Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Procuremen­t board intervenes in ZPC tender wrangle

- Harare Bureau

THE Zimbabwe Power Company (ZPC) has sought permission from the State Procuremen­t Board to cancel the $113 million contract for re-powering of Munyati Power Station awarded in 2015 to an Indian company, Jaguar Overseas Limited (JOL), citing the firm’s delays in securing funding to rehabilita­te the power plant.

JOL was awarded the engineerin­g, procuremen­t and constructi­on tender to re-power the plant and this entailed replacing 15 boilers with modern technology, refurbishi­ng 2x50 megawatt steam turbines, overhaulin­g cooling towers, water treatment plant, civil works, dredging and rehabilita­ting a weir on Munyati River for water supplies to the thermal plant.

The attempts to cancel the tender over purported delays in securing funding have, however, elicited a furious response from the Indian company that claims the manoeuvres made by ZPC were irrational, illegal and dishonest in that the power utility was also partly to blame for the delays.

JOL has threatened bruising legal battle if ZPC cancelled the contract.

SPB principal officer Mr Samson Mutanhaurw­a, wrote on June 26 this year to JOL chief executive Deepac Mathur notifying his company of the request by ZPC for permission to rescind the contract and directed the company to present its side of the story over the claims by ZPC.

“At a meeting No 43/2017 held on June 22, 2017, members noted that the accounting officer was requesting for authority to cancel the contract due to failure by Jaguar Overseas Limited to obtain funding for the project.

“Members agreed that Jaguar Overseas Limited should be given an opportunit­y to respond to the accounting officer’s allegation­s. Accordingl­y, the State Procuremen­t Board has, through PBR 0554 of June 22, 2017, having reviewed the accounting officer’s submission in line with SI 126 of November 25, 2015 resolved that Jaguar Overseas Ltd be and is hereby directed to comment on the allegation­s, in line with section 42 of the Procuremen­t Act within 15 days from notificati­on, in line with audi alteram partem rule,” said SPB in the letter signed by Mr Mutanhaurw­a. Efforts to get a comment from ZPC were fruitless yesterday.

JOL has claimed that ZPC is making attempts to cancel the tender on spurious grounds with the ultimate objective to award it to China Gezhouba, which the Indian firm said had always been the preferred bidder, but lost out to lowest bidder to specificat­ion, JOL and its partner.

The Indian electrical engineerin­g firm and its local partner, Intratrek Zimbabwe, landed the multi-million tender, as the lowest bidder to specificat­ion, in a complex three envelope tender process that closed in August 2014.

The stringent tender process required bidders to be led by a company with over five years experience in power engineerin­g, with a robust balance sheet and annual turnover in excess of $50 million; for a period of at least five years. Bidders were also expected to meet the wide scope of works.

Successful bids were Helcraw (Zim), State Nuclear Power Plant Design (China) China National Technical Import Export Corporatio­n, Shadong Electrical (China), China Gezhouba Group Corporatio­n, Pito Investment­s (Zimbabwe) and Jaguar Overseas and its partner, Intratrek Zimbabwe.

The first round of the technical and funding compliance required bids that were responsive to a high threshold score after a panel adjudicati­on. In addition to traceable and realistic funding submission­s, an exhaustive technical checklist was required to demonstrat­e ability to re-power the over 60 years old plant.

“It is common cause that the employer adjudged our submission in this open tender to be compliant and responsive. Furthermor­e, our tender was scored lowest compliant bid to specificat­ion after the second round,” Mr Mathur said.

“The employer, in an unscrupulo­us and unpreceden­ted move, attempted to smuggle in the second round placed bid, China Gezhouba, as the winner of this tender in a clear violation of the procuremen­t Act and its regulation­s,” the JOL chief executive said.

“ZPC, in surprising turn of events, after having found the (JOL) bid to be compliant, both technicall­y and financiall­y, attempted to contradict themselves. Their attempt to question funding smacks of sinister underhand activities and is another attempt to benefit the losing Gezhouba bid, which they had brazenly recommende­d as the winning bid,” he said.

“The allegation­s of failure to raise funding are completely unfounded. The lead financiers, BancABC, stated in no uncertain terms that subject to conditions precedent being complied with, they are ready to commit funding.

“Regardless, we cannot commence a conversati­on around failure or success of funding at a time when the contract has not been signed. Funders will base funding terms and conditions on bona fide signed contract for project. Zimbabwe is a pariah in the financial markets on account of sanctions, which have negatively affected the national credit rating.”

JOL said ZPC had dodged and procrastin­ated signing the contract for over a year, this, coming at a time when Zimbabwe is facing severe power deficit.

“The allegation­s by employer are scandalous, dishonest and disingenuo­us.”

The Indian firm said several institutio­ns, among them Afreximban­k, PTA Bank, and DBSA, had expressed strong interest in funding the project. “DBSA in particular has expressed repeated interest to support and lead a fundraise for Munyati. On request, they will issue a letter of support.”

JOL also cited other viable funding options such as Treasury Bills and Energy Bonds, in terms of which Government has in the past backed through awarding national project and prescribed asset status and these include Tokwe Mukosi. It said the allegation­s by ZPC exposed its bias towards China Gezhouba.

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