Kenya Power workers inspect a distribution line. An additional 210
megawatts of geothermal power has been injected into the national grid.
PHOTO | FILE
By GERALD ANDAE, gandae@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Fuel cost adjustment dropped to Sh2.87 per kilowatt hour (kWh) for bills to be settled this month from Sh3.47 in November and Sh7.22 in August.
- Kengen is Thursday expected to inject another 70 MW of geothermal power to the grid, signaling lower electricity bills next year.
The fuel adjustment surcharges levied on December
electricity bills sank to a six-year low following increased injection
of cheaper geothermal power to the national grid.
Data from the Energy Regulatory Commission shows fuel cost
adjustment dropped to Sh2.87 per kilowatt hour (kWh) for bills to be
settled this month from Sh3.47 in November and Sh7.22 in August.
At Sh2.87, the fuel surcharge – which is
responsible for steep electricity bills and is linked to the amount of
power generated from expensive diesel – is trading at levels last seen
in March 2008.
This is the result of additional geothermal power
into the national grid from KenGen, with 140 megawatts having been added
to the grid in late July and the second tranche of 70 MW added on
September 16.
The state-owned power generator is Thursday
expected to inject another 70 MW of geothermal power to the grid,
signaling lower electricity bills next year.
The foreign exchange fluctuation adjustment cost,
however, increased to Sh0.33 per kWh from last month’s Sh0.30 per kWh
and Sh0.23 in October, reflecting the impact of the wobbly
shilling—which is trading at three-year lows to the dollar.
The December adjustments will cut electricity
prices by about 6.8 per cent for homes that consume about 50kWh this
month to Sh540 compared to Sh800.15 in August – representing a 32.5 per
cent drop since the injection of the 140MW of geothermal power in late
July.
Middle class households that use 200 units of power
monthly expect to see their bills drop by 4.2 per cent to Sh3, 644
compared to Sh4,685 in August – a 22.2 per cent drop.
Savings on power bills will ease pressure on
inflation, which stood at 6.09 per cent last month, down from 6.43 per
cent in October and 8.36 per cent in August.
The falling electricity prices offers relief to
businesses that say expensive power makes Kenya’s industry uncompetitive
in a regional trading block where product pricing influences market
share growth.
“With more geothermal power, we want to completely
remove the fuel charge cost from our bills,” said Davis Chirchir, the
Energy and Petroleum minister in an earlier interview.
Kenya in August set a target to halve electricity
bills next year from present levels of between Sh15-Sh16 per KWh on back
of increased renewable like geothermal
Diesel generation costs about Sh30 per kWh while the cost of geothermal power ranges between Sh7.12 and Sh8.01 per KWh.
In September, the share of electricity from geothermal sources surpassed hydro for the first time in Kenya’s history.
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