Skip to main content

Ghana Gets €250 Million To Upgrade Electricity Transmission Infrastructure



The Government of Ghana, on Tuesday, 14th January, 2020, received, as part of Germany’s Compact with Africa programme,  €250 million from the Government of the Federal Republic of Germany to upgrade and expand the country’s electricity transmission infrastructure.
A Memorandum of Understanding, to this effect, was signed at Jubilee House, by Mr. Jonathan Amoako-Baah, CEO of the Ghana Grid Company (GRIDCo), on behalf of the Government of Ghana, and by Sabine Dall’Omo, a representative of Siemens, in the presence of the President of the Republic, and the President and Chief Executive Officer of Siemens AG, Mr. Joe Kaeser.
The signing of the MoU has seen Ghana receive a quarter of the €1 billion fund put in place by the German Government to boost the private sector in Compact countries, of which Ghana is one.
Under the agreement, the two companies will work not only to improve Ghana’s electricity grid capacity and stability, but also help ensure that the country expands her ability to export power to neighbouring countries in West Africa, such as Burkina Faso, Togo and Benin.
Witnessing the event, the President of the Republic, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, described the signing ceremony as a very important development in the energy sector of the country, adding that “the people from GRIDCO know, as well as I do, how necessary it is to undertake this project – the retooling, and refitting of our transmission and grid system across the country”.
The importance of the project, he underscored, stems from the “kind of future that we want to design for ourselves as a rapidly industrialising economy, that is going to be focused on important infrastructural developments, as well as big resource developments in our bauxite, manganese, and iron ore industries. All of this is going to have to be focused very much on reliable accessibility to power and the rest.”
With Ghana being the first country in Africa to benefit from a significant transaction from the ‘Compact with Africa’ programme, the President indicated that this “is, in itself, a big vote of confidence by the German leadership and Chancellor Merkel and yourself, one of the great German companies, to work in our country.”
He continued, “We welcome that expression of confidence, and we want to assure you that it is not one that we will abuse. We, on our part, are determined to work in transparency and openness with you, to make sure that this project comes to a proper conclusion.”
On his part, Mr. Joe Kaeser, President and Chief Executive Officer of Siemens AG, stressed that “the MOU will, together with our partner GRIDCO, modernize the whole grid of Ghana in steps, one at a time, and also organize the grids and bring the power to the people in a more efficient way. It will also help young people and train them and educate them for the future.”
He added that the Compact with Africa initiative is about the future of Africa.
“It is about showing them the way and on how to lead; and the first thing in this future in this vision is about electrification. It is about energy. The agreement is not only about supplying grids or products or solutions, it is about being a proud, responsible and an honoured partner to Ghana, and to the Ghanaian people, so that we can build this country for the future,” the Siemens President added.
It will be recalled that, on 12th June 2017, President Akufo-Addo attended G20 Africa Partnership Summit in Berlin, Germany, where the Compact with Africa (CwA) programme was announced, and at which Ghana became one of the beneficiary countries of the Compact. Again on 27th October, 2018, he attended another such meeting in Berlin.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

CK Akonnor wins dismissal case against Kotoko, Ghanaian giants ordered to pay compensation

Asante Kotoko are expected to CK Akonnor a hefty compensation after the former coach won his case for wrongful dismissal against the club on Monday. The Player Status Committee has ruled the Porcupine Warriors breached the terms of his contract. The ex-Ghana international was sacked in July this year, just nine months into his three-year contract. He dragged the club to the Ghana Football Association demanding his 2 years salary, league trophy cash, and CAF Confederations Cup group stage entitlements. The Player Status Committee ruled that the club was not justified in terminating the contract of the former Hearts of Oak gaffer. Both parties are yet to be furnished with a copy of the ruling. Akonnor rejected an offer to head the club’s technical directorate and left his post under bitter circumstances. The gaffer had been in charge for a close to a year having had stints with Kotoko sworn rivals Hearts of Oak and regional rivals Ashantigold. He had also coached D...

Full History of the living Legend Dag Heward-Mills on Personality Library (Edition 1b)

Dag Heward-Mills was born on the 14 May 1963 to a Swiss mother and Ghanaian father (Nathaniel and Elizabeth Heward-Mills) in London, United Kingdom. He moved with his family soon after his birth to Accra Ghana and has spent his entire life in Ghana. He was converted to Christianity while having his secondary education at Achimota School.  He joined Christian youth campaigns such as the Scripture Union as well as the Calvary Road Singers (which later became Harvest Chapel International immediately after his conversion. He proceeding to the University of Ghana Medical School, where he was trained as a medical doctor.  He started the Light House Chapel International while still a student in Medical school, having felt a strong call of God to start a church. In his fifth year of Medical School, Dag started the church in a little classroom in the School of Hygiene, Korle-Bu, with no more than 15 members. Amidst persecutions in various forms and with his academic work dema...

Today In History: Kwame Nkrumah arrives in Guinea After the Coup

When news of the coup reached him, Nkrumah was in Peking (today’s Beijing) en route to the Vietnamese capital, Hanoi, with plans to end the American war in Vietnam. Leaders of four African countries sent Nkrumah immediate messages of support and invitations. They were the presidents of Egypt (Gamal Abdel Nasser), Mali (Modibo Keita), Guinea (Sekou Toure), and Tanzania (Julius Nyerere). Nkrumah decided to accept Sekou Toure’s invitation. The government of Guinea shared Nkrumah’s Pan-African objectives, encompassing the liberation of the African people from all forms of social injustice and economic exploitation. There also existed a strong brotherly bond between Nkrumah and Sekou Toure. In addition, Guinea was closest to Ghana, to where Nkrumah was determined to return to carry on his work. Sekou Toure came to the rescue of Kwame Nkrumah, the deposed of Ghana and invited him to Guinea where he arrived on March 2, 1966, together with his bodyguards and a few civil servants w...