PSC Tema CEO credits foot soldiers with saving equipment

A Ghanaian shipyard sat abandoned for nearly three years, overrun by vegetation and reptiles, before new management stepped in to revive it.

PSC Tema Shipyard's rough shape
  • Alhaji Osman Sulemana revealed party foot soldiers blocked unauthorized equipment removal during the shutdown.
  • Valuable machinery faced theft risks while operations were frozen.
  • Thick bush and reptile infestations made the yard unsafe when the new team arrived.
  • Clearing the premises was the first order of business before any repairs kicked off.
Getting the gears turning again
  • Sulemana's team assessed which machines could be saved and which were toast.
  • Some gear got fixed up, while other critical parts needed full replacement.
  • Slipway operations resumed, letting vessels get hauled for maintenance.
  • Canteen restoration boosted on-site worker welfare and productivity.
Renovation rundown
  • Dock rehabilitation and electrical substation upgrades wrapped up.
  • Power reliability improvements were a key piece of the overhaul.
  • Compound-wide fixes addressed years of neglect across the facility.
  • Leaking roofing in marine workshops still threatens equipment and staff.
Legacy equipment is holding things back
  • Most machines date back to the Kwame Nkrumah era with zero modernization since.
  • Giraffe crane replacement topped the list of urgent appeals.
  • Peter Mensah, the deputy CEO, described pre-takeover conditions as completely unworkable.
  • Mensah expressed confidence that sustained investment could transform the yard into a competitive maritime hub.
 

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