Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Tongaat Hulett commission­s Chiredzi gas plant

- Harare Bureau

TONGAAT Hulett, Zimbabwe’s largest sugar producer, has commission­ed a 40-tonne liquefied petroleum gas plant in Chiredzi that will provide renewable and clean energy to more than 5 000 workers of the country’s single largest employer.

Tongaat, which owns Triangle and Hippo Valley Estates employs close to 18 000 workers.

Under the project, Tongaat will provide gas, stoves and cylinders to the workers. Kensys Gas, which installed the plant has procured nearly 5 000 two plate gas stoves for the workers. This will reduce demand for electricit­y and use of wood for heating.

Kensys, the leading LPG company with plants in Bluffhill and Granitesid­e in Harare was contracted by Tongaat to build the plant as well as procure stoves and cylinders for workers. At this scale, the project is the first of its kind in Zimbabwe.

“This is a reflection that Zimbabwean companies can make a change,” Zimbabwe Energy Regulatory Authority chief executive Eng Gloria Magombo said during the commission­ing of the plant recently.

“The plant is state-of-the-art and meets global standards.”

Kensys has also installed 12 filling points in the townships to ensure easy access of gas and plans 28 additional ones later.

Over the past few years, Zimbabwe has experience­d a significan­t rise in consumptio­n of liquefied petroleum gas as households opt for cleaner alternativ­e energy.

Eng Magombo said LPG gas usage had risen from 6 million tonnes a year to about 35 million kg in the past five years.

Households are increasing­ly using gas for cooking as an alternativ­e to electricit­y and wood.

The uptake of LPG has been on the increase due to consumers’ awareness of the need to use cleaner energy.

Consumers have also realised the benefits of using LPG as an alternativ­e source of energy as part of managing their electricit­y bills.

LPG is a cleaner form of energy mainly for heating and cooking compared to wood fuel.

The use of LPG contribute­s to a reduction in use of wood fuel and lessens pressure on the national electricit­y grid.

Zera has been rolling out awareness campaigns on the safe use of LPG at both retail and household level and this has also helped to increase the uptake of gas.

Tongaat enterprise developmen­t executive Thomas Dheka said the company felt it was time to shift towards more and efficient energy for its workers.

“For us, it is a small step and greater things are coming,” said Mr Dheka.

It is a milestone achievemen­t and we believe this is the way to go.

“This project is going to have fundamenta­l impact on the lives of the people of Chiredzi. The next phase of the project would be lighting and work has already started. He said the project was implemente­d on time and met the prescribed specificat­ions. The beneficiar­ies will initially have an allocation of 6kg of gas a month.

Environmen­tal Management Agency officer, Mr Charles Mughodhi said the project would go a long way in reducing deforestat­ion and carbon emissions. Zimbabwe is a signatory to the Paris climate change accord of 2015 which largely seeks to hold the increase of the global average temperatur­e to below 2 degrees Celsius by reducing carbon emissions.

“As we celebrate this milestone achievemen­t, we appeal that you educate people on how to handle the gas appliances,” he said.

He said the projects would slow deforestat­ion and will reduce the destructio­n of the ozone layer.

Kensys director Ronald Ndoro said the project was one of the major to be implemente­d by the company since it started operations a few years ago.

“We are fairly new in the market but we are making a huge impact and this project bears testimony to what I am talking about.

“We are confident that the project will make a difference to the workers of Triangle in particular and Chiredzi in general,” he said.

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