Kenya Power will commercialise its garage and lease out idle
land in an attempt to shore up its revenues in the wake of dimming
profitability.
Managing director Bernard Ngugi said on
Friday the utility firm expects these avenues will diversify revenue
streams and support electricity sales.
“We have a
transport section and we want to open that as a public garage since it
is idle at the moment. We also want to lease out idle land,” said Mr
Ngugi without giving the estimated monetary potential of these actions.
“The garage sits on huge land and we will liaise with insurers to give
us an opportunity to repair vehicles. Going by the growing numbers of
vehicles on roads, it is a potential business.”
Mr
Ngugi said the garage business will be handled by its subsidiary, Kenya
Power International. The subsidiary was started four years ago as part
of business diversification strategy to create alternative revenue
streams.
Kenya Power will also lease the idle pieces of
land it holds. The firm has six pieces of land in Mombasa, two in
Nakuru, Eldoret (two) and several others in Nyeri and Nairobi.
The
board is also looking at expanding its fibre business that started in
early 2010, helping it to sign five to 20-year lease agreements with
several telecommunications operators.
“The fibre business gives an average of Sh500 million and we
want to incrementally improve on this investment to increase leasing to
the telcos. We still believe it is lucrative business and we have
started injecting in new capital,” added Mr Ngugi.
Kenya
Power had earlier announced that it wanted to grow the fibre network
and provide inter-connection from Kenya to the entire Common Market of
Eastern and Southern Africa.
The diversification strategy comes at a time Kenya Power’s net profit for six months to December 2019 fell 71.8 percent to Sh693 million marking third straight year of dimming performance.
This
was on the back of a 92 percent plunge in net profit to Sh262 million
in the financial year ended June 2019, with rising non-fuel costs being
the key reason for the performance. Kenya Power made an application to
the regulator for an increase in electricity prices by up to a fifth but
the government has been hesitant to approve this.
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