Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Chivayo Gwanda project leaves Parly team shocked

- Oliver Kazunga

THE Parliament­ary Portfolio Committee on Mines and Energy has expressed disappoint­ment at the poor preparator­y work that has been done at the site of the proposed Gwanda solar power plant despite Intratek having been paid $5 million for the project.

This emerged during a tour of the project site by MPs in the company of Zimbabwe Power Company (ZPC) executives, officials from Government department­s such the Environmen­tal Management Agency (EMA) and Gwanda Municipali­ty.

Intratek, a company owned by flamboyant Harare businessma­n, Mr Wicknell Chivayo was awarded the tender in 2013 and paid $5 million by ZPC to build the 100 megawatt Gwanda solar power plant

After receiving the money without a bank guarantee, no meaningful developmen­t has taken place at the site.

Erected at the site are two cabins, toilets with no ablution facilities and a perimeter fence which does not cover the whole site.

The road network at the site is also poor. It also emerged that the proposed plant falls under state land and Intratek has failed to pay the required money for leasing it.

In an interview after the tour, committee chairperso­n who is also Norton MP, Mr Temba Mliswa said his committee was disappoint­ed that money was paid to Intratek but work done on the site is not commensura­te with cash paid upfront.

“Clearly the money that was paid to Intratek does not tally with what is on the ground. We just saw toilets with no ablution facilities and sewer, fence which is not done all the way. We need to find out from them why they have not completed the work,” said Mr Mliswa.

“ZPC were also very clear that they were not happy with work done so far and it is important for us to understand that this emanates from the oral evidence from Mr Chivayo when he came before us. ZPC also gave evidence to the committee.”

Mr Mliswa said his committee had picked a number of anomalies on the Gwanda project.

“There are so many anomalies that include lack of expertise. The land tenure is also not there so how can you talk about owning the project when you don’t even have the right documentat­ion of owning the land?,” he said.

“They (ZPC) and the Procuremen­t Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe (formerly State Procuremen­t Board) who awarded the tender are appearing before the committee on the 14th of March and after that we will submit our findings.

It emerged during a briefing before the tour yesterday that the Ministry of Lands, Agricultur­e and Rural Resettleme­nt withdrew Intratek’s applicatio­n to lease the land due to the contractor’s failure to pay an annual subscripti­on fee of $15 000.

Mr Mliswa said the subscripti­on fee was, however, paid by ZPC and the power utility has applied to lease the land.

“There is no way such a project can go ahead without a lease. So we are now asking ourselves how in the first place he (Mr Chivayo) was given this project when he did not have proper land documentat­ion defining the tenure.

“We also have the (EIA) Environmen­tal Impact Assessment from EMA coming in, why was it issued a year later?” queried Mr Mliswa.

Responding to questions from the committee, ZPC acting managing director Mr Josh Chirikutsi admitted that his organisati­on had not done due diligence to ascertain if Intratek had proper documentat­ion for the land. “Basically, what we are saying is getting land for solar project, l was trying to say it’s not a big challenge for us, Government will assist us to get land. If Intratek were to chase us from here, we would find other land,” he said.

The committee argued that ZPC was supposed to secure its documentat­ion first before starting the project.

The committee has previously grilled Mr Chivayo over the manner in which he won the tender for the project in 2013. Mr Chivayo has also admitted that he was paid by the power utility without a bank guarantee following the interventi­on of former Minister of Energy and Power Developmen­t Dr Samuel Undenge.

The suspended ZPC managing director Noah Gwariro had refused to pay him the money without the guarantee. — @okazunga.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe