By AFP
Harare
Energy-starved Zimbabweans were told on Thursday
to brace for worsening blackouts due to electricity generation
shortfalls, decreased imports and break-downs at the country's major
power stations.
The Zimbabwe Electricity Transmission and
Distribution Company (ZETDC) said low water levels at the main Kariba
hydro-power station, generation constraints at the Hwange thermal
station and limited power imports have massively depleted supplies.
"The power shortfall is being managed through load
shedding (power cuts) in order to balance the power supply available
and demand," ZETDC said in a statement in the local paper.
Power cuts started on Tuesday, and are expected to worsen.
The ZETDC said supplies will be interrupted during peak demand periods between 5:00 am (0300 GMT) and 10:00 pm (2000 GMT).
Most cities in Zimbabwe have been experiencing
electricity outages, at times lasting up to 24 hours in recent days,
plunging entire suburbs into darkness as the power utility battles to
conserve scarce supplies.
The crippling power cuts are a boon for traders
doing brisk business selling liquid petroleum gas, paraffin and
generators, but have grave ramifications for the country's manufacturing
industry -- which is already operating at low capacity due to a slowing
economy.
At peak times Zimbabwe requires around 2,200
megawatts (MW) of electricity, and resorts to importing power from
neighbouring Mozambique to augment local supplies.
A table on the power utility's website on Thursday
showed its stations were producing 919 MW, with Kariba and Hwange
supplying 424 MW and 416 MW respectively, and the remainder coming from
smaller generators.
Power generation at Kariba early this month was
forecast to decrease from 750 MW to 475 MW due to drought that has
caused a drop in water levels at its dam.
The ZETDC has been running adverts in the local press, television and radio asking consumers to use power sparingly.
Zimbabwe's economy has been on a downward spiral for more than a decade amid slow growth, low liquidity and high unemployment.
Many companies have closed, downsized or relocated to neighbouring countries.
The government has cut its growth forecasts for
2015 from 3.2 percent to 1.5 percent, mainly due to slow growth in the
agricultural sector.
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