Politics and policy
By KIARIE NJOROGE, gkiarie@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Private operators could be licensed to compete with utility firm if Parliament passes proposed law.
- Licensed distributors will build supply power lines from sub-stations to homes but another entity (a retailer) will sell, meter and bill customers, according to the proposed law.
- The Bill also provides for sector regulators to set the minimum capital required to enter the power distribution and retail business.
Kenya Power
is likely to lose its stranglehold on electricity distribution and
retail if a new Bill seeking to open the business to private utility
providers is passed into law.
The Bill, currently with the Commission for the
Implementation of the Constitution (CIC) for review ahead of its tabling
in Parliament, proposes the licensing of other electricity distributors
and retailers, promising consumers choice and better quality of
service.
Licensed distributors will build supply power lines
from sub-stations to homes but another entity (a retailer) will sell,
meter and bill customers, according to the proposed law.
The retailers will buy power from different sources
and pay the distribution company a fee for using their network to
connect customers.
The Energy Bill, 2015 says that customers will only
turn to a power distributor for supply if there is no registered
retailer in their locality or if they require medium to high voltage
power.
“A person requiring supply of electrical energy
shall apply to the duly authorised retailer, but where there is no such
retailer, to the distribution licensee,” the Bill says.
The changes are meant to create room for new
players in the electricity sub-sector where Kenya Power continues to
operate as a monopoly.
The Bill also provides for sector regulators to set
the minimum capital required to enter the power distribution and retail
business. The plan is to restrict retail licensees to a particular area
or areas stated in the licence.
It is not clear from the Bill whether Kenya Power
will be allowed to continue as a player in the retail market although
the utility firm is expected to remain the biggest distributor in the
new dispensation given its extensive distribution network.
If Kenya Power’s business is split between
distribution and retail, two separate entities would be created to
handle the different segments as was previously done with the separation
of high voltage transmission which went to the Kenya Electricity
Transmission Company (Ketraco) from distribution and retail, which
remained with Kenya Power.
Such unbundling, however, exposes the listed
company to a possible loss of a chunk of its revenues associated with
the retail business.
As a retailer, Kenya Power has recently taken
advantage of an increase in tariffs to grow its profits. The utility
company’s net profit for the six months to December 2014 rose 38.5 per
cent to Sh4.17 billion.
Its sales grew 40 per cent to Sh37.6 billion
despite the units of electricity consumed by households and businesses
going up by a marginal 5.5 per cent — meaning the higher earnings were
driven by the increase in power tariffs.
More recently, the positive financial results have
seen Kenya Power continue to outperform other energy stocks at the
Nairobi Securities Exchange, driven by sustained demand from foreign
investors.
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