The Ministry of Energy has refuted claims made in a Facebook post by Hon. Edward Bawa, in reaction to an earlier press briefing by the Energy Minister,Hon. Dr. Matthew Opoku Prempeh, and which was earlier carried by ghanaweb.com.
Hon. Bawa’s Facebook post read ‘Hon. Dr. Prempeh, I challenge you to publish all the 40 PPAs you claimed have been cancelled and the 3 renegotiated PPAs from Take or Pay to Take and Pay. These lies must stop.’
In a rebuttal, the Public Relations Officer of the Ministry, Mr. Kwasi Obeng-Fosu, strongly refuted the claims ascribed to the Minister by Hon. Bawa and described them as assertions of his own creation. He clarified that the Minister stated that during the power crisis under the tenure of former President Mahama, government entered into over 40 Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs) to address the power generation issue that had led to the crisis. What this government has done, he added, is to negotiate a deferral of the rollout of three of these contracts, which means a saving of a total of $1.426bn that would otherwise have been paid to the 3 relevant power producers under the take or pay agreements. “This is what the Minister said. Renegotiating the start date of a contract is not the same as renegotiating the core terms of the contract”, he said.
Mr. Obeng-Fosu explained that under the Take or Pay contracts the previous government entered into, government was to pay for the total power generated by the companies, whether or not they were used by the nation, as opposed to a Take and Pay system whereby you pay for what you consume, and explained further that these onerous clauses were agreed to by the then government because of the desperate situation of the time. However, he stated that government’s position, going forward, was that all new PPAs would be accepted only on Take and Pay basis, as would the current ones when they expire and are due for renewal.
The PRO admonished the lawmaker for not being accurate with the facts and seeking to misrepresent the Minister’s submissions, adding further that what the Minister said was a matter of public record and was available for review by anyone who so desired.
Source: Mypublisher24.com