A/R: ‘Galamsey’ Limits Water Supply To Over 140,000 People Daily In Odaso – GWCL
The Ghana Water Company Limited says over 140,000 people in Odaso and Obuasi in the Ashanti Region have limited access to water on a daily basis due to the negative effects of illegal mining activities.
According to GWCL, it has drastically reduced the volumes of water supplied to households in these areas as illegal mining activities directly affect its production and general operations.
Citing the current situation in Odaso and Obuasi, the company said it has reduced its output from four million gallons of water a day to just a million gallons.
Speaking at a forum on water under the auspices of the Israeli Embassy in Ghana, the Managing Director of the Ghana Water Company, Ing. Dr. Clifford Braimah, said the company’s operations have been severely hampered by illegal mining activities.
“Whatever happens to the resources has a direct impact on us at Ghana Water Company. ‘Galamsey’ is making us reduce the volumes of water that we can store in our reservoirs to abstract.”
“If you take Odaso for example, we were supposed to be doing four million gallons of water a day. What we can abstract now is 1 million gallons. 3 million gallons of water cannot be abstracted. Just on the raw surface, we are leaving out 140,000 people daily from getting water, so when we begin to complain about the scarcity of water, there are external forces affecting it.”
He added that, “We are unable to do the abstraction, and because of the turbidity levels, if you go to Odaso again, instead of us to record a 5% process loss so that we are able to inject into the system, the 95% of the water you abstract, we would have done 50% for clean water and would throw away more than 50%, but we have to also incur additional cost by changing the chemicals that we are using to a more expensive chemical, and so in Odaso we are able to generate 50% of what we abstract”.
Speaking on Eyewitness News, Ing. Braimah stated that the company is also currently absorbing the cost of the new chemicals because it does not have the power to translate these expenses into the bills of consumers.
“We don’t have the capacity to increase bills at anytime, it is PURC that does that, and they do that every two years so we would have to absorb some of these expenses in the meantime till we are called to bring new proposals, then our expenses will be captured in the subsequent review of prices so we are currently running at a loss in Odaso. We are recording similar cases in Western Region.”
He however noted that the operations of the government’s anti-illegal mining taskforce is gradually improving the situation.
Illegal mining activities have severely polluted several water bodies in some parts of the country, making the treatment of water by the Ghana Water Company more cumbersome and expensive.