Kenya’s maximum demand for electricity grew the fastest in three years, fuelled by increased connections.
Data
from electricity distributor Kenya Power shows that the peak demand —
maximum power ever consumed — shot to 1,710 megawatts in the year
ending June 30, a 7.8 per cent rise from 1,586 megawatts a year earlier.
This
is the fastest demand growth from a 4.8 per cent rise in the 2015/16
year and three per cent a year earlier. It came as customers connected
to the national grid grew to 6.2 million currently, from one million in
2010, a six-fold jump over the seven-year period.
The
utility firm has been riding on increased sales to grow its bottom line
which, however, remained flat at Sh7.2 billion, dimmed by higher
operating and maintenance costs on its expanded distribution network.
State-owned
Kenya Power has since last year been connecting homes at subsidised
costs of Sh15,000 down from Sh35,000 as part of the government’s
strategy to light up more homes.
Households and
businesses consumed 5.6 billion kilowatt hours (kWh) of electricity in
the eight months to August, up from 5.1 billion units in a similar
period last year, according to Kenya National Bureau of Statistics.
Kenya’s
total power capacity rose marginally to 2,370 megawatts in the year
ending June, from 2,341 megawatts a year earlier and 1,885 megawatts in
2014.
This came after electricity producer KenGen expanded its capacity including additional 10 megawatts of geothermal energy.
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