TANZANIA AND RWANDA ARE THE ONLY COUNTRIES WITH ELECTRICITY DEFICIT IN EA AS AT NOW.

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EA states stuck with excess power after building billion-dollar plants

Delays in implementing transmission lines could lead to financial losses.






IN SUMMARY

While investments in power generation projects have significantly increased their installed capacity, they have also resulted in what could become a paradox.

Currently, electricity surplus in the region stands at 878MW, with only Tanzania and Rwanda experiencing a deficit.

The surplus power is projected to hit 3,430MW by 2025.


Over the past decade, countries in East Africa have made multibillion-dollar investments in power generation, to connect more consumers to the grid and spur industrial as well as economic growth.

But while investments in power generation projects in Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania and Rwanda have significantly increased their installed capacity, they have also resulted in what could become a paradox — excess capacity that could see countries suffer financial losses.

Currently, electricity surplus in the region stands at 878MW, with only Tanzania and Rwanda experiencing a deficit.

The surplus power is projected to hit 3,430MW by 2025.

Apart from national priorities, the investments in generation were driven by the understanding that the region will be a single power market interconnected through the Eastern Africa Power Pool (EAPP).

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The EAPP would farther connect with the Southern and West African markets, effectively transforming Africa into an integrated power trade market.

Financial losses

But delays in implementing transmission lines have led to fears that countries could suffer financial losses with electricity generation plants that cannot produce to full capacity.

Key projects that were expected to anchor electricity trade, particularly the Ethiopia-Kenya-Tanzania high-voltage lines, are behind schedule, which has denied countries with excess capacity the opportunity to trade in power and those with deficits to bridge the gap.

An analysis by the US government-led Power Africa Initiative shows that Ethiopia has the potential to earn over $200 million in power exports to Tanzania over the next four years.

Tanzania on its part could save up to $500 million by substituting its expensive emergency power with cheap imported electricity.

The Uganda-Rwanda line, the study notes, would save Rwanda $1.3 million to $2 million per month — money being spent on diesel generation — in 2019-2020. The savings represent about 15 per cent of the Rwandan utility’s monthly spend on energy.

Experts say that failure to accelerate regional interconnection to facilitate the power trade puts countries with excess power in a precarious situation due to charges that come with idle capacity.

“It is unfortunate that consumers are unable to utilise all the electricity produced, because sectors like manufacturing have not expanded in tandem with generation,” said Lamarck Oyath, managing director of renewable solutions firm Lartech Africa.

In Kenya, for example, the World Bank declined to guarantee the 310MW Lake Turkana Wind Power (LTWP) due to the country’s weak grid, delays in completing the transmission line to evacuate the power, and concerns over the country’s ability to absorb all the power.

Now, LTWP has admitted that the windfarm in Turkana County in the north cannot generate optimally, with maximum generation capacity set at 65 per cent, yet Kenyan taxpayers had to pay a fine of $52.5 million after the government failed to complete the transmission line.

Kenya Power has also signed a power purchase agreement with LTWP and other generators that give them the comfort of recouping their investment despite the idle capacity.

Challenge

The challenge of surplus electricity has prompted Power Africa Initiative to mobilise at least $3 billion to help finance priority transmission lines to facilitate electricity trade in Africa.

“Unused power generation facilities result in lost opportunities and lost revenues for governments,” notes the Power Africa Transmission Report.

East Africa’s peak supply that stood at about 7,800MW last year and is expected to grow to about 17,800MW by 2025, with peak demand of about 7,000MW growing to about 14,400MW.

Uganda is the latest country to experience excess capacity following the commissioning of the 183MW Isimba hydropower dam, which pushed the country’s power generation capacity to 1,167MW, way above a peak demand of about 600MW.

In Kenya, power generation capacity stands at 2,250MW, against a demand of 1,640MW while in Ethiopia, the installed capacity stands at 4,206MW against a demand of 3,700MW.

Ethiopia and Kenya will have excess capacity, reaching as high as 1,900MW for Addis, when ongoing projects start generation.

Tanzania and Rwanda, which are currently experiencing a deficit of 485MW and 13MW respectively, will also have peak surplus when ongoing projects come on-stream.



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"An analysis by the US government-led Power Africa Initiative shows that Ethiopia has the potential to earn over $200 million in power exports to Tanzania over the next four years."

Rubbish we gonna have surplus electricity in the next 3 years, update your pumpkin
 
When you look at those numbers for all EA countries, you can't help but hide in shame.

South Africa alone produces over 50,000 MW and that is still not enough for them, yet here with less than 2000 mw we're talking of surplus.

When regional dictators and their minions and bootlickers cc Mkikuyu- Akili timamu realize that East Africa needs one common market to grow, it will be a beautiful day.
In this day and age, no serious money will be poured into manufacturing unless there is a big local market.
Also, local manufacturers will not be able to scale to compete in the world if they can't even sell to the regional market.

If EU failed to smell the coffee all those years ago and come together economically, modern China would have swallowed them whole one by one.
 
But as at today you still have deficit.
Tanzania and Rwanda, which are currently experiencing a deficit of 485MW and 13MW respectively, will also have peak surplus when ongoing projects come on-stream.
This shortage is for short run as something is currently happening on the ground.

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I'm sure you haven't read the title to completion, kusoma ilikufanyia nini brother RREDEEMER?
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Nakumbuka kipindi nimetembelea Olkaria geothermal plants, mtaalam mmoja alisema umeme unaozalishwa Kenya ni mwingi sana ukilinganisha na mahitaji. Ukija Tanzania tuna uhitaji kuliko generation capacity. Kwa kweli hapa inabidi tuendeleze hizi juhudi za kuunganisha backbones zetu.
 
Yaweza kua habari ya kale sana,TZ tunazaidi ya 240MW Hatuzitumii ni ziada...
Ila zinaweza tosha kuendesha treni mwezi November 2019...tuko well informed sio kutuletea kingereza kingi chenye habar za zamani...


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Its about priorities, why build a connecting line now(usually very expensive) while you can pour that money in a hyro power plant?
TZ has uranium, many rivers and natural gas.. After years of under investment in power should they develop their own power stations or use their money to invest in a line for importing power?
The line will definately come but JPM has better use for the scarse resources for now
 
I don't deal with mere claims without evidence, leta evidence at I mko na excess of 240MW
Yaweza kua habari ya kale sana,TZ tunazaidi ya 240MW Hatuzitumii ni ziada...
Ila zinaweza tosha kuendesha treni mwezi November 2019...tuko well informed sio kutuletea kingereza kingi chenye habar za zamani...


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Kennedy0000......South africa mining industry consumes approximately 25% of SA electricity supply.....mining is one of the most energy-intensive industries in the world because of the huge amount of work,heat and processing required to produce metals....south africa has all sought of minerals from gold,diamonds,platinum,coal and iron ores...mining is huge sector in SA economy..i think here in EA we don't such huge amounts of power...
 
East africa region as a whole is really trying when it comes to infrastructure projects meant to jump start industrial revolution,the missing link has been lack of alignment and co ordination by member states for them to be economically viable,we tend to view each other with suspicion and jealousy...the tragedy of africa,the curse that has condemned africans to poverty..for example if kenya,Tz and ethiopia built their SGR from dar through nairobi to addis ababa,the economic impact would have been immence,the cost of construction would have been low due to economies of scale,but because we can't see beyond our noses and plagued with jealousy,we are building new rail lines parallel to existing rail lines,with the same concept our colonial masters had...which was to transport raw materials from the interior of africa to the coast for shipment to overseas for value addition by european countries..instead of aligning our infrastructure to spur trade among our people,we are busy building rails from coast to interior to facilitate cheap imports from china....shithole africa
 
You've nailed it son

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Good summary,
Back to work.
 
surplus from where?
that freaking SG - a white elephant waiting to hit shiite?

what a pipedream!!
 

You can build all the stations, but as long as the consumption market remains small, all you'll get is a surplus.
 

75% of 50,000 is still a lot compared to what we have here in East Africa.
And Egypt with not as much minerals as South Africa is not far behind.

Manufacturing eats up a lot of energy. Plus when the spending power of the people is high, household electricity consumption is also very high.
 
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