The Member of Parliament for Dormaa East, Paul Apraku Twum Barimah has called on government to prosecute signatories who negotiated the GPGC power purchasing agreement on behalf of the government of Ghana for causing financial loss to the state.
He regarded as sad the decision by some officials in the erstwhile NDC administration to sign power purchasing agreement for their selfish interest at a time the nation did not need such agreements.
He called for such persons to be identified and punished for acting in bad faith and deliberately causing financial loss to the state.
A report by the Public Procurement Authority committee constituted by government in September 2016 to study the agreement revealed that the agreement was not properly made resulting in excessive power supply.
According to Honourable Twum Barimah Ghana is forced to cough up more than 500million dollars every year to pay for excess capacity from the Take or Pay power agreements. In effect, independent power producers have received payments for excess capacity charge of US$937 million between s2017 and 2020;a situation he described as worrying.
He blamed the situation on the “unsolicited power purchasing agreements” the erstwhile Mahama administration signed with the Independent Power Producers (IPPs) at the time.
The worrying aspect, the honourable MP stated, is the fact that less than 40percent of the Take or Pay agreements is being used by the State.
According to him, per the terms of the agreement, the country still pays for the remaining power it is not using or has not been utilised.
He added that the unused power contributed to the high cost of electricity the NPP government inherited from the previous NDC.
“40percent of the Take or Pay power purchase contracts were not used. Ghana now pays almost 500million dollars annually for excess capacity that it is not using which we have committed to.
“If you look at the statistics further you will realise that Ghana has an installed capacity of about 5,000megawatts, dependable capacity of about 4,700MW. If you take the all-time high peak demand of 2,700MW then you are talking about 1,700MW excess capacity of power relative to dependable capacity. If you take available capacity of about 3,700MW then we are talking about excess capacity of 600MW that we don’t consume and yet we have to pay ich is significant,” he stated.
His comments come hours after the Attorney General, Godfred Yeboah Dame disclosed his intention to lodge a formal complaint with the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) to investigate the Power Purchasing Agreement signed between the erstwhile NDC government and Ghana Power Generation Company (GPGC).
The Attorney General, Mr Dame in a statement blamed the signatories to the agreement for the $170 million judgement debt that the government of Ghana has been instructed to pay to GPGC, by a Commercial Court in London, for unlawful termination of contract.
He said, “the fact as borne out by the PPA committee’s report was that the agreement, together with other agreements, had resulted in such excessive power supply to the state. The state was going to lose $586m per annum and a cumulative cost of about $7.6billion dollars between 2013 and 2018.”
“So I think that when it comes to financial loss, it is so clear in my mind that the responsibility lies clearly with those who entered into the agreement. The basic point is that the entry into this transaction was unnecessary. The entry into this transaction was what resulted in financial loss to the state.”
He stated that he is putting some documents together to request for a formal enquiry into the conduct of the public officers who handled the agreement.
“I, on account of all of this, am going to write a formal complaint requesting an enquiry by the CID into the conduct of the public officers who acted in the manner which resulted in the signing of an agreement which resulted in financial loss to the state.”
“I think that first and foremost the entry into the agreement itself was wrong. There was no justification, because their own committee determined that the agreement was going to result in excessive power.”
His comment comes after a London-based United Nations Commission on International Trade Law tribunal issued its final award, ordering the government of Ghana to pay a contractually defined “early termination payment” of more than US$134.3 million plus interest and costs.
The agreement between the government and GPGC, an independent power producer, was terminated in 2018.
According to Godfred Dame, a report presented by a committee constituted in September 2016 advised on the abrogation of the contract.
“The committee set up by the NDC in 2016 – against the background of a recognition that there were so many PPAs entered into by the NDC administration, and therefore those agreements were going to result in excessive capacity development, as it was termed – came to a conclusion that this agreement had to be terminated. The committee singled out this particular agreement for termination.”