As a people, we face a bleak future, if our nation does not make the
needed investments, to modernise the energy sector of our national
economy - and make it one of the most efficient in the world.
The only way to modernise Ghana's power sector, is to invest money in
that area of Ghana's economy - and by so doing, eliminate the
inefficiencies that have bedevilled it for decades.
The companies that produce power in Ghana, ought to be able to recover
their costs and make a profit, to enable them stay in business - as is
the case for all power-sector businesses the world over.
That is the only business model that will enable them survive in the
long-term. That is a real-world cold fact of modern life that all
Ghanaians must accept.
Yet, precious few in Ghana accept that it is unrealistic, in the 21st
century, to continue expecting to have reliable power delivered by a
modern and efficient energy sector, if consumers refuse to pay the
true cost of producing electricity.
The fact of the matter - and surprising though it might be to many -
is that consumers in Ghana can all cope with the increase in tariffs
for water and electricity - by taking simple measures to eliminate
wasteful use of water and electricity at the individual and household
levels.
If they want a positive outcome to the furore created across the
country, by the increase in electricity tariffs, our educated urban
elites must see the crisis brought about by the increase in utility
tariffs, as an opportunity to increase the share of renewable energy,
in Ghana's power-generating mix.
As a people, we must aim to make it possible for households throughout
Ghana, to be in a position to buy solar and other renewable energy
systems - because they are affordable: and reasonably-priced consumer
credit for their purchase, readily available nationwide.
Why do the powers that be not use that noble objective, as an
opportunity to empower Ghana's leasing industry, for example - by
making all income from leasing solar power and other renewable energy
systems tax-free?
Will it also not help stabilise many of the shaky entities in the
savings and loans industry too, if one of the areas they could focus
on, was financing the purchase of renewable power systems by
households, educational institutions, and commercial entities across
Ghana - were the government to make income they derive from that
tax-free?
The mounting public discontent over electricity tariff increases, and
the lack of an imaginative and appropriate response to it from our
ruling elites, illustrates perfectly the inability of so many amongst
our educated urban elites, to turn seeming disasters into
opportunities.
Surely, a more creative response to the crisis brought about by the
increase in electricity tariffs, is for the government of the day to
make the entire supply-chain for renewable energy systems in Ghana,
tax-free?
Apart from the spurt in consumer demand in the national economy that
that will engender, psychologically, that exciting green-economy
prospect that also leverages the new global low-carbon development
model, will make electricity tariff increases bearable for all in
Ghana. A word to the wise...
Tel: 027 745 3109.
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