A view of the 600 megawatts Karuma Hydroelectric Power project. Uganda
will get an extra loan from China Exim for increasing the number of
domestic customers connected to the national power grid. PHOTO | MORGAN
MBABAZI | NATION
With Uganda scheduled to complete Karuma and Isimba hydropower
dams by the end of 2018, the government alongside China Export Import
Bank (China Exim) are now working towards increasing the number of
electricity consumers.
The government will get an extra
loan from China Exim for increasing the number of domestic customers
connected to the national power grid.
Uganda had
borrowed $1.9 billion from the Chinese lender to construct Karuma and
Isimba dams, with the understanding that money to repay the loans will
come from electricity tariffs.
Currently, the
government cannot collect this money, since there are no consumers for
the electricity from the two dams. Once completed, the two dams will add
an extra 786 megawatts onto the national grid.
The
Cabinet has now decided to borrow Ush782.2 billion ($212.7 million) from
China Exim in an order to ensure that these two dams do not become
white elephants, once they are completed.
According to
Uganda Electricity Regulatory Authority (ERA) spokesperson Julius
Wandera, current electricity generation capacity stands at 927MW, while
consumption is estimated at less than 600MW.
This means that even before completion of the two mega dams,
Uganda has a surplus. This presents problems for policy makers in Uganda
and their lenders in China, especially since electricity consumption
hasn’t been growing for years.
Increased demand
Information
from the Uganda Electricity Generation Company shows that electricity
demand, which had been growing at rate of 10 per cent per year, peaked
in 2013, when it reached the 500MW mark with only about 12 per cent of
the population connected.
Yet Uganda can’t afford the
possibility of these two dams becoming white elephants, as the country
has to start paying back the debt to China Exim soon after completion of
the Isimba in August and Karuma in December.
To pay back the two loans and the more than 2 per cent interest, Uganda is expected to sell electricity from the two dams.
The
20-year repayment period of the loans which were approved around the
same time in March 2015, means that Uganda does not not have the luxury
of growing electricity demand over time.
In fact, the
five-year grace period is coming to an end, and Simon Kasyate, the
spokesperson of the Electricity Generation Company says repayment of the
loans will start once the dams are completed.
Rural focus
This means that Uganda will just have 15 years within which to pay back the two loans.
Yet,
as the ongoing negotiations to reduce Bujagali’s tariff have shown,
Uganda’s electricity suppliers struggle to pay back loans with short
repayment periods, as this usually translates into an unaffordable
tariff for the 1.2 million consumers that pay for the service.
With
this in mind, Frank Tumwebaze the Minister of Information announced
that the Cabinet had decided to increase the number of people consuming
electricity. To do this, Uganda will borrow $212.7 million (Ush782.2
billion) from China Exim.
“Cabinet has approved the
proposal to borrow from Export Import Bank of China for the project,
bridging the demand and supply gap through the accelerated rural
electrification programme,” said the statement from Mr Tumwebaze.
Mr Wandera argues that the initiative will increase the number of people connected to the grid.
To
get an electricity connection, Mr Wandera says one has to at least
spend Ush90,000 ($24.2), and if a single pole is necessary, the amount
increases to Ush330,000 ($88.7) putting it beyond the reach of the
average household in Uganda’s rural areas.
But initiatives to increase connectivity of rural consumers have been tried before, without much impact.
In
2012, after the donor community stopped, aiding the subsidisation of
electricity consumption in Uganda, money was channelled to connecting
rural consumers.
Aid project
The
World Bank, the European Union and the German government signed a deal
with Uganda and together they invested $22.3 million (Ush82 billion) in a
grid-based output-based aid project.
With this money the Rural Electrification Agency, connected over 100,000 households between 2012 and 2017.
The
connection of new customers, however, has not had much of an impact on
demand, suggesting that failure to consume a lot more electricity has
more to do with the expensive tariffs rather than the connection fees.
Until 2012, the government had been subsidising electricity tariffs, but Cabinet took a decision to drop this practice in 2012.
The
argument by Cabinet then was that the $200 million that government was
losing annually, would be better utilised, if it was invested in
construction of more hydopower dams.
Government is now
attempting to walk back this 2012 policy, by making concessions to the
owners and financiers of Bujagali hydroelectric, so that the tariffs
from this power station can be reduced from the current 11 US cents to 5
US cents.
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