Government
officials have recently been groping in the dark in their search for the
right electricity supply mix to meet demand and trigger growth while
avoiding excess power that could result in higher consumer bills.
Several
mega power projects have been cancelled or shelved amid fears they
would leave Kenya with excess power, a situation that could see
consumers pay billions of shillings for electricity not used.
Energy
experts reckon that the officials bit more than the economy could chew
when they unveiled an ambitious plan to construct new power plants based
on an ‘exaggerated’ demand growth.
Kenya had hoped to
slash electricity costs by increasing supply from cheaper energy
sources such as geothermal, wind, coal and natural gas power plant –
which was dropped last year on lack of adequate demand.
“Of
course they knew their estimations were highly exaggerated when they
drafted the least cost power development plan (LCPDP) in 2011,” said Mr
David Mwangi, an energy consultant.
He said economic
activity, especially in the manufacturing sector, has been slow over the
six-year period. This has failed to fire up demand for power while the
option of exports to neighbouring economies has been impeded by the lack
of or existence of low-capacity transmission lines.
It
is perhaps for this reason that the Energy ministry recently
commissioned a study by a German consultancy Lahmeyer International to
assess the economy’s power needs in coming years.
The
consultant, which audited manufacturers and other large power users,
submitted the report last October to serve as the power sector roadmap.
The
study casts the spotlight on just how far-off-the mark the government
was when it came up with the economy’s growth projections for
electricity demand.
The consultant reckons that Kenya’s
maximum power demand will grow 72 per cent to 2,259 megawatts by 2020
from the current 1,620 megawatts, when projects such as the standard
gauge railway start operating fully.
Government
estimates, on the other hand, indicate that the peak demand will jump
threefold to 4,755 megawatts in the three-year period, which is double
that of the consultant.
Such growth would require the
country to have a total power capacity of 6,495 megawatts or nearly
three times more than the current capacity, leaving a reserve margin of
36 per cent to serve as contingency energy.
The
ministry expects geothermal power to grow threefold to 1,728 megawatts
in the next three years, hydropower (1,039 megawatts), wind (735
megawatts) and 969 megawatts from diesel generators.
Imports,
largely hydropower from Ethiopia, would comprise 1,000 megawatts while
coal will take up 620 megawatts according to the plan.
The
cheaper power sources will serve as base load to meet the country’s
minimum demand at any given time, pushing out expensive thermal sources
in the reserve margin.
Any economy is required to have
surplus power capacity up to a given level, beyond which it translates
to higher power bills as consumers are often charged for idle power
plants.
The reserve energy capacity serves to plug
supply shortfalls whenever several plants are taken off the national
grid during maintenance or unforeseen breakdowns.
The
government’s power demand growth projection has sparked a fierce debate
on where this huge demand will come from in the three years to 2020.
To put it into context, Kenya has only managed to consume a maximum of 1,620 megawatts at any given time.
The
narrative that the economy will now transform rapidly to demand three
times more power in the next three years is seen to lack substance.
“It
does not take much effort to notice the gap between what is on paper
and the economic reality,” Hindpal Jabbal, a former chairman of the
Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) said, citing sluggish pace of
activity.
Kenya’s manufacturing scene, the biggest user
of electricity, has recently experienced mixed fortunes with some
firms, like tyre maker Sameer, battery maker Eveready and Cadbury,
exiting factory operations.
On the flipside, French
multinational Peugeot and German Volkswagen have since opened assembly
plants in Kenya, raising electricity demand.
Kenya’s
manufacturing sector has stagnated at an average of 10 per cent over the
past 10 years, despite government’s efforts to revamp it like reducing
power costs.
Several factories that shut operations had cited high cost of doing business.
Demand
from domestic consumers is still low despite connections to power
having grown fivefold in the past seven years to 5.8 million customers
currently.
Electricity retailer Kenya Power has also more recently been keen on expanding street lighting programme across the country.
Energy Principal Secretary Joseph Njoroge says that investors in Kenya are enjoying the lowest power costs in East Africa.
The
ministry records indicate that the average tariff for industrialists is
Sh14.22 (13.8 US cents) per kilowatt hour (kWh), having dropped from
Sh18.80 per unit in 2014.
“At 13.8 US cents per kWh,
Kenya’s industrial end user tariff is lower compared to other countries
in the region more so Rwanda (15.5 US¢/kWh), Tanzania (17.6US¢/kWh),
Uganda (20.7 US¢/kWh), Nigeria (15.6 US¢/kWh) and Ghana (15.5 US¢/kWh),”
said Mr Njoroge.
“It is, however, higher than that of
Egypt (3.8US¢/kWh), Zambia (6.0 US¢/kWh), Ethiopia (6.7 US¢/kWh) and
South Africa (8.47 US¢/kWh),” he added.
In 2013, the
Jubilee Government announced an ambitious plan to produce additional
5,000 megawatts of electricity in a period of 40 months ending this
year.
This saw economists warn that the economy would
end up with a more-than required surplus and saddle consumers with a
Sh61 billion idle capacity charges burden every year.
They
reckoned that Kenya lacks the capacity to absorb such massive amounts
of electricity given the sluggish rate of economic growth, delays in
rolling out Vision 2030 projects and a poorly performing manufacturing
sector.
“The power plants will remain totally redundant
for several years, attracting almost $600 million (Sh61 billion) per
annum in idle capacity charges,” Mr Jabbal said in a 2014 report titled
Review of Kenya’s Power Sector (1998-2013) and Its Future (2013-2023).
Energy
ministry officials last year seemed to heed to this advice and dropped
plans to construct a 700-megawatt (MW) natural gas power plant near
Mombasa to avoid excess supply.
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