Craig Murray, a former British ambassador to Uzbekistan has diagnosed
what he sees as the real challenges facing Ghana's energy sector which
is almost on its knees with the ongoing dumsor (power rationing regime)
His views were contained in a piece titled 'IMF and USA set to ruin
Ghana,' chronicles Ghana's power journey of years back, the current
situation and where it is headed for. The former rector of Dundee
University speaks on power production, distribution and transmission
through to privatization and outright sale of public institutions.
Murray absolves the two major political parties of any blame, in his
view, the ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC) and the opposition
New Patriotic Party (NPP) are trading accusation whiles the common
adversary, the International Monetary Fund (IMF)and World Bank continue
to repeatedly exploit the people of Ghana.
Below is the full article as published on his website
Just ten years ago, Ghana had the most reliable electricity supply in
all of Africa and the highest percentage of households connected to the
grid in all of Africa – including South Africa. The Volta River
Authority, the power producer and distributor was, in my very
considerable experience, the best run and most efficient public utility
in all of Africa. Indeed it was truly world class, and Ghana was proud
of it.
Obviously the sight of truly successful public owned and run enterprise
was too much of a threat to the neo-liberal ideologues of the IMF and
World Bank. When Ghana needed some temporary financial assistance
(against a generally healthy background) the IMF insisted that VRA be
broken up. Right wing neoliberal dogma was applied to the Ghanaian
electricity market. Electricity was separated between production and
distribution, and private sector Independent Power Producers introduced.
The result is disaster. There are more power cuts in Ghana than ever in
its entire history as an independent state. Today Ghana is actually, at
this moment, producing just 900 MW of electricity – half what it could
produce ten years ago. This is not the fault of the NDC or the NPP. It
is the fault of the IMF.
Those private sector Independent Power Producers actually provide less
than 20% of electricity generation into the grid – yet scoop up over 60%
of the revenues! The electricity bills of Ghana’s people go to provide
profits to fat cat foreign corporations and of course the western banks
who finance them.
Indeed in thirty years close experience the net result of all IMF
activity in Africa is to channel economic resources to westerners – and
not to ordinary western people, but to the wealthiest corporations and
especially to western bankers.
Not content with the devastation they have already caused, the IMF and
the USA are now insisting on the privatisation of ECG, the state utility
body which provides electricity to the consumer and bills them. The
rationale is that a privatised ECG will be more efficient and ruthless
in collecting revenue from the poor and from hospitals, clinics, schools
and other state institutions.
Doubtless it will be. It will of course be more efficient in
channelling still more profits to very rich businessmen and bankers. I
suspect that is the real point. That privatised utilities bring better
service and cheaper prices to the consumer has been conclusively and
forever disproven in the UK. What it does bring is huge profits to the
rich and misery to the poor. To unleash this on Ghana is acutely morally
reprehensible.
Ghana has a political culture in which the two main parties, NDC and
NPP, heatedly blame each other for their country’s problems. But if they
only can see it, in truth the electricity sector has been ruined by
their common enemy – the IMF and World Bank. I pray that one day the
country will escape the grip of these bloodsucking institutions.
Source: craigmurray.org.uk
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