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| Nana Akomea NPP Communications Director |
The New Patriotic Party has called on
government to stop the “blame shifting, crocodile tears and propaganda, andmove quickly to reduce the electricity tariffs”.
The call by NPP comes on the back of
unhappiness expressed by consumers about recent overbilling by the state powerdistributor due to a new software introduced by the company in 2015.
The Public Utilities Regulatory Commission
(PURC) in a statement Tuesday directed the ECG to immediately suspend the use
of the new billing system.
NPP flagbearer Nana Akufo-Addo has also called
on government to address the problem adding that he will reduce electricity
tariffs if he wins power.
A statement signed by the Communications Director of the NPP Nana Akomea Thursday stated that Ghanaians are actually
paying over a 1000 percent increase in utility tariffs instead of the 70
increment announced.
“Ghanaians have been horrified to find that the
actual effective increases, as reflected in their bills, have been far in
excess of the announced 70% [in 2015]. The increases have amounted in many
cases to even 1000%!”
The statement added: “The great suffering of
Ghanaians today over these killer electricity and water tariffs is, therefore,
a direct result of government’s failure to maintain the value of the cedi (the
dollar's price in the last seven years has gone up nearly 250%), government
mismanagement and a deliberate government policy that has imposed new taxes and
levies on electricity tariffs”,
Below is the full statement:
NDC GOVERNMENT SHOULD STOP THE PROPAGANDA AND
CROCODILE TEARS AND REDUCE ELECTRICITY TARIFFS NOW!
Nana Akufo Addo, flagbearer of the NPP, has
called on government to stop the blame shifting, crocodile tears and
propaganda, and move quickly to reduce the electricity tariffs and ensure
better macro-economic management.
This call is very timely, coming at a time when
Ghanaians are straining under the burden of massive electricity tariffs hikes
and severe economic hardships.
In October 2015, amidst reports of $180 million
debt owed VRA to N-Gas, the West African Gas Pipeline Company held a press
conference during which the Managing Director Mr Walter Perez announced that
President Mahama had okayed an increment in electricity tariffs in Ghana in
order to pay for the debts.
This disclosure was followed shortly in
December by tariffs increases of 70% and 80% for electricity and water, which
increases also came with new levies and taxes.
As if these increases were not killing enough,
Ghanaians have been horrified to find that the actual effective increases as
reflected in their bills, have been far in excess of the announced 70%. The
increases have amounted in many cases to even 1000%!
Since January 2016, the media, including social
media, have been awash with complaints from citizens, commerce and industry
about the effective percentage increases, which had made cost of living even
more unbearable and led to business closures and failures.
Government's response over the last 5 months
has largely been to blame “faulty” meters and vague promises to "look into
the matter".
By this month of May, the complaints, from
labour, industry and ordinary consumers have been such that it was clear
government was not getting away with the excuses.
Government’s desperate reaction now is to blame
the PURC and the ECG and even the New Patriotic Party!
Minister Omane Boamah’s statement last Monday
called on the PURC to act. Hon Muntaka’s statement in Parliament last Tuesday
put the blame on ECG, actually accusing the state owned company of supervising
the increases in collusion with the NPP in order to embarrass and make the
government unpopular!!
Now the PURC has also jumped in, laying the
blame on some ECG software.
Many questions arise:
Since the complaints and outcry over the electricity billing started in earnest from January 2016, is it now that it has come to government’s attention?
Since the complaints and outcry over the electricity billing started in earnest from January 2016, is it now that it has come to government’s attention?
b) How should Ghanaians place the explanation
that came from ECG and PURC that the 70% announced increase was only an average
and so the actual incidence of the percentage increase could be higher than the
70%?
c) did the electricity meters suddenly become
faulty after the December 2015 tariff increments?
d) was the billing software changed after the
new tariffs were imposed in December 2015?
e) how about the charge from ECG that that
since 2014, about seventy thousand (70,000) "political" electricity
meters have been installed, which meters are not billed ? (Peace fm 12 noon
news Thursday 26 may)?
It is clear that the government is just crying
crocodile tears by this sudden concern over a situation that has persisted for
5 months, and by the attempt to blame the ECG as a scapegoat. The ludicrous
attempt to rope in the NPP shows that the government does not think much of the
intelligence of Ghanaians.
It is clear knowledge that the main drivers of
these inhumane increases in tariffs include:
a) the failures in President Mahama’s
government’s macroeconomic management which has caused steep falls in the value
of the cedi (or steep rises in the price of the dollar); coupled with the
b) Sole sourced and imprudent (to say the
least) leasing deals in emergency power (such as Ameri and Karpower) at tariffs
levels much higher than market prices;
c) Government imposition of new taxes and
levies in December 2015.
The great suffering of Ghanaians today over
these killer electricity and water tariffs is therefore direct result of
government failure to maintain the value of the cedi (the dollar's price in
last seven years has gone up nearly 250%), government mismanagement and
deliberate government policy that had imposed new taxes and levies on
electricity tariffs.
Beyond the excuses of "sudden" faults
in ECG meters/ and faulty new software , blame game and propaganda and
crocodile tears, government should stop the mismanagement and move quickly to
reduce the tariffs and ensure stable tariff levels through better macroeconomic
management.
The sufferings of Ghanaians are just too much!
...signed...
The sufferings of Ghanaians are just too much!
...signed...
(Communications Director)

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