Dr. Kwaku Agyeman Mensah |
As
part of efforts to meet its Strategic Investment Plan by 2025, the Ghana Water
Company Limited (GWCL) through the support of the Ministry of Water Resources,
Works and Housing has signed various contracts with international corporations
to rehabilitate and expand most of the water systems in the Northern Region.
Sector Minister Dr. Kwaku Agyeman Mensah,
who revealed this during his recent visit to the Northern Region, said the GWCL
and the government had contracted a loan facility of US$189 million for the Tamale Water Rehabilitation and
Expansion Project.
Additionally, he said another US$30 million had been contracted for
the rehabilitation and expansion of the Yendi Water Supply System, US$19 million for the Damongo Water
Supply System as well as Bole, Salaga and Buipe Water Supply Systems.
The Minister assured GWCL workers of
government’s commitment to provide the necessary support for them to deliver
efficiently. He urged management of the company to continue to adopt innovative
ways of collecting bills to enhance their service delivery to existing and new customers.
Managing Director of the GWCL Fred Lokko who
accompanied the Minister also announced that by the beginning of August 2015,
the company would introduce prepaid meters to all its customers nationwide.
The policy, he explained, was intended to enable the
GWCL check illegal connections and non-payment of bills which had become a bane
on its revenue mobilisation effort. Mr. Lokko said the refusal of
customers to pay bills was making it impossible for the company to maintain,
rehabilitate and expand its machines in order to meet the demands of existing
and new customers.
According to him, the company over
the years struggled to collect bills from customers after providing them water.
Adding, he observed that most customers were comfortably enjoying the services
of the company, but felt reluctant to pay their bills.
About 50 percent of treated water
produced by the GWCL is unaccounted due to non-payment of bills, illegal connection
and incessant leakages mostly caused by high water pressure and construction
activities of contractors or private citizens. When it is eventually rolled out
across the country, the prepaid water metering system would ensure that
customers pay before consuming water and not the vice versa. “It is going to be
pay and consume” instead of “consume and pay later”, Mr. Lokko pointed out.
He regretted that the prepaid meters
were introduced on pilot basis in one of the regions some years ago but it met
some opposition from the public. But this time round, he said customers would
have no option than to embrace the policy in order to save the company from
dying.
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