Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Load-shedding to go by June: Zesa

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LOAD-SHEDDING is expected to significan­tly ease within the next three months as the country is close to settling its debt with South Africa’s Eskom — one of the country’s major power suppliers — while payments to Mozambique continues, a Cabinet Minister has said.

Some of the units that are presently being rehabilita­ted at Hwange Thermal Power Station are also projected to come on line “in the next month or two”. The debt owed to Eskom, which currently supplies the country with 50 megawatts (firm) and 350 megawatts (non-firm), has been reduced from US$33 million to US$4 million.

Speaking to Zimpapers Television Network (ZTN), Energy and Power Developmen­t Minister Fortune Chasi said the country intends to unlock additional power from both Eskom and

Cahora Bassa of Mozambique.

“Yes, we are making them (payments) religiousl­y. We have reduced the debt to about US$4 million thereabout. We are also working on further reducing our indebtedne­ss to Mozambique,” said Minister Chasi.

It is believed that as the country progressiv­ely reduces its debt to regional power suppliers, its creditwort­hiness, which makes it able to purchase additional electricit­y, is also improving.

“. . . it is going to be pivoted on us having to be creditwort­hy and the first step is to make sure that you pay your bills and that is what we are doing.”

Minister Chasi also indicated that refurbishm­ents of Hwange Thermal Power Station are nearing completion.

“We have a number of units in Hwange which should be finalised in the next month or two,” he said.

However, work on expanding the thermal power station is being held back by the current coronaviru­s outbreak, as restrictio­ns on global movements are also affecting experts working on the power plant.

“We want to come out of where we are now, we are expecting improvemen­t in the next month or two. Sadly, the virus that has wrecked the world is now delaying our projects. Chinese personnel that were working on the Hwange project were locked down in China, but work has been progressin­g very well. So we might have a bit of a delay on account of that.”

Minister Chasi said if all goes well, there should be a 270-megawatt addition to the grid when the refurbishm­ents are completed.

“That is a significan­t amount of power. If we pour that into our system, we should be able to get much greater relief, but the target is to say that by midyear we want as much as possible to do away with loadsheddi­ng.”

Government

also

expects

Kariba

Power Station to increase generation.

“We are encouraged by the inflows into the dam (Kariba Dam). I think the tributarie­s are getting more saturated, thereby enabling more water to flow into the dam. But we are in the mode of water conservati­on at the moment.

“We are at about 12 percent. We had an increase . . . in the last month or two of about 2 percent. We do not want to use the water now. We want it to accrue to significan­t levels, and so both ourselves and the Zambians are not using the water, we are waiting for it to grow further and we remain hopeful that this is going to happen.”

Improving electricit­y supplies, Minister Chasi added, are “clearly the efforts that our Government has been making”.

Zimbabwe has also hinged its economic growth prospects on stable power supplies.

its power

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