Ing. Ebenezer Kofi Essienyi (3rd left), CEO of GRIDCo and Mr Laurent Tossou (2nd right), Chairman of ERERA in a group photograph with officials of GRIDCo and ERERA, at the GRIDCo Head Office in Tema

The Chief Executive Officer of the Ghana Grid Company (GRIDCo), the power transmission company in the Republic of Ghana, Ing Ebenezer Kofi Essienyi, has called on Ecowas Regional Electricity Regulatory Authority (ERERA) to speed up the approval process of the ECOWAS Regional Transmission Tariff so that all stakeholders, especially transit countries involved in the regional trade in electricity can be appropriately compensated.

According to him, the absence of an approved transmission tariff has created bottlenecks which impede power trade flows in the region.

Ing. Essienyi appealed while receiving a four-member delegation from ERERA led by its Chairman, Mr Laurent Tossou, who paid him a courtesy call on 16th January 2023, at the GRIDCo headquarters in Tema, Ghana’s industrial city.

Other members of ERERA’s delegation were Regulatory Council Member, Dr Haliru Dikko, the Head of Administration and Finance, Mr. Ofosuhene Apenteng-Takyiako, and Communication Officer, Mr. Uwem Thompson.

Earlier, Mr. Tossou informed GRIDCo’s Chief Executive of the imminent launch of the second phase of the regional electricity market and requested a deeper collaboration with the company, considering its experience and strategic relevance to the development of the market.

Both Heads of Institutions discussed issues of mutual interests relating to the power sector in the region.

These included renewable energy, harmonization of national legal texts, data collection, infrastructural challenges and capacity-building programmes for power sector practitioners.

ERERA is mandated to regulate cross-border trade in electricity in West Africa.

As part of its functions, ERERA is to approve critical documents for the development of the regional power market.

GRIDCo is to develop and promote the national grid to ensure competition in Ghana’s wholesale power market.

Its specific functions include ensuring the transmission of electricity from wholesale suppliers, that is generating companies, to bulk customers; providing fair and non-discriminatory transmission services to all power market participants; as well as acquiring and managing assets, facilities and systems required to transmit electrical energy.

 

 

 

Source: ERERA