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Minister, Kojo Oppong-Nkrumah, has dispelled concerns that a decision by
government to review some of the current power purchase agreements will result
in judgement debts.
According to him, the government is cautiously working to convert the take-or-pay
agreements to take-and-pay with some Independent Power Producers (IPPs) in a
way that will prevent possible legal issues like a breach of contract.
“Not that we intend to force it down their [IPPs’] throats. We can’t do that.
The idea is also to explain to them where the sovereign tends to go, where the
red line is, so we begin to work with them,” he said Tuesday evening on
MultiTV’s current affairs programme, PM Express.
The Finance Minister declared “a state of emergency” in the energy sector on
Monday, a situation he said was causing the state to bleed scare financial
resources.
The challenges in the energy sector, Ken Ofori-Atta stated, could pose grave financial risks to the entire economy.
“At the heart of these challenges are the obnoxious take-or-pay contracts signed by the NDC, which obligate us to pay for capacity we do not need,” Mr Ofori-Atta indicated while presenting the mid-year budget review to Parliament.
He said the country was paying over GH¢2.5 billion annually for some 2,300MW in installed capacity which the country does not consume.
“We shall from August 1st 2019, with the support of Parliament, make take-or-pay contracts a beast of the past,” he stressed.
Meanwhile, persons with deep insights in the energy sector like former CEO of the Ghana National Petroleum Company (GNPC), Alex Mould, has said the move to review the agreements is ill-advised and dangerous.
Mr Mould in an article on the matter said the review of these power purchase agreements will pose a hindrance to potential investors in the energy sector.
“If investors agree to take-and-pay agreements, the government will have to provide even greater security support packages to make the financing of the development of these gas fields intended for Gas2Power possible. Clearly, the approached being proposed by the Minister shows his team’s lack of experience in financing infrastructure project,” Mr Mould stated in the article.
Also, the Africa Centre for Energy Policy (ACEP) doubts if the government can successfully surmount critical legal obligations in its attempt to review the power deals with at least four IPPs that have signed the take-or-pay agreements with the state.
However, reacting to these concerns, Mr Oppong-Nkrumah said the successes already achieved in renegotiating some power deals are evidence that other renegotiations will also be successful.
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