Summary
- Only 48 percent out of 1.02 million targeted households have been connected to the national electricity grid.
- Kenya Power has so far connected 494,374 under a five-year subsidised electricity project launched in September 2015.
- The plan now in the second phase has largely been implemented through the funding from AfDB with 60 percent of the connected customers done through the banks funding.
- The government has funded about 30 percent and the rest done by funds from the World Bank.
Jubilee administration is set to leave thousands of families in
the dark when its term ends in two years as only 48 percent out of 1.02
million targeted households have been connected to the national
electricity grid.
Kenya Power
, the
utility firm charged with hooking households to the electricity mains,
has so far connected 494,374 under a five-year subsidised electricity
project launched in September 2015.
“Accelerating
access to electricity has been a priority national goal, acknowledging
that electricity supply catalyses socio-economic development,” said
managing director Bernard Ngugi.
“The last mile project
targets to connect a total of 1.02 million customers out of which
494,374 have already been connected. Rural centres transform quite fast
after they are connected to supply.”
The project funded
by the World Bank, the African Development Bank (AfDB) and the Kenyan
government targeted customers situated near transformers and was to be
carried out in three phases.
The plan now in the second phase has largely been implemented
through the funding from AfDB with 60 percent of the connected customers
done through the banks funding. The government has funded about 30
percent and the rest done by funds from the World Bank.
The
project may delay further as AfDB plans to audit the first phase of the
project where some 224,952 customers were hooked to the grid through
its funding.
The lender, which recently blacklisted a
Chinese firm involved in the project last month invited firms to tender
for the provision of audit services for the project, a process that will
subsequently inform support for future Kenya Power projects.
“The
independent development evaluation function of the African Development
Bank Group invites individual consultants to indicate their interest for
the impact evaluation of the Last Mile Connectivity Project in Kenya,”
said the bank in a tender notice.
“The evaluation will focus on the bank-funded Last Mile Connectivity Project approved in 2014 and scheduled to close in 2020.”
Chinese
company Sinotec contracted by Kenya Power for the second phase of Last
Mile Project is said to have misrepresented its experience to meet
qualification requirements for several AfDB-funded projects in what may
have compromised the quality of connections.
No comments :
Post a Comment