“Kenya Power is still [assessing] the impact of the decision as we engage with our partners and financers and hope soon we will know what direction to take,” said Samson Ondiek, the chief officer for corporate planning at Kenya Power. “But, for now, let’s deal with the coronavirus issue as we wait.”
Sinotec may now be suspended in other multilateral development banks, including the Asian Development Bank, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the Inter-American Development Bank and the World Bank Group, according to the African Development Bank.
In July 2018, Sinotec signed the contract with Kenya Power for supplying and installing over 1,800 miles of low voltage power lines and corresponding supply cables in the second phase of the Kenyan electricity project in the port city of Kisumu region, western Kenya and the Mount Kenya region.
Neither Sinotec Director for East Africa Jin Hua nor the manager in charge of the Kenya’s Last Mile project, Wang Long, could be reached for comment over the suspension and the firm’s future in East Africa.
The Kenyan government says the Last Mile Connectivity project will improve access to electricity in slums and rural areas in Kenya and help the country achieve 100 percent universal access to electricity by 2022. The project, divided into three phases, aims to connect close to 280,000 households located within approximately 2,000 feet of the existing transformers in the country.
The completed first phase of the project, financed by the African Development Bank and Kenyan government at approximately the same cost of $150 million, targeted over 300,000 households to bring electricity to an additional 1.5 million Kenyans.
Kenya’s progress in accelerating electricity connectivity has largely been accredited to the Last Mile Project, with a recent World Bank report putting the country on top in the East African region with 75 percent of the population having access to electricity, compared to 32.8 percent in Tanzania, 29.4 percent in Rwanda, 26.7 percent in Uganda, and 7.5 percent in Burundi.
Earlier this year, the International Energy Agency’s Africa Energy Outlook showed Kenya is close to universal access to electricity. The report states the country “has seen one of the fastest increases in electrification rates within sub-Saharan Africa since 2013” and is also making “notable progress” in renewable energy sources.
(Editing by Bryan Wilkes and Natalie Gross)
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