The Ghana Gold Board has committed GH¢8.4 million to support the restoration of water infrastructure damaged by illegal mining.
The funding forms part of a partnership between GoldBod and Ghana Water Limited, the public utility responsible for urban water production and distribution.
The intervention will focus on infrastructure affected by galamsey, which has polluted water bodies and created operational difficulties for treatment systems in mining areas.
Illegal mining activity can increase the amount of sediment and contaminants entering rivers used for water production. Affected treatment plants may face additional pressure in processing raw water to the standard required for public supply.
The partnership gives Ghana Water Limited responsibility within its water-sector mandate while GoldBod provides the announced financial support.
GoldBod’s GH¢8.4 million commitment is distinct from its commercial functions in Ghana’s gold industry. The institution is responsible for activities within the country’s gold trading framework, including the purchase, assaying and sale of gold.
The restoration programme connects the gold sector with efforts to repair damage associated with unlawful mining activity.
The initiative does not replace enforcement operations against illegal mining. Regulatory and security actions against galamsey remain separate from the infrastructure work covered by the partnership.
The contribution is also not a court-ordered compensation payment from a named mining operator. No company or individual has been identified as responsible for the specific damage to be repaired under the programme.
Ghana Water Limited operates treatment and distribution infrastructure across the country. The effect of polluted raw water varies among facilities, depending on the condition of the water source and the treatment systems available.
The agreement is intended to support physical restoration rather than introduce a new national water tariff. No change to customer billing has been announced as part of the partnership.
The GH¢8.4 million amount remains the value of GoldBod’s stated commitment. The allocation is expected to support work selected under the arrangement with Ghana Water Limited.
The partnership was announced while illegal mining and the condition of Ghana’s rivers remain prominent national concerns. Water bodies in mining areas have been affected by excavation, sediment and the discharge of mining waste.
The project adds a restoration component to the wider institutional response to galamsey-related environmental damage.
GoldBod and Ghana Water Limited are expected to carry forward the programme under their partnership, with implementation focused on the affected infrastructure identified for restoration.














