The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Govt acts to ease power situation

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CABINET was yesterday seized with the prevailing electricit­y challenges afflicting Zimbabwe, with remedies expected to be announced and rolled out soon, acting Informatio­n, Publicity and Broadcasti­ng Services Minister Jenfan Muswere has said.

Zimbabwe is presently facing acute power shortages which have seen consumers going for long hours, outside the normal load-shedding periods without electricit­y.

The situation, caused by frequent breakdowns at Hwange Thermal Station, has been compounded by the water shortages in Kariba Dam which provides the bulk of Zimbabwe’s electricit­y supplies.

The Zambezi River Authority (ZRA) which runs the Kariba Dam, wrote to the Zimbabwe Power Company last week directing it to stop generating electricit­y until at least January, when water levels are expected to have picked up.

“With the current performanc­e of the 2022/2023 rainfall season in the Kariba Lower Catchment where the river flows are yet to improve and the associated inflows from the Upper Kariba Catchment which will only influence any potential increase in the Lake Level at Kariba during the later part of the first quarter of 2023, it is highly unlikely that there will be any reasonable inflow augmentati­on in the remaining period of the year 2022, giving little or no chance of improvemen­t in the reservoir storage levels during the remaining period of the year 2022 and going into the first quarter of the year 2023,” ZRA CEO Munyaradzi Munodawafa said in the letter.

In light of that, acting Informatio­n, Publicity and Broadcasti­ng Services Minister Muswere said government was seized with finding solutions.

“Cabinet deliberate­d on the issue of Zimbabwe’s energy and power supply.

A detailed statement on the matter will be issued by the Minister of Energy and Power Developmen­t, Honourable Zhemu Soda, as soon as consultati­ons are finalised,” he said in a post Cabinet briefing.

Part of the solutions likely being looked at by the Government include, securing more imports from regional countries and expediting the completion of the Hwange 7 and 8 expansion project.

Last week, the first of the two units being built at the Hwange power station was successful­ly turned on for the first time, bringing the country closer to producing an additional 300 Megawatts.

The additional power is expected to be fed into the national grid before the end of the year and will go a long way in easing power shortages.

When complete, the two units, Hwange 7 and 8, are expected to produce a total of 600 megawatts. Several independen­t power producers are at various stages of implementi­ng their projects.

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