Politics and policy
By ALLAN ODHIAMBO
In Summary
The fight over a multi-billion-shilling government
tender to build a coal-fired power plant in Lamu yesterday took an ugly
turn after a bare-knuckle war of words broke out between billionaire
businessman Chris Kirubi and two Nairobi lawyers representing rival
bidders.
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The drama unfolded as Energy ministry officials briefed the
bidders on the process of picking the firm that is expected to build
Kenya’s inaugural Sh174 billion coal plant as part of the Lamu Port
South Sudan and Ethiopia Transport corridor (Lapsset) project. The plant
is expected to contribute 960 megawatts (MW) of power to the national
grid.
The chairman of the tender evaluation committee
Simon Ngure ignited the spat as he took the bidders through the process
indicating that a consortium led by Centum Investment — a public listed company that Mr Kirubi chairs — and Gulf Energy had clinched the deal.
The briefing revealed that the Centum/Gulf Energy
consortium had performed better than the two other bidders led by
Shanghai Electric Power Company and HCIG Energy. Nairobi lawyers
Ahmednasir Abdullahi and Fred Ngatia represented the Shanghai
consortium.
Mr Ngure had presented tender evaluation results
showing that the Centum-led consortium had presented the most favourable
Specific Fuel Consumption (SFC) — a key determinant of the final Power
Purchase Agreement because it defines the plant’s fuel efficiency which
is critical in setting the cost of utility for consumers. Mr Ngure said
the evaluation committee had awarded the Centum-led team an SFC of 0.42
kilogramme per Kilowatt Hour (KWh) against 0.43 for Shanghai and HCIG
groups.
The war of words between Mr Abdullahi and Mr Kirubi
began after Mr Ngure announced that the tender committee had not
concluded the overall cost analysis of the financial bids presented by
the two rival consortiums because they used a coal standard that was not
in the tender document.
The two consortiums were found to have used the
international coal standard of 29,000 kilojoules per kg (Kj/kg instead
of the South African benchmark of 21,000 kj/kg specified in the tender
document. Mr Abdullahi fired the first salvo when he accused the tender
committee of making deliberate effort to award the contract to the
Centum-led consortium.
“When you look at the evaluation process there is
constant excuse-making for the Gulf Energy consortium,” Mr Abdullahi,
who is representing the Shanghai group said, drawing applause from a
section of the audience.
Mr Ngatia, also representing Shanghai, waded into
the controversy, accusing the committee of siding with the Centum-led
group and asked for fairness. “Each bid evaluation should be purely on
merit and not reverse psychology... once you tell a bidder you passed
the technical stage that is the end,” he said.
“You risk running into litigation because you will
be telling Kenyans to pay Sh19 billion more by awarding the tender as it
is currently,” Mr Ngatia claimed, drawing the ire of Mr Kirubi who
fired back accusing the two lawyers of misleading the public.
“Kenya is ours and not for big people and global
players who can pay big fees for big lawyers,” he said in defence of the
Centum bid before asking the two lawyers to “go and live in China if
they have ceased to be Kenyans”.
The remark appeared to have hit a raw nerve in the
two lawyers who stormed out of the meeting promising to challenge award
of the tender in court. “The meeting has degenerated into absurdities we
can’t stand and we have opted to leave,” Mr Abdulahi said as he left
the venue.
A visibly upset Energy secretary Davis Chirchir,
who sat through the exchange, took to the podium and reprimanded Mr
Kirubi for the broadside against the two lawyers. “I would like Mr
Kirubi to be polite to other investors and use kind and polite
language,” the minister said as he stood to restore calm in the meeting.
He said the ministry would review the grievances
raised by the rival bidders before forwarding the evaluation report to
the Treasury’s Public Private Partnership (PPP) unit and the Public
Procurement Oversight Authority(PPOA) for approval.
“If the numbers used in the evaluation are wrong we
are ready to have them challenged and we shall ensure they add up so
that we don’t make mistakes that will affect other projects in future,”
Mr Chirchir sai
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