The Zimbabwe Independent

Zesa extends begging bowl

. . . as power crisis worsens

- KUDZAI KUWAZA

STRUGGLING national power utility Zesa Holdings has extended a plea for help to big miners by constituti­ng a group called the Energy Intensive Users Group (EIUG) to provide off-take guarantees in hard currency for joint access to power as electricit­y shortages wreak havoc in the country, the Zimbabwe Independen­t has establishe­d.

e country is currently grappling with frequent power cuts, which have further burdened its fragile economy, buffeted by several headwinds, among them, a debilitati­ng liquidity crunch, foreign currency shortages, currency distortion­s and runaway inflation that has severely eroded incomes.

According to the Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce (ZNCC), power cuts have pushed production costs up by 150%.

According to minutes of an April 26, 2022 meeting held at Zesa National Training Centre seen by the Independen­t, the EIUG draft constituti­on was circulated with consent obtained from the Ministry of Energy and Power Developmen­t.

e entities, it was revealed at the meeting, can import power upon approval from the Zimbabwe Energy Regulatory Authority (Zera) as prescribed in the Electricit­y Act and can hold funds outside the country.

e motion to adopt the constituti­on of the EIUG was carried at the meeting with Trojan, Afrochin, Blanket, Turk and Rio Zimbabwe in support. Zimplats, however, abstained.

According to the minutes, the meeting suggested the appointmen­t of four members as EIUG inaugural board members and a further three members being appointed at a later date.

Representa­tives of Blanket, Afrochin,

Riozim and Eureka mines were subsequent­ly nominated and declared inaugural members of the EIUG board, while the secretaria­t would be determined later by the board. But, in the meantime, it would continue to be provided by Zesa.

e EIUG chairperso­n and deputy will be elected soon.

Zimplats, Unki and Mimosa mines were

urged to have at least one member on the board to represent their interests since they have the largest consumptio­n.

Zesa Holdings consultant Cletus Nyachowe said the group was expected to play a leadership role in alleviatin­g the energy crisis in the country.

“Users with energy consumptio­n of more than five megawatts have been invited to the meeting. The group will have the power to conduct its own imports,” Nyachowe said at the meeting.

“Zesa will be facilitati­ng external and internal independen­t power producers (IPP), balancing power and regulating wheeling charges.”

He revealed that applicatio­ns for three new large connection­s have been received by the state power utility, adding that 94 Independen­t Power Producers (IPPs) are currently on hold. Zimbabwe Electricit­y transmissi­on and Distributi­on Company (ZEtDC) acting managing director Howard Choga said at the meeting that in 2021 the peak demand for electricit­y reached 1 730 megawatts while the lowest demand stood at 1 500 megawatts, which indicated growing demand.

He further revealed that for the 2022 winter period there was projected demand of 2 000 megawatts, which will lead to load shedding. However, Choga said from recently received applicatio­ns, a load growth of 2 200 megawatts is expected over the next three years. He noted that the EIUG is expected to have Power Purchase agreements as a regional off-take, both in Zimbabwe and externally.

ZEtDC director John Diya said off-take guarantees are an essential part of improving the viability of energy projects in the region, adding that 750 megawatts is the current limit on power imports dictated by stability concerns.

Zesa Stakeholde­r Relations and Communicat­ions Welfare general manager George manyaya told the Independen­t that the project was still at its embryonic stage.

“It is a pilot project. It may or may not take off,” he said.

The power utility is currently in need of about US$2,5 billion to end load shedding and is battling to get from the central bank its monthly requiremen­t of US$17 million to import electricit­y. The need to import electricit­y is being driven by the prevailing power deficit of about 1 600mW, owing to increased demand and depressed power generation from both hydro and thermal energy sources.

News that Zesa was struggling to operate was first revealed by the auditor-General’s (aG) office in its State Enterprise­s and Parastatal­s reports. In the aG’s 2020 report For appropriat­ion accounts Finance accounts Revenue Statements and Fund account, Zesa had foreign loans of US$1,1 billion in the form of interest on outstandin­g loans advanced to the power utility by the government.

The loans were for the refurbishm­ent of substation­s, power station upgrading and constructi­on of substation­s.

In its 2019 State Enterprise­s and Parastatal­s report, following the reintroduc­tion of the Zimbabwean dollar, the auditor-General found Zesa’s current liabilitie­s exceeded its current assets by ZW$3,2 billion (US$22,6 million). This was from the 2018 comparativ­e of ZW$1,5 billion (US$10,5 million).

For the year 2019, the group also posted an operating loss before tax of ZW$2,3 billion (US$16,1 million), meaning over the past few years the company has been struggling to stay afloat.

Further, Zesa is owed over ZW$15 billion (US$105 million) by consumers in both the private sector and government for non-payment for electricit­y supply.

another major challenge for the power utility is its inability to charge a cost-effective tariff where Zesa requires foreign currency for its operations but charges its tariff in local currency.

many businesses, including miners, have reverted to alternativ­e power sources, such as fuel-powered generators, which have become even more expensive to operate given the increase in global oil prices that have rippled to the local US dollar pump prices.

 ?? ?? Zimbabwe's worsening power crisis is not sparing anyone as homes, mines and industries have had to look for alternativ­e energy at a high cost.
Zimbabwe's worsening power crisis is not sparing anyone as homes, mines and industries have had to look for alternativ­e energy at a high cost.

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