Fallen Pylon Cause Of K’si Power Cuts

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The damaged tower

A COLLAPSED communication tower is the main cause of the recent intermittent power outages being experienced in Kumasi, the Ashanti regional capital, an official source has announced.

The tall communication tower, reportedly, collapsed at Bogoso on November 9, 2021, causing extensive damage to three important GRIDCo transmission towers, which supply power to Kumasi and the northern sector.

As a result of this accident, the power being transmitted to the Ashanti Region has been curtailed and this has resulted in outages between 6pm and 11pm.

Consequently, the four major players in Ghana’s power sector – the Ministry of Energy, GRIDCo, Volta River Authority (VRA) and the Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG) – are collaborating to help rectify the anomaly.

Kwame Agyeman Budu, Managing Director of ECG, addressing journalists in Kumasi yesterday, stated that the damaged towers would be erected and begin operating by December 20, 2021.

On behalf of the four major players, he apologised to the people of Asanteman saying that the recent intermittent power cuts were not intentional.

Giving detailed accounts of the power challenge, Ing Vincent Boachie, GRIDCo’s Director for Northern Network Services, said power supply was stable in the Ashanti Region until the tower collapsed.

“On November 9, 2021, a communication tower collapsed and fell on the 330kv Aboadze-Kumasi transmission line at Bogoso. Three transmission towers collapsed in the process and were extensively damaged, requiring either repair or complete replacement.

“As a result, most of the electricity supply to Kumasi has since been coming from the Akosombo Generating Station and the power generation enclave in Tema. During peak periods, the available transmission network cannot carry enough power to the country’s middle and northern parts, including Kumasi.”

Kumasi and its environs, Ing Vincent Boachie indicated, normally consume 340 megawatts at peak times, adding “there is the need to manage power supply to Kumasi and its environs to avoid a total transmission system failure.”

He also assured that a team of experts have since been dispatched to the accident scene and were working assiduously to erect the damaged towers and restore service to normalise the power situation in Kumasi by December 20, 2021.

The press conference was organised at the instance of the Minister of Energy, Dr. Matthew Opoku Prempeh, who had earlier on said he was concerned about the power cuts.

Meanwhile, the Minister, who doubles as the MP for Manhyia South, is expected to join the team to visit the Asantehene, Otumfuo Osei Tutu II, at the Manhyia Palace in Kumasi today where he would officially introduce himself as Energy Minister to the King.

FROM I.F. Joe Awuah Jnr., Kumasi

 

 

 

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