Change in ECG Management Won’t Result In Price Hikes, PURC Assures

 

The Public Utilities Regulatory Commission (PURC) has fought off claims that new managers taking over ECG will result in an astronomical increase in electricity tariffs.

Ishmael Agyekumhene, Commissioner at the PURC, says they will be regulating the new managers to ensure that no outrageous tariffs are imposed.

“If for example, ECG’s losses are around 24 per cent, we only allow 21 per cent so that they will pay the remaining 3 per cent. Where they will find the money to do that, we (PURC) don’t care,” he said.

He told Joy News’ Joseph Ackay-Blay that there are regulatory benchmarks and as the system improves, those thresholds will have to come down.

Minority spokesperson on Energy Adams Mutawakilu had earlier claimed the energy sector is in crisis claiming the ECG’s debt is inching towards ¢2 billion.

He blamed the situation on government’s decision to reduce electricity tariffs last year

According to him, ECG in 2018 accrued a loss of ¢1.1 billion for the first part of the year and is expected to hit ¢2 billion in this year.

“With this, you can see that the energy sector is in crisis…National Grid Company (Gridco) and Northern Electricity Distribution Company (NEDCo) are all in crisis…the concessionaire is coming in with a mind to make profit….we should expect an astronomical increase in tariffs in 2019,” he said.

But the PURC Commissioner disagrees.

He said Meralco, which will take over the majority shares of ECG, is supposed to publish their proposal which they did last Friday and they are being regulated by the PURC

“As far as the laws of Ghana are concerned, only the Commission approves tariffs no other person not even the president of the land is in charge of that,” he said.

He said they will ensure that Meralco does the right thing by charging the appropriate and not arbitrary tariffs.

However, some power players are asking for hikes in tariff. Power transmitter GRIDCo is pushing for a 95 per cent increase in tariff while NEDCO wants a 45 per cent increase.

The TUC who are unhappy about the proposals insists tariffs must decrease.

myjoyonline.com