ACCRA – Power shortages in Ghana, which have affected major mining companies in Africa’s second biggest gold producer, will continue until the end of November, the Volta River Authority (VRA) said yesterday.
The VRA, the power generating entity in the West African state, said electricity rationing introduced at the end of August was necessary to prevent serious shortages in the year ahead. “The power shortages will continue until the end of November and then we will review them,” a VRA spokeswoman said.Many of the West African country’s gold miners, which include some of the world’s biggest, such as Newmont Mining Corp, AngloGold Ashanti Ltd and Gold Fields Ltd, saw costs rise and production slow in September as they were forced to cut their use of power.But mining firms did not cut their power use by half, as VRA had originally requested.”They never made the (50 per cent) target.Industry made a cut of 20 per cent.We have to accommodate that, there was a risk of layoffs,” the VRA spokeswoman said.VRA says a new thermal plant should be up and running in Ghana, Africa’s second biggest gold producer after South Africa, by the middle of next year.Nampa-Reuters”The power shortages will continue until the end of November and then we will review them,” a VRA spokeswoman said.Many of the West African country’s gold miners, which include some of the world’s biggest, such as Newmont Mining Corp, AngloGold Ashanti Ltd and Gold Fields Ltd, saw costs rise and production slow in September as they were forced to cut their use of power.But mining firms did not cut their power use by half, as VRA had originally requested.”They never made the (50 per cent) target.Industry made a cut of 20 per cent.We have to accommodate that, there was a risk of layoffs,” the VRA spokeswoman said.VRA says a new thermal plant should be up and running in Ghana, Africa’s second biggest gold producer after South Africa, by the middle of next year.Nampa-Reuters
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