Corporate News
Kenya Power worker repairs a transformer in Nyeri. The company has fixed
more than 1,800km of fibre optics along its high-voltage power lines in
24 counties. PHOTO | FILE
By MUGAMBI MUTEGI, pmutegi@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Kenya Power International Limited will handle Kenya Power’s telecoms business as well as spearhead the transformation of its energy research institute into a fully-fledged university.
- The new subsidiary will also oversee the elevation of the Kenya Power’s Institute of Energy Studies and Research, which is located in Ruaraka, into a regional power training hub.
Kenya Power
is set to establish a new subsidiary to handle its telecommunications
business which includes a fibre optic network laid across the country.
The NSE-listed firm has indicated that it would, in its
annual general meeting set for December 22, seek shareholder approval to
incorporate the Kenya Power International Limited.
This new company will handle Kenya Power’s telecoms
business as well as spearhead the transformation of its energy research
institute into a fully-fledged university.
“The purpose of such a subsidiary being to operate
and run the business of the company’s telecommunications business unit,”
reads one of the proposed special resolutions for the upcoming AGM.
“(The subsidiary will also) actualise the vision of
the Institute of Energy Studies and Research towards establishing a
university of excellence in the energy sector.”
Kenya Power has since 2010 fixed over 1,800
kilometres of fibre optics along its high-voltage power lines —
traversing through 24 of Kenya’s 47 counties — and is seeking to extend
this to all regions.
The State-owned utility firm earned Sh259.4 million
in revenue in the year ended June from leasing out extra capacity on
its fibre optic network, an income line it now intends to grow to Sh1
billion by 2017.
The power firm mainly uses the high-speed Internet network to manage its national grid.
The firm does not, however, use all the capacity
and has over the years been leasing out the extra capabilities to mobile
telecommunication firms and Internet service providers.
Kenya Power in 2002 was licensed as a network
facility provider by the communications sector regulator allowing it to
its lease excess broadband capacity to players in the telecoms industry.
Its current customers include Safaricom, Liquid Telecom, Jamii Telecommunications, Wananchi Group and Airtel.
The new subsidiary will also oversee the elevation
of the Kenya Power’s Institute of Energy Studies and Research, which is
located in Ruaraka, into a regional power training hub.
Kenya Power uses the 58-year-old training institute
to meet its internal research and training needs but is now looking to
elevate it to becoming a regional centre for training in power
generation, transmission, distribution and interconnectivity.
The power distributor in March partnered with the
Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology in a deal that
will see the two entities collaborate in research, training, and
technological innovations.
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