@4Yexe I have been a Dishonored fan since 1s release PLEASEEEE it is one of my favorite game franchises I need more the style and powers are wonderful, even the comic was fun. I need more 😭😭
Glad to hear @cinnabrit is ok chasing tornados. Once I knew she was in the car, I immediately knew it was sticking to the ground. Thank God for gravity.🙏
@joyce_bawah Great to hear progress is being made restoring power at Akosombo. Hoping the remaining units come online as scheduled to stabilize the grid.
Minister for Energy and Green Transition has announced that two power generation units at Akosombo have been brought back into operation adding about 280MW to the national grid.
A third unit is expected to come on stream shortly to add another 140MW.
He further states that ALL six units should be back in operation by close of this week after the devastating fire outbreak at Akosombo. Thank you 🙏🏾
@FelixKwakyeOfo1 Good job.
Anyway, For your information.
The NDC party needs to start removing former CEOs from the system. The saboteurs are really working against the party
Minister for Energy and Green Transition has announced that two power generation units at Akosombo have been brought back into operation adding about 280MW to the national grid.
A third unit is expected to come on stream shortly to add another 140MW.
He further says that ALL six units should be back in operation by close of this week.
#GovernmentAccountabilitySeries.
@FelixKwakyeOfo1 Yet we have been without light for the past 36 hours? All NDC MDs, CEOs, ministers, and deputies should learn lessons and take npp appointees from such positions to stop the sabotage. The grassroots who campaigned for the party are suffering, pick up calls, and attend to them.
At 2:00pm today, Minister for Energy and Green Transition, Hon John Jinapor will appear at the Government Accountability Series to break down all the issues regarding the electricity situation, provide an update on work done so far to resolve it and answer all questions on same.
Government deeply regrets any inconvenience caused and is deploying ALL measures to restore normalcy as quickly as possible.
@Maxzulander1@thepowderguy1@Iam_Berimah Read wai
MyJoyOnline article (published April 24, 2026): Ghana halts power exports as Akosombo fire knocks out 1,000MW capacity
I don’t get why some Ghanaians with zero understanding of electricity think losing 1,000MW to a fire outage is something that can be fixed in a week or even a month. Dumsor is normal not anything new
THE SACRIFICE OF THE NDC IN THE ENERGY SECTOR WITH RECEIPTS.
Fellow Ghanaians, enough is enough. The “current Dumsor, I mean these erratic, frustrating power outages hitting homes, businesses, hospitals, and factories across Accra, Kumasi, and beyond in April 2026 is not some unavoidable act of nature or a sudden crisis under the new administration. It is the direct, bitter harvest of eight years of reckless neglect, mismanagement, and misplaced priorities by the NPP government (2017–2024). They left the power sector’s distribution network to rot while chasing headlines with new plants that couldn’t deliver reliable light to the people.
Energy Minister Dr. John Abdulai Jinapor has been crystal clear: the recent interruptions in Accra and Kumasi stem from “years of underinvestment in the distribution segment of our power system” and “prolonged neglect.”
This is not political rhetoric, it’s the official explanation from the very people now scrambling to fix the mess the NPP left behind. While generation capacity grew on paper (from 4,638 MW installed in 2017 to 5,963 MW by 2024), the NPP starved the critical distribution infrastructure, the transformers, feeders, and local networks that actually get power to your meter. The result? Overloaded, decades-old equipment failing under pressure, forcing ECG to issue maintenance schedules that feel exactly like the Dumsor we thought was behind us.
The numbers don’t lie. When President Mahama took office in January 2025, the NPP had saddled the energy sector with a crippling $1.7 billion debt overhang to Independent Power Producers (IPPs) and had completely depleted the World Bank’s $500 million Partial Risk Guarantee through years of non-payment for gas and power.
By December 2025, the Mahama administration had already repaid $1.47 billion to clean up that inherited disaster and restore the guarantee. Yet the structural damage from NPP-era underinvestment remains: faulty transformers, weak feeders, and a distribution network never modernized despite the capacity boom. That’s why a single substation fire or routine maintenance now knocks out 1,000 MW and triggers widespread outages – problems the NPP created by prioritizing political propaganda over real infrastructure investment.
Think about the human cost. Households losing refrigerated food, students studying by phone torchlight, hospitals switching to noisy, expensive generators, and small businesses bleeding money on diesel. The Africa Sustainable Energy Centre warns that unchecked outages could cost Ghana up to $2 billion in lost productivity. This is not “planned upgrades” alone, it is the NPP’s legacy of inaction finally catching up, even as the current government races to install 2,500 new transformers and roll out a GH¢4 billion 18-month rescue plan.
The NPP had eight full years. They added megawatts but delivered darkness through neglect. They accumulated debts that nearly collapsed the sector. They left the grid vulnerable. Now, in 2026, ordinary Ghanaians are paying the price for their failure. It’s time to call it what it is: the NPP’s Dumsor, still haunting us because they refused to build a resilient system for the people.We deserve better. Hold them accountable. Demand they own the mess they created instead of pointing fingers at those trying to clean it up. Ghana’s power future cannot be held hostage to the NPP’s eight years of broken promises. The light at the end of the tunnel starts with remembering who turned it off in the first place.