Ghana’s electric company cuts power to parliament due to a $1.8 million debt.
Written by Zenna Issa on March 1, 2024
The Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG) cut power to parliament due to an outstanding debt of 23 million cedis ($1.8 million).
The outage interrupted a debate on the president’s State of the Nation speech.
A video shared by local media showed MPs in the dimly lit chamber chanting: “Dumsor, dumsor”, which means power outage in the local Akan language.
Local media reported that a backup power generator restored power to the chamber a few minutes later.
But other parts of the parliament building remained without power for most of the day before supplies were restored.
MPs and parliamentary staff who were using the elevator when the abrupt blackout hit were stuck, Ghana’s TV3 channel reported.
The power company’s communications director William Boateng told Reuters news agency it had resorted to disconnecting power because of parliament’s refusal to “honour demand notices to pay up”.
Electricity was restored later in the day after parliament paid 13m cedi and made a pledge to settle the remaining debt within a week, Mr Boateng added.
“Disconnections are for everybody; anyone who doesn’t pay and fails to make arrangements, the team will disconnect,” he told Reuters.
Ghana’s electricity company, which is facing crippling financial difficulties, frequently disconnects power from indebted clients.
In recent years, power shortages have worsened as the country grapples with its worst economic crisis in a decade.
Private electricity suppliers are owed $1.6bn by the state power company, according to Elikplim Kwabla Apetogbor, the head of the organisation representing them.
Last July, they threatened to shut down operations over the arrears.