Politics and policy
By CHARLES MWANIKI and NEVILLE OTUKI
In Summary
- Power consumers have the option of paying the Sh15,000 in cash or in instalments through their monthly bills, removing a major hurdle for rural electrification.
President Uhuru Kenyatta on Wednesday launched a mega
consumer power connectivity drive that is expected to take electricity
to millions of homes at a lower cost.
The project, which is specifically targeting households,
uses cheaper transmission line designs to cut the cost of connectivity
to Sh15,000 from the Sh36,000 that applicants whose homes are located
within 600 metres of a transformer have been paying.
Kenya Power,
the electricity distributor implementing the plan, said it is using a
new transmission line design known as the Single Wire Earthing Return
(SWER) to rollout the Last Mile Connectivity Project (LMCP), giving
unconnected consumers cheaper access to power.
Speaking in Machakos during the launch of the
project, Mr Kenyatta said power consumers have the option of paying the
Sh15,000 in cash or in instalments through their monthly bills, removing
a major hurdle for rural electrification.
“By 2017, 70 per cent of Kenyan households should
have access to power,” Mr Kenyatta said. If achieved, the target would
double the 35 per cent of households currently connected to the grid.
Lowering the cost of connectivity will also come as
a relief to thousands of rural consumers who have been aspiring to
connect their homes to the national grid but could not pay the more than
Sh70,000 that Kenya Power demanded for homes located outside the 600
metres radius of a transformer.
Under the LMCP initiative, the requirement that
distinguished between customers living within and beyond the 600 metre
radius of transformer is effectively removed, because the state will
shoulder the costs of bringing transformers closer to homes.
The plan is to connect 2.3 million new customers to
the national power grid. Kenya Power said households where wiring has
not been done will be issued with a “ready board” which comes with
sockets and ports for lighting and plugging electronics.
The Sh34 billion initiative is being financed
through the Kenya Electrification Fund that is backed by Sh13.5 billion
each from the World Bank and the African Development Bank (AfDB), and
Sh7 billion from the French Development Agency (FDA).
Some Sh58.2 billion will spent in the next three
years to supply electricity to remote areas and instal transformers
closer to unconnected homes.
Kenya Power managing director Ben Chumo said
timelines within which households will pay the instalments through power
bills would be announced on Thursday.
“Payment will vary according to customers’
financial ability but we will announce tomorrow (Thursday) the period
within which they will be required to have paid,” said Dr Chumo.
Kenya Power said the SWER system will be mainly used to connect domestic consumers in the rural areas.
SWER allows for lower cost of connection to be
realised through use of single, thinner and lighter cables as opposed to
the current system that uses two or four cables to connect domestic
consumers.
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