A three-week visit and twelve “Dumsor”
days later
E. Ablorh-Odjidja
July 20, 2021
It looks like there is no solution to “Dumsor.”
For all the monies spent, we are still at the
mercy of blackouts.
A problem so mechanical, which must demand a
mechanical solution, has attained a natural
phenomenon status,
like the Harmattan.
There must be a solution.
But know that a problem becomes intractable
only if the available solution on hand, for some
reason, is refused.
In our case, there may be many reasons for the
refusal, all man-made.
One is corruption.
The solution may not pay the greatest
kickback, so why bother.
The other is political vindictiveness or
ideological blindness.
There have been attempts to solve the “Dumsor”
problem in many expensive ways lately.
Private companies have been empowered to generate
power at tremendous costs to the nation. The known
outstanding energy debt for the nation stands at
$2.2 billion accumulated legacy debt.
The most dramatic of this expense, in many views,
was the Karpowership, Turkish off-shore electricity
generating scheme.
It was to provide supplemental power for our
grids.
Karpowership of Turkey was to provide a “direct
supply of 450 MW (megawatts) of electricity to
Ghana’s grid every year,”
wrote Reuters.
All these expensive efforts later, and we are still
left with our power shortages. And you wonder if
there could have been a better solution.
Meanwhile, step back a few decades into our history
and you find all the ideas on energy production and
sustenance already spelled out by Nkrumah.
Nkrumah knew and offered that strengthening energy
supply was the necessary approach for a growing
nation as Ghana was in the 60s.
In a speech at Accra, at the commissioning of
the Ghana’s Atomic Reactor in November 1964, he offered
how this energy structure could be built.
He had hydro, atomic energy, and solar in
mind.
Had all he said about energy build-up happened,
there would have been no “Dumsor” today or ever.
Akosombo wasn’t planned to be a stand-alone power
generating dam.
On the wings were 13 other complimentary dams
of which the two latecomers, Bui and Kpong, were
part.
But the short-sightedness of the 1966 coup planners,
and their enablers, took matters in a different
direction, which possibly, made our current, almost
permanent condition of “Dumsor” possible.
On atomic energy,
Nkrumah had the following idea in
his address:
“It is essential to do this if we are to impart to
our development the acceleration, which is required
to break even with more advanced economies.
"We have
therefore been compelled to enter the field of
Atomic energy because this already promises to yield
the greatest economic source of power since the
beginning of man.”
Further on in the speech, he said:
“Indeed, we begin where many ended. We make our
start from the great body of scientific and
technological attainment, which is the common
heritage of mankind. Beginning as loftily as we do,
there is no reason for us to be timid in joining the
forward march of knowledge.”
And for the part concerning solar, Nkrumah said:
“I have also recently directed the Ghana Atomic
Energy Commission to investigate and expand research
on the possibilities of solar energy, which is
already going on at the Kwame Nkrumah University of
Science and Technology.
What happened to the drive launched in 1964 for
solar energy development?
Sums of monies spent encouraging entrepreneurs to
provide extra power to supplement our grids have
come to naught.
Many of these entrepreneurs have gotten rich
at our expense, while we still have “Dumsor.”
Considering Karpowership alone, the cost for Ghana
was to be a staggering $50 million a year and the
contract was to run for 10 years.
At $50 million a year, for 10 years, that would add
up to $500 million.
The vessels came to dock in Ghana, but I
wouldn’t know if all the contracted sums were paid.
The $500 million for Karpowership could have started
a solar industrial revolution within the short ten
years the contract was to run, starting with the
creation of a “Solar Fund” for citizens by the
government.
New house builders would be required by licensing
authority to access this Fund for loans; up to
$10,00 per structure for solar panels and storage
system, using an equivalent portion of the equity in
the house as collateral.
Indigenous solar panel manufacturing companies and
allied services, if they qualify as loan-worthy,
could access the fund for the manufacture and
installation of solar systems in houses.
These loans must be offered at a low cost.
The administration of the loans must be left
in the hands of existing public banks, and the
interest on the loan to cover mostly the
administrative cost by the banks.
The approach through public banks will take out a
lot of political patronages and smother the
opportunity for the fraudulent practices of “jobs for the boys.”
The government’s sole interest in the “Solar Fund”
will be for sustenance - to assure that the loans
are paid back to replenish the fund.
As the solar scheme expands, fewer and fewer people
will depend entirely on the public grid system.
As they leave the grid, the power left behind
will be shared by the diminishing non-solar using population.
The growth of the new solar system will
assure the end of “Dumsor.”
Stepping back a bit, to sell Karpowership services
to Ghana, the company stated the underlying causes
for “Dumsor”:
“After
decades of reliance on the 1965-completed 912-MW
Akosombo and the 1977-built 140-MW Kpong hydro
plants, and owing to a reduction in gas flow from
Nigeria due to unpaid debts, and transmission
losses, the government had struggled to provide
adequate power to its citizens.”
They even had the temerity to say that “locals even
coined a term for the constant outages: “Dumsor.”
It was our loss.
But for Karpowership, it was the opportunity
to make money off our predicament.
Meanwhile, the solar idea from the Nkrumah
era was ignored.
“It is estimated that even one-tenth of the solar
energy falling on the earth’s surface would be
enough to produce an amount of energy several times
the amount generated at present.
"In Africa, we have
no lack of sunlight, and the development of solar
energy should be one of our main scientific
preoccupations.”
Kwame Nkrumah’s speech:
Why wasn’t solar energy pursued after all these
years is a question that must haunt the parade of
politicians who came after Nkrumah.
We found ready money to fund power generation by all
kinds of expensive means.
We couldn’t find funds to start a “Solar
Fund,” the cheapest, renewable source of
electricity, and an easy path to the creation of
organic, economic growth for our country.
And as I write this, I am yet to hear a government
policy that advances a “Solar Fund” to promote solar
energy convention in our homes and factories.
E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publisher www.ghanadot.com,
Washington, DC, July 20, 2021.
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