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Ghana: PURC Increases Electricity Tariffs By 3.49%, Water Tariffs By 0.85%, Effective July 1
The Public Utilities Regulatory Commission (PURC) has announced a 3.49 per cent increase in electricity tariffs across the board and a 0.85 per cent increase in water tariffs for the third quarter, effective July 1, 2026.
According to the Commission, the tariff review is in line with its mandate to adjust tariffs quarterly to reflect developments within the review period.
The quarterly reviews track and incorporate movements in key operational factors that are beyond the control of Utility Service Providers (USPs) but are critical to service delivery.
These factors include the exchange rate between the Ghana Cedi (GHS) and the United States dollar (USD), the domestic inflation rate, the electricity generation mix, and the cost of fuel—mainly natural gas—used to power thermal plants.
In a statement on Monday signed by Dr. Shafic Suleman, Executive Secretary of the PURC, the Commission explained that the quarterly adjustments are intended to maintain the real value of tariffs and ensure that utility providers remain financially viable while continuing to deliver reliable services to consumers.
The Commission applied a weighted average exchange rate of GHS11.2228 to one US dollar for the third quarter of 2026, representing a 0.2 per cent depreciation of the Cedi compared to the previous quarter.
It also used a three-month average inflation rate of 3.43 per cent, down from 4.17 per cent in the second quarter, while the weighted average cost of natural gas declined by 1.58 per cent to USD7.9708 per MMBtu.
The hydro-thermal generation mix remained unchanged at 20.9 per cent hydro and 79.1 per cent thermal generation.
Zambia: ZESCO Signs 25-Year Deal To Offtake Power From 400MW Sinazongwe Thermal PlantBased on the combined impact of these indicators, PURC approved a 3.49 per cent increase in electricity tariffs for residential, non-residential, and special load tariff customers.
For residential consumers, the lifeline tariff for users consuming up to 30 kilowatt-hours per month increased from 86.9Gp per kilowatt-hour to 89.93Gp per kilowatt-hour.
Water tariffs were also adjusted upward by 0.85 per cent across all customer categories, including residential, commercial, industrial, public institutions, and bulk consumers.
Under the revised rates, the residential lifeline tariff for water consumption of up to five cubic metres rose from 593.49Gp per cubic metre to 598.54Gp per cubic metre.
PURC said it remains committed to monitoring the performance of utility service providers and ensuring compliance with regulatory standards to guarantee value for money and improved service delivery.
The Commission expressed appreciation to stakeholders for their continued support in implementing quarterly tariff reviews and indicated that the decision will be published in the Gazette and on its website in due course.
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NNPC, TotalEnergies Extend Methane Reduction Partnership For Two More Years
The agreement, aimed at helping NNPC Ltd meet its gas-flare reduction obligations in line with its Oil & Gas Decarbonization Charter (OGDC) commitments, participation in the Oil & Gas Methane Partnership (OGMP) 2.0, and its near-zero methane emissions ambition by 2030, follows an earlier agreement signed in 2023 for the adoption of the AUSEA technology.
The agreement was signed by NNPC Ltd’s Executive Vice President, Upstream, Udy Ntia, and TotalEnergies Country Chair and Managing Director, Matthieu Bouyer, on behalf of their respective companies at the NNPC Towers in Abuja on Wednesday.
Speaking at the signing ceremony, Ntia expressed satisfaction with the first phase of the technology’s deployment, stressing that he would like to see it scaled across more assets.
“Today’s signing represents a practical step in NNPC Limited’s journey to build a credible, transparent, and action-oriented decarbonisation programme. Through the AUSEA initiative, we are strengthening our ability to detect, quantify, and prioritise methane abatement opportunities using advanced measurement technology,” Ntia said.
He also called for the institutionalisation of progress reporting in line with compliance requirements and highlighted the potential for technology transfer under the AUSEA programme.
On his part, TotalEnergies’ Senior Vice President for Africa, Mike Sangster, expressed satisfaction with the cooperation his company has enjoyed from NNPC over the years. He noted that TotalEnergies was the first oil-producing company in Nigeria to end gas flaring across all its assets and said the AUSEA technology had been instrumental in achieving that milestone, as the company works towards near-zero methane emissions by 2030.
AUSEA is a drone-based technology developed by TotalEnergies in partnership with the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) and the University of Reims.
The technology helps identify unaccounted emission sources, provides a basis for reviewing and improving existing emissions reporting processes, supplies data for evaluating operational systems and implementing corrective actions, and enables the estimation of flare combustion efficiency.

