantee immediate gas supply from Takoradi to Tema.
The Minority in Parliament has urged the government to settle its debts to avoid an energy crisis.
A member of the Mines and Energy Committee of Parliament, Edward Bawa, has suggested the government should solve the issue by coming to some arrangement with WAPCo.
“Government must find a way or make an arrangement with WAPCo as to how that can be paid. If WAPCO begins to have some comfort that government has kept in touch to do the payment, then, I believe that it will work.
“Government must be working to see how they can give WAPCo some level of comfort to continue transmitting gas from Obuasi to Tema or else we are going to be in trouble. If the gas does not come, what it simply means is that the plants cannot run because they use fuel. And if they cannot run, you’d have that ‘dumsor‘,’” he suggested.
He explained why WAPCo has decided to cut the gas supply due to this debt.
“Now the question you would ask is whose liability is it? It is true that if you look at ECG, they do not have a healthy access or guarantee to be able to always go into arrangements with power or gas utilities so GNPC stood in as a guarantee for ECG.
“So ECG has to pay WAPCo but unfortunately because for almost 13 months now the cash waterfall mechanism where all the monies that ECG collects after selling power is put for it to be distributed among the utility mechanism is no longer working, ECG is unable to pay the liability,” he explained