Kenya has increased its electricity imports from Uganda by 67 per cent on the back of a 50 per cent tariff reduction.
According
to Business Daily, a Nairobi based newspaper, Kenya is importing more
power because Uganda reduced the tariff cost from Shs787.3 to Shs501.
“The
Energy ministry attributes the sharp growth to a 50 per cent tariff cut
that Uganda offered Kenya from June. The Muhoroni generator which
largely supplies the region is Shs1,252.6 per unit compared to Uganda’s
which was Shs787.3 per unit before June and is now Shs501 per unit,” the
Business Daily quoted Kenya’s Energy Cabinet Secretary Charles Keter.
Mr
Keter also revealed that the tariff is expected to reduce further to
Shs357.8 at the end of October, adding that this, being hydro power:
“Gives us [Kenya] a lot of stability in the region even as demand
continues to rise.”
Uganda, through, Uganda Electricity
Transmission Company Limited (UETCL), which is in charge of bulk
electricity supplies, imports and exports power to different East
African countries including Kenya, which mainly requests for support to
its western grid.
Kenya’s western region is
periodically affected by lack of stable supply from base-load sources
such as hydro and geothermal due to lack of a transmission line from
Olkaria where the country generates half of its electricity.
Mr Valentine Katabira, the UETCL deputy chief executive officer,
confirmed Uganda has been reducing the cost of electricity it exports
to Kenya because of a reduction in generation costs.
“The
high tariff we were having with Kenya before was based mostly on
thermal power because you had Electromaxx and Jacobsen. The minute you
are running expensive plants, the tariffs are also high,” he said
adding: “We were supposed to have gone directly to Shs357.8 but because
Isimba Dam had not yet come online, we reduced to Shs501.”
UETCL
also renegotiated the power purchase agreement with Kenya as a demand
increasing strategy amid a growing generation surplus.
Uganda currently has a generation capacity of above 1,200 megawatts but consumption stands at 650 MW at peak demand.
According to Business Daily, Kenya bought 153.06 gigawatt hours of electricity from Uganda between January to August 2019.
However,
Electricity Regulatory Authority (ERA), whose mandate is to determine
the price of electricity, said the cost of electricity exports even when
reduced are still higher than what Ugandans pay.
“When
Uganda sells to Tanzania it is at a wholesale price. When Umeme sells
to you as a user, it is a retail price. However, if you compare the
amount of money at which we sell to Kenya Power and Lighting Company and
Umeme, Umeme’s is cheaper,” Mr Julius Wandera, the ERA communication
manager, said adding power sales generated from exports help subsidise
the cost of electricity Ugandans pay.
Comparisons and regional plans
Uganda power cheaper:
Umeme’s bulk supply tariff, which is the cost at which UETCL sells power to Umeme, according to figures from ERA is 6.8 cents (Shs252.2) compared to Kenya’s Shs501 per unit.
Umeme’s bulk supply tariff, which is the cost at which UETCL sells power to Umeme, according to figures from ERA is 6.8 cents (Shs252.2) compared to Kenya’s Shs501 per unit.
Bulk supply tariff recovers
the cost of generation and transmission.
Uganda exports power to Kenya,
Tanzania, Rwanda and DR Congo.
East African Power Pool:
To create demand for the excess power in East Africa, governments from the region are creating a transmission network linking them into a power pool.
To create demand for the excess power in East Africa, governments from the region are creating a transmission network linking them into a power pool.
It is from the pool that different countries
will sell power to each other, which explains Uganda’s competitive
strategy by reducing the cost of power.
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