Utility tariffs to go up on May 3; 14.75% for electricity, 4.02 % for water
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Utility tariffs to go up on May 3; 14.75% for electricity, 4.02 % for water

Effective May 3, 2025, consumers of both electricity and water would experience increment in tariffs.

It follows a new tariff approval by the Public Utilities Regulatory Commission (PURC), which will see electricity jump by 14.75 per cent and water up by 4.02 per cent across the board for all customers.

The tariff, which was approved on Friday, April 11, 2025 was occasioned by changes in the exchange rate, domestic inflation rate, cost of natural gas and electricity generation mix, among others.

A statement issued on Friday evening and signed by the new Executive Secretary of PURC, Dr Shafic Suleman, explained that a total payment of the outstanding revenues from the previous quarters would have resulted in much higher increase in both electricity and water tariffs. 

He said the commission, being mindful of the current economic difficulties for Ghanaians decided to recoup only half of the outstanding debts. 

This, he said, has always been the careful balancing act the commission has had to do to minimise the impact of tariff increases on livelihoods while ensuring that the utilities were well-capitalised to keep the lights on.

“The commission, in their decision today at 6pm reviewed upward the average end-user tariff for electricity by 14.75 per cent and also 4.02 per cent upward for water supply across board for all category of consumers,” he stated.

The PURC has concluded the regulatory process for the quarterly adjustment of electricity and water tariffs for the first and second quarters of 2025. 

The regulatory process is in line with the Commission’s Quarterly Tariff Review Mechanism outlined in its Rate Setting Guidelines for Quarterly Adjustment of Natural Gas, Electricity and Water Tariffs.

The Quarterly Tariff Adjustment tracks and incorporates changes in four key variables namely, the Cedi/Dollar exchange rate, inflation, electricity generation mix, and cost of fuel (mainly natural gas) in electricity tariffs. 

The Quarterly Tariff Review Mechanism is essentially meant to avoid over- and under recovery of revenues.

Under-recovery has negative implications for the ability of the companies to supply electricity and water to consumers and it has potential to cause outages of both electricity and water supply. 

Over-recovery unnecessarily overburden consumers of electricity and water. This process, therefore, enables the Commission to maintain the real value of the tariffs over adjustment period.

For the second quarter of 2025, a Weighted Average Exchange Rate of GHS15.6974 to the USD was used for computation of the tariffs. This implied an under recovery of Ghs0.1700 from the last quarter review in 2024. 

The commission used an average three-month projected inflation rate of 22.49 per cent for the second quarter of 2025.

The applicable Weighted Average Cost of Gas (WACoG) for the second quarter of 2025 is USD7.6289/MMBtu. 

This figure dropped from USD 7.8368/MMBtu, which was applied in the third quarter of 2024. The projected hydro-thermal generation mix for the quarter under review is 28.80% for Hydro and 71.20 per cent for thermal.

A key variable that contributed significantly to the 2025 quarterly tariff adjustment was an inevitable attempt to pay half (50 per cent) of an outstanding revenue of Ghs976Million carried over from the previous three quarters of 2024. 

The remaining 50 per cent will be spread over the subsequent quarters of the year.

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