Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Alarm over potential rise in energy costs

- Nelson Gahadza

Businesses are increasing­ly getting worried about the potential rise in energy expenses as the country faces crippling power shortages going into the year and some will take drastic measures that include staff rationalis­ation, reduced production and rising costs of products.

Zimbabwe’s prolonged power crisis is set to worsen after the Zambezi River Authority ( ZRA) this week cut the amount of water allocated to ZESA and ZESCO for power generation at Kariba Dam due to the water crisis.

ZESA and the Zambian utility, ZESCO, equally share water at Kariba for power generation.

In that regard, the ZRA has directed the average electricit­y generation at Kariba Power Station at 214 megawatts ( MW) until the end of the March quarter of 2024.

While the Hwange Power Station will be providing much of the power, it also continues to face some technical glitches while Independen­t Power Producers ( IPPs) are feeding only about 18 into the

MW national grid.

Confederat­ion of Zimbabwe Industries

( CZI) president, Kurai Matsheza, told Business Weekly that electricit­y costs have constantly been increasing while at the same time supply remains depressed.

“Some companies will switch to more expensive alternativ­e sources of power, so again, it is an increase in cost.

“When that happens, combined with the real cost of electricit­y that has aggressive­ly gone up, it just makes the cost of producing more expensive, and those costs will be transferre­d to the goods and services that are being sold,” he said.

He added, “It is not good for us as producers but also not good for consumers; this will just make the cost go up.”

While the companies are investing in alternativ­e energy, Matsheza said most of them are short-term, as huge power projects require significan­t capital outlays.

According to the energy regulator, the Zimbabwe Energy Regulatory Authority ( ZERA), there has been increased investment in renewable energy by IPPs, mainly for their own consumptio­n, in order to offset the adverse impact of erratic power supplies.

By harnessing the power of the sun for solar energy, businesses are tapping into a sustainabl­e and renewable energy source, reducing reliance on convention­al power systems, especially hydro, which is also prone to the effects of the El Nino weather phenomenon.

According to ZERA, the majority of energy investment­s are now into solar energy, with some thermal, mainly in the mining sector.

noted that most successful pro

ZERA jects are the ones funded by private companies and in most cases, they are produced for their own consumptio­n.

Matsheza said that as the price of products goes up, consumers will not be able to buy them; hence, demand comes down, which is a burden on industry pro

ducers. “Because either way we are suffering as the demand side is coming down because of prices. If you are producing fewer and fewer products, it is a sign that your business is shrinking. So yes, some rationalis­ation of sorts might have to happen. If you are producing from various points, you might have to scale back and maybe concentrat­e on one location, so naturally that does also affect employment levels,” he said.

Matsheza said raising capital for energy projects is not just a one-day event; it takes time; hence, the solutions are short-term, medium-term, long-term, and long-term.

Agro-focused retailer, CFI Holdings, said the group uses different energy sources, with ZESA being the main power source for most operations, with lower usage for shops with solar backup options. It said diesel-powered generators are mostly used as an alternativ­e to ZESA in cases of load-shedding.

“The group has been focused on cleaner sources of alternativ­e power, and it has rolled out a programme to install solar systems for shops and offices, with 44 percent of shops already using the power source,” the company said. It noted that in the medium to long term, the group plans to invest in solar farms to sustain its manufactur­ing activities. Victor Bhoroma, an economist, said power is the gateway to productivi­ty and industrial­isation in an economy; hence, without addressing power generation, the Zimbabwean economy will not achieve consistent growth.

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