The Managing Director of the Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG), Samuel Dubik Mahama, has defined why Accra Academy and different senior excessive faculties had been disconnected from the nationwide electrical energy grid.
He stated, the train is a part of a nationwide effort to recuperate debt owed it.
In an interview with TV3, Mr Mahama stated the debt inventory of consumers is turning into too big, therefore the necessity to take pressing measures to recuperate them.
“Currently, the schools’ bill is almost GHC45m in arrears,” he stated.
According to him, “Across the nation, there is a GHC2.5b debt based on debt stock I am seeing.”
He used the chance to apologise to the authorities of Accra Academy for the inconvenience induced.
“For Accra Academy and co, I am sorry for what happened yesterday, I know it was a traumatizing experience. That was not the main aim of the company. I had a conversation with the Director General of the Ghana Education Service, and he has promised to have a meeting with me before the end of this week, so we can find a long-lasting solution to these issues and how we can handle them going forward,” Mr Mahama acknowledged.
Senior High Schools throughout the nation are stated to owe the ECG an estimated GHC45m. Accra Academy’s share of this quantity is reported to be over GHC400,000.00.
GES Director General resolves Accra Academy power issue, assures it won’t reoccur
Background
ECG on Monday, February 19, disconnected the college from the nationwide grid resulting from an unpaid debt of over GH¢400,000. This resulted in a complete blackout on all the campus.
Paul Agraga, the top of prosecution at ECG, defined in an interview on Citi FM that “the disconnection is part of an ongoing initiative to recover outstanding payments owed to the company.”
Academic activities resume as ECG restores power supply to Accra Academy
“Normally, we have a team that goes around once a while to inform our customers of their debts, so they do not accumulate and so if you take Accra Academy for example, they owe in excess of GH¢400,000 to the ECG.”
Mr Agraga emphasised the significance of ECG recovering the monies owed to repay the ability producers.
He dismissed the assertion that the corporate is concentrating on some chosen senior faculties.