It has
been established that some of the power blackouts Uganda has been
experiencing are because of construction flaws at Uganda Electricity
Transmission Company Limited (UETCL) substations.
A UETCL memo seen by Daily Monitor, indicates that the government owned power transmission company recently discovered faults at its substations partly attributed to shoddy works by contractors.
A UETCL memo seen by Daily Monitor, indicates that the government owned power transmission company recently discovered faults at its substations partly attributed to shoddy works by contractors.
“Recently during a
maintenance activity at Namanve, we noticed that the mechanical
protection and signals important for monitoring the transformer were all
left out by a simple looping wire that was not added by the contractor.
This was not the case with the other two transformers that are
similar,” Mr Patrick Kawuki, the UETCL principal protection engineer,
wrote in a July 27 memo, noting the Isimba transmission line and
associated protection at Bujagali and Isimba were incomplete, which
caused a nationwide blackout.
The memo also indicated the contractor had since been recalled to correct the anomalies.
The
132 kilovott Isimba dam transmission line, funded by a loan from Exim
Bank, was contracted to China International Water & Electric
Corporation (CWE).
Mr Kawuki also revealed faults at the recently commissioned Nkenda-Hoima transmission line.
“Nkende-Hoima
has issues with pole discrepancy at Nkenda, line automatic re-closure,
swapping of differential links for the two lines 1 and 2,” he said.
Re-closure, according to online sources, means the establishment
of an interrupted electrical circuit by the closing of a switch or
circuit breaker.
In addition, Mr Kawuki revealed that the differential protection for the Fortportal-Hoima line is not stable.
The responsibility to fix the flaws lie with government after the contractor has officially handed over a project.
This
means that in addition to the loan repayment obligation, government
uses tax payers’ money or money recovered through power tariffs to fix
such issues.
Mr Kawuki cautioned that installations and other projects should be thoroughly checked instead of rushing into completion.
Mr
Valentine Katabira, the UETCL deputy chief executive officer, in an
earlier interview, said they would undertake a system-wide feasibility
study on the power system to explore how they can improve reliability as
the transmission backbone expands.
UETCL between 2017
and 2019, added to the transmission network 1,263 kilometres of network
length bringing the total length to 2,890 kilometres.
Power blackouts
Uganda has had nationwide or partial power blackouts since the onset of the Covid-19 induced lockdown in April.
Uganda has had nationwide or partial power blackouts since the onset of the Covid-19 induced lockdown in April.
In April, the blackout was attributed to a moving Island that reportedly blocked the turbines at the Jinja complex.
In May, there was a power blackout in both Kenya and Uganda for a few hours.
On
June 21, there was a partial power blackout, which Electricity
Regulatory Authority said resulted from a fault from a high voltage line
from Kiira Power Station.
This was just before the
nationwide black out on July 19, which South African company Eskom,
nearing its end of concession in 2023, pegged to a bucket carrier making
contact with a high voltage line causing a fault at the 132 kilovott
Nalubaale Power Substation.
Eskom has in the past been
accused by members of natural resources committee in Parliament of
failure to maintain the 66-year-old Nalubaale Dam.
However, Ms Thozama Gangi, the Eskom’s executive director, has previously said the two issues are not related.
Cost of blackouts
Shares surrendered
Depending on which stage of production one is at, electricity blackouts cost manufacturers a lot.
Shares surrendered
Depending on which stage of production one is at, electricity blackouts cost manufacturers a lot.
If you are lucky, only your time will be wasted as you reignite the machines that work efficiently at certain temperatures.
“If the produce is already in the system and power goes off, at times you will have waste.
When
you have no power and no other alternative, it is a cost because you
have to send away workers and you lose material,” Mr Jim Kabeho, the
chairperson of Uganda Sugar Manufacturers’ Association explained the
cost of power outages and blackouts to manufacturers.
Mr
Selestino Babungi, the Umeme managing director, said that based on last
year’s Shs1.9 trillion in annual power sales as a sector, they lose
about Shs226m for each hour of a blackout.
ERA said it
was engaging licensees to improve conditional monitoring to ensure that
maintenance activities are done before they escalate to outages or
blackouts.
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