TITLE:
The Bui Dam: A Microcosm of Sino-Ghanaian Relations in Energy Infrastructure and Global Governance
AUTHORS:
Renie Korantemaa Darfour, Regina Dede Awuyeh, Lovelyna Mayila Etombet, Renee Celine Bouanke D’ogem
KEYWORDS:
Bui Dam, Belt and Road Initiative, Debt Dependency, Environmental Governance, Dumsor, Global Infrastructure Finance
JOURNAL NAME:
Open Journal of Applied Sciences,
Vol.16 No.2,
February
26,
2026
ABSTRACT: This paper critically examines the Bui Dam hydroelectric project as a microcosm of the tensions inherent in China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and its impact on contemporary Sino-Ghanaian relations. While existing literature often polarizes around narratives of either neo-colonial “debt-trap diplomacy” or benevolent “South-South cooperation,” this study advances beyond these binaries by adopting a governance-centered analysis of the trade-offs between rapid infrastructure delivery and long-term developmental sovereignty. Through an in-depth case study of the Bui Dam a project financed by a $562 million Chinese buyer’s credit and secured against Ghana’s cocoa exports the paper reveals how the expedited realization of national energy ambitions has incurred significant structural costs: heightened public debt vulnerability, deficient environmental and social safeguards, and limited genuine technology transfer. The paper’s original contribution lies in its comparative governance framework, which contrasts the operational norms of Chinese state-backed financing with established multilateral standards, particularly those of the World Bank. It demonstrates that the appeal of the “Beijing Consensus” speed, scale, and non-interference historically came at the expense of transparency, equity, and sustainability in projects like Bui. However, the paper also contends that this model is not static, and it calls for a longitudinal view to assess whether the BRI’s evolving rhetoric of “high-quality development” translates into tangible governance reforms. Ultimately, this analysis reframes the debate from one of dependency versus development to a more nuanced understanding of negotiated agency, in which recipient countries like Ghana actively leverage BRI partnerships while navigating profound governance trade-offs. The findings urge a recalibrated approach to global infrastructure finance one that harmonizes efficiency with accountability in an increasingly fragmented governance landscape.