China Daily

China-backed dam project powers Kenya vision for tech city

- By OTIATO OPALI in Nairobi, Kenya otiato@chinadaily.com.cn

Constructi­on of the first phase of a major hydroelect­ric dam in Kenya is nearing the halfway mark, with the Chinese-backed project promising to provide water and power supplies for a technology-driven city taking shape under an ambitious developmen­t plan.

The Thwake Multipurpo­se Dam is being built by China Gezhouba Group Company, or CGGC. It is integral to the plan for Konza Technology City, which the government approved as a developmen­t project in 2008.

Xiong Wentao, CGGC’s project manager for the dam, said the project is a key element of the Kenya Vision 2030 economic developmen­t blueprint for the country. It will provide the water for hydropower generation for Konza, as well as its irrigation needs. The project will also benefit the nearby counties of Kitui, Makueni and Machakos, Xiong said.

“The project will be implemente­d in four phases. Phase one involves the constructi­on of the dam and preliminar­y works for the implementa­tion of the subsequent three phases,” he said.

“Phase two will involve installati­on of a hydropower generation plan. Phase three will see the installati­on of water supply system and phase four the irrigation system. Phase one, which is underway, is currently at 45 percent completion.”

The dam, rising up at the confluence of the Thwake and Athi rivers, is funded by the Kenyan government and the African Developmen­t Bank.

Key enabler

Julius Muia, Kenya’s national treasury principal secretary, said the Thwake project will serve as a key enabler of what he called the government’s Big 4 Agenda, as well as the Vision 2030 blueprint.

“This project is poised to benefit around 3 million rural inhabitant­s of the three counties of Makueni, Kitui and parts of Machakos as well as the envisioned Konza technopoli­s,” Muia said.

Muia said internship programs for students would aid in skills transfer in work associated with the dam’s constructi­on.

Xiong said the main features of the project will include a 77-meter-high dam wall and the provision of 34,600 cubic meters of water. With this capacity, some 40,000 hectares can be irrigated in Makueni and Kitui counties.

Piped water will be supplied to Konza and adjacent towns, said Xiong, adding that the project will generate 23 megawatts of hydropower.

“Once completed, it will greatly relieve the lack of electricit­y and water for domestic purposes and the irrigation needs of over 3 million people in the Konza technopoli­s, Kitui, Makueni and Machakos counties,” he said.

CGGC is also working on a project will that will improve water supply and sanitation services for the national capital Nairobi, Xiong said. For this goal, the company is building water collector tunnels.

“Once completed, it will provide a clear water resource to Nairobi. The main tunnel of the project is 11.7 kilometers long and 3 meters in diameter,” said Xiong, adding that nothing of that scale has been attempted in Africa before.

He said the company aimed to carry out more such projects in Africa and contribute to the continent’s sustainabl­e developmen­t.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Kenyan officials assess progress on the constructi­on of the Thwake dam.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Kenyan officials assess progress on the constructi­on of the Thwake dam.

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