A few days to the July 18 launch of the Lake Turkana Wind Power
plant by President Uhuru Kenyatta, the then UK Secretary of State for
International Development Rory Stewart made a quiet tour of the
multi-billion shilling project that went largely unreported in the local
media.
The tour by Mr Stewart, who was replaced last
week after new British Prime Minister Boris Johnson took over from
Theresa May and named a new cabinet, came just a few weeks after US
Ambassador to Kenya Kyle McCarter had raised eyebrows after sending out a
series of tweets in support of the massive Lamu coal project by Amu
Power, at a time when the National Environment Tribunal (NET) was set to
issue a ruling on its legality.
Western powers are
leading an emerging scramble for Kenya’s multi-billion shilling energy
generation, transmission and distribution projects under an ambitious
plan aimed at connecting all homes to electricity by 2022.
Kenya
has opened the door for international investors and financiers to tap
into business opportunities that come with the Jubilee administration’s
goal of connecting every household to electricity through expansion of
the power grid and promoting off-grid sources such as solar plants.
Renewable energy
On the day before the Lake Turkana Wind Project (LTWP) launch,
the European Investment Bank held a press conference in Nairobi during
which it announced its ‘support for renewable energy projects’ in the
country.
The EU Ambassador Stefano Dejak was present at the media briefing.
Mr
McCarter’s strong defence of the proposed Lamu coal plant, Mr Stewart’s
visit to LTWP and the European Union’s involvement have all shone a
spotlight on the special interest that Western powers are taking in
Kenya’s multibillion-shilling energy deals.
The
investment projects presented by the plan to achieve universal access to
electricity from 75 per cent as at last year are estimated at $14.8
billion (Sh1.54 trillion), under the Electricity Sector Investment
Prospectus (2018-2022).
European and American firms,
which have in the past decade lost to Chinese contractors on major
infrastructure deals, already control significant stakes in the Sh71
billion LTWP wind farm in Marsabit and the Menengai Geothermal Power
Station (under construction), projects which have catapulted the country
to being among leading producers of renewable energy in Africa.
Some
of the projects identified by the Ministry of Energy as
"investment-ready" include geothermal power generation plants at
Menengai which have a projected capacity of 460 megawatts (MW), Suswa 1
(150 MW) and Baringo Silali (200 MW).
Others are a
hydropower plant at Grand Falls along Tana River, LPG storage and
bottling facility in Nairobi as well as a power transmission line
between Kitui and Lamu for the controversial coal plant whose
construction has been suspended.
Public participation
The
NET in June ruled in favour of environmentalists who had in October
2016 raised climate change and health concerns as well as lack of
nationwide public participation in their opposition to the proposed
construction of the Sh200 billion coal-fired plant.
US conglomerate General Electric as well as Chinese investors are backing the Amu Power project.
Mr
McCarter, US President Donald Trump’s appointee in Kenya, appeared to
hint at his country’s interest in the controversial 1,050 megawatts
thermal power plant through a series of tweets following the NET ruling.
"Investors
will come," the US envoy said on his official twitter handle which
relays updates from the embassy, adding that coal power costs seven US
cents in Illnois, the State where he served as a senator.. "Coal is the
cleanest, least costly option."
LTWP executive director
Rizwan Fazal in an interview said Mr Stewart’s visit was about
sustainable development projects that mitigate against effects of
climate change.
"It was purely an information visit for both sides to exchange thoughts and ideas on sustainable development," Mr Fazal said.
"And
how, for example, being a successful role model as Lake Turkana wind
power, others want to learn how they can come and participate in
projects that have kind of positive impact on the country, community,
development and climate change."
The 310.25-megawatt
LTWP wind farm, the largest wind farm in Africa, is largely co-owned by
Google of the US, Aldwych International of the UK, KP&P BV Africa of
Netherlands, Norwegian state-owned private equity fund Norfund,
IFU-Danish Development Bank, FinnFund, among other minor shareholders.
Menengai
1 Geothermal Power Station is, on the other hand, owned by
OrpowerTwenty Two, a consortium of Ormat Technologies and Symbion Power
of the US as well as Kenya’s TransCentury-owned Civicon Ltd.
Projects
identified under Kenya’s investment prospectus are geothermal
generation (850 MW), hydropower (1240MW), wind (500MW), transmission
lines of various sizes and an LPG (2,250 million-tonne storage).
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