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Nana Addo cuts sod for $993m Pwalugu Dam and Irrigation Project

Citi NewsroombyCiti Newsroom
November 29, 2019
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Nana Addo cuts sod for $993m Pwalugu Dam and irrigation project
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President Nana Akufo-Addo has cut the sod for the construction of the Pwalugu Multipurpose Dam and Irrigation Project.

The project, according to President Akufo-Addo, “will be the single, largest investment ever made by any Government in the Northern sector of the country.”

Cutting the sod for the construction on Friday, the President stated that the pledge he made was to the effect that construction of the Dam will “avert the perennial flooding caused by the spillage of the Bagre Dam”.

“Today, we begin the process of realising this pledge. Today, we start the process of helping to bring respite to the people of the Northern Regions of our country, and to lay the foundation for the sustained growth and development of the area.”

The Pwalugu Multipurpose project will consist of three main components, namely the construction of a hydropower plant; the construction of a solar farm; and the establishment of an irrigation scheme covering an area of some twenty-five thousand (25,000) hectares.

President Akufo-Addo noted that the 60 megawatt hydropower plant and the 50 megawatt solar power plant will be the very first hydro-solar hybrid system in the country, with the two technologies complementing each other to provide reliable and stable electricity supply to the national grid.

Additionally, the irrigation component of this project, the largest ever built in the country, with 15,000 out-grower beneficiaries, the President added, will complement the gains made by programmes such as “One Village, One Dam” and “Planting for Food and Jobs”.

With the transformation of North hinging on creating infrastructure, and supporting agriculture and agro-based industries, the President bemoaned the fact that in the dry season, agricultural work comes to a halt in the Northern Regions, as farmers continue to be dependent on rain-fed agriculture.

“Irrigation, therefore, remains a key strategy to achieve food security, the eradication of poverty and generation of rural employment in the Northern sector, in particular, and, generally, across the country,” he said.

President Akufo-Addo continued, “With millions of dollars spent on rice imports annually, in the midst of an abundance of fertile lands, this project has the potential to increase annual rice production in the country by up to one hundred and seventeen thousand (117,000) metric tons, reducing rice imports by as much as 16%.”

The Pwalugu reservoir can accommodate up to 120,000 cages of 25 square metres each of fish, with an average yield of two tons per cage, making possible the continuous development of the country’s aquaculture and fisheries sector.

This project, he added, is also very crucial to the realisation of the “One District, One Factory” initiative, as it will serve as a catalyst to developing agro-industry, including reviving the Pwalugu Tomato factory.

“Other hydro-electric projects, such as Akosombo and Bui, were intended also to have irrigation schemes, but they have, unfortunately, not materialised. The story of the Pwalugu Multipurpose Dam and Irrigation Project will be different,” he assured.

With the cost of the project, amounting to some US$993 million, President Akufo-Addo stated that the cost will be borne entirely by Government, and will be executed constructed under an engineering, procurement and construction contract by Sinohydro, and will be executed in 50 months.

“In all, 2,200 Ghanaians, skilled and unskilled, will benefit fully from the project, with the contractor mandated also to source services such as catering, security, water, cement, steel, office logistics, and other supplies locally.”

Source: Ghana Presidency
Tags: Bagre damIrrigationPwalugu Dam
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