There is no US Court which is awarding judgment debt against the government of Ghana, the Attorney-General Godfred Dame has said. He explained that the $111 million judgment debt case awarded in favour of Ghana Power Generation Company by the court in the United States is only an enforcement order. That enforcement order, he said, is on account of a failure to pay a judgment debt which accrued way back in January 2021 as a result of an award that was given that time.
Following the failure of the Government of Ghana to fully comply with an earlier tribunal decision from the United Kingdom, a District of Columbia Court in the United States has awarded a $111,493,828.82 judgment debt against Ghana in favour of the Ghana Power Generation Company (GPGC). The court, in granting the Motion for Default Judgment in favour of GPGC, also ordered Ghana to pay mandatory post-judgment interest. It is recalled that a court in the United Kingdom in 2021 awarded a $140 million arbitral against Ghana for the termination of a power deal with GPGC.
In addition, the government was asked to pay the cost of the arbitration and the legal fees of GPGC, which amounted to over $3 million. Trafigura, an oil trader was in the position to sell Ghana’s assets in the UK in other to raise the amount of money the government of Ghana owed it. On 23rd June, 2003, Ghana filed an application to set aside the order but the court dismissed the application. Deputy Attorney-General Alfred Tuah Yeboah said although part payment was made, the state was unable to meet the installment payment plan.
Despite the ruling, Ghana only made partial payments totalling $1,897,692.40, leaving a significant outstanding balance. After unsuccessful attempts to secure the remaining payment from Ghana, GPGC filed a case in the U.S. District Court on January 19, 2024, under the New York Convention and Chapter 2 of the Federal Arbitration Act, seeking to recover the compounding debt.
Court documents reveal that the U.S. court served Ghana with the petition on January 23, 2024, through Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey, Ghana’s Minister for Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration. The documents were delivered in Ghana on January 29, 2024, with a signed confirmation of receipt. However, Ghana failed to respond by the March 29, 2024 deadline and did not appear in the court proceedings. The court determined that it had jurisdiction over the case, citing the New York Convention, which the U.S. has ratified, recognizing UK arbitral awards.
The court also noted that Ghana had expressly waived its sovereign immunity and committed to international arbitration under the power purchase agreement. In his August 6, 2024, memorandum opinion, Chief Judge James E. Boasberg emphasized that the arbitral award between the non-U.S. parties arose out of a commercial relationship, which falls under the New York Convention. The Convention requires that member states recognize and enforce such awards, regardless of the parties’ citizenship or domicile. While the judge did not grant pre-judgment interest to GPGC, the court will award post-judgment interest at the rate specified in U.S. codes, adding to the financial burden on Ghana.

BAR AMSA

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