Opinion › Article       06.04.2020

Ghana’s Energy Woes Is A Construction Problem

Ghana’s energy demand is increasing against a stagnant secondary supply since 1995 – when Ghana’s construction expansion started showing signs of negatively impacting demand. Around that time, Ghana’s population also showed expansion thus the demand for houses. This phenomenon caused the expansion of new towns close to the capital and today that expansion has contributed to the link between Accra and Kasoa, Aburi and Nsawam. As population expansion contributes to economic gains, in Ghana the opposite occurs as many new buildings and industries needed to contain the expansion were not planned. Often, population expansion does not necessarily mean economic growth but increased energy consumption as demand for power is proportional to increased population. Unfortunately, the majority of existing buildings built over the years do not conform to international standards as the Ghana Building Regulation had been outmoded and poorly enforced. This trend has continued for so many years and yet there is no solution to the address the challenges. This short article articulates some of the problems and examines the way forward by focusing on residential existing buildings in Ghana.

There are arguments illustrating many of the challenges that contribute to increased energy demand particularly of residential buildings. Close to 80% of existing residential buildings are poorly oriented, designed and constructed, not properly defined and supervised, with low engagement of qualified professionals, general lack of data on construction and residential buildings, energy demand is poorly estimated, unemployment etc. among many others. This article argues and highlights some of the problems as follows:

The article proposes solutions to address the problem:

In conclusion, Ghana’s existing building stock is a major energy problem that should be addressed.

John Dadzie, PhD
Expert in Construction and Building Performance, Kumasi Technical University Building Technology Department

Disclaimer: "The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect ModernGhana official position. ModernGhana will not be responsible or liable for any inaccurate or incorrect statements in the contributions or columns here."

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