Summary
- The scheme that initially targeted to distribute more than three million six-kilogramme cylinders at subsidised rates has had the numbers reduced to less than 200,000 over budget cuts.
- The Treasury began slashing the project whose initial budget was Sh3 billion in the financial year 2016/17 when it was reduced to Sh1 billion.
- In the year starting July when the programme rolls out, the Treasury had allocated Sh370 million but has proposed to reduce the allocation by another Sh130 million
The State has cut the number of cooking gas cylinders under its
subsidy scheme by 84 percent even as the project is set to resume next
month.
The scheme that initially targeted to distribute
more than three million six-kilogramme cylinders at subsidised rates
has had the numbers reduced to less than 200,000 over budget cuts
according to Petroleum Principal Secretary Andrew Kamau.
Mr
Kamau told the Business Daily that the scheme set to resume in late
July will see the suppliers distribute some 60,000 cylinders after the
initial supply of about 100,000 of which just 28,000 are in circulation.
“We
have given it a good start and with the funding that we have, we will
have just about 200,000 distributed. The mission to increase LPG
(liquefied petroleum gas) usage is still possible because we have
stimulated enough private sector interest in the distribution of
affordable LPG using innovative means like the pay-as-you-go models now
in the market,” he said.
The Treasury began slashing
the project whose initial budget was Sh3 billion in the financial year
2016/17 when it was reduced to Sh1 billion. In the year starting July
when the programme rolls out, the Treasury had allocated Sh370 million
but has proposed to reduce the allocation by another Sh130 million
The scheme was stopped by the High Court in 2018 after
contracted manufacturers supplied the government with substandard gas
cylinders, prompting an audit and inspection, which the court ordered to
be done by an independent contractor.
The contractor
is said to have started the inspection last month and is expected to
conclude in mid-July 2018 before the National Oil rolls out the
subsidised cylinder plan.
The flagship project designed
to offer poor homes cheaper cooking gas was also hijacked by a private
sector cartel who saw it as a threat to their LPG monopoly in the market
with reports that some of the cylinders were stolen and rebranded into
different cooking gas brands.
The fraudulent
contractors who supplied 67,251 faulty gas cylinders are still expected
to complete the supply to National Oil Corporation of Kenya under the
inspection of a government-contracted verifier who will check them for
quality compliance to safeguard users from harm.
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