Nigeria will delay a plan to drastically cut gas
exports to Ghana from Friday while the two
sides hold emergency talks over an
outstanding debt of $181 million, the West
African Gas Pipeline Company (WAPCo) said.
Ghana already faces electricity blackouts and
the threat to cut supply by 70 percent could
have worsened the problems and presented
an extra headache for the government.
Ghana’s Minister for Power, Kwabena Donkor, led a government delegation to Abuja that began talks on Thursday with N- Gaz, a Nigerian consortium, and other stakeholders in a bid to avert the threat, said Harriet Wereko-Brobby, WAPCo spokeswoman. “By next week we are expecting a way forward,” she told Reuters. “There appears to be a will by all the parties to resolve the issue without the flow of gas being cut off.” Power cuts have raised the cost of doing business and angered voters at a sensitive time for President John Mahama’s government ahead of what is expected to be a tough re-election battle next year. Mahama has vowed to end the power cuts by the start of next year and Donkor has said he would resign if the problem has not been fixed by then.
Ghana’s Minister for Power, Kwabena Donkor, led a government delegation to Abuja that began talks on Thursday with N- Gaz, a Nigerian consortium, and other stakeholders in a bid to avert the threat, said Harriet Wereko-Brobby, WAPCo spokeswoman. “By next week we are expecting a way forward,” she told Reuters. “There appears to be a will by all the parties to resolve the issue without the flow of gas being cut off.” Power cuts have raised the cost of doing business and angered voters at a sensitive time for President John Mahama’s government ahead of what is expected to be a tough re-election battle next year. Mahama has vowed to end the power cuts by the start of next year and Donkor has said he would resign if the problem has not been fixed by then.

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