Energy Minister John Abdulai Jinapor says the current power crisis is not the making of the Mahama administration but a direct result of an inherited crisis from the previous government.
Speaking on Joy News' PM Express on Wednesday, April 30, the Minister blamed persistent load shedding on what he described as deep-rooted problems left behind by the NPP administration. "In fact, as far back as December, when we were about going into the election - and that was the last month of the NPP administration - they were shedding about 500 megawatts of power," he revealed. "If you look at the whole of 2024, not virtually every month - every month - there was load shedding." According to Jinapor, the crisis was so severe last year that even the former energy minister faced intense criticism. "It got so heated that the minister came under fire," he recalled. "So this thing didn't start today." He stressed that while Ghanaians are rightfully upset about power outages, the issue did not originate under his watch. "If the roads are bad, people are unhappy.
If water does not flow, people are unhappy.
But the night, when the lights go out, people get very upset and angry.