Kenya Power connects 1.2m homes to the national grid representing 60% of all households in Kenya

http://www.businessdailyafrica.com/image/view/-/3444464/medRes/1483187/-/maxw/600/-/snwede/-/kplc.jpg
Kenya Power aims to connect 1.5 million customers by end of June next year and to hit the nine million mark in 2020. PHOTO | FILE

By BRIAN NGUGI, [email protected]
Posted Monday, November 7 2016 at 20:11
In Summary
[ul]
[li]Kenya Power says it has set its eyes on connecting all Kenyan households to electricity in the next four years.[/li][/ul]
Electricity distributor Kenya Power connected 1.2 million new customers last year, raising to 4.87 million the total number of households hooked onto the national grid or 60 per cent access rate.
The power firm Monday said that the achievement has emboldened it to setting its eyes on connecting all Kenyan households to electricity in the next four years.The project would push the number of connections to nine million, representing an access rate of 80 per cent.

“As we talk today we have above 5.2 million customers connected. This year, we are working to connect 1.5 million customers. We are now on the fourth month and we have already connected above 300,000 customers since beginning of July,” said Kenya Power’s general manager (business strategy) Peter Mungai Kinuthia at an investor briefing.

He said the goal was to connect 1.5 million customers by end of June next year and to hit the nine million mark in 2020. The large number of domestic connections has, however, had little effect on the country’s demand for electricity, pointing to the weak economic power of those coming on board. Kenya’s peak demand for electricity crossed the 1,600-megawatt mark for the first time in September up from about 1,500 three years ago, lagging the rapid growth of generating capacity that now stands at 2,300 megawatts.
The huge spare capacity has become a big challenge for the government’s initial plan to generate 5,000 megawatts of electricity in five years. Power sector experts had argued that such a rapid capacity expansion required a grand plan to expand the manufacturing sector and produce industrial goods for local consumption and export markets. The slow growth in demand for power is therefore seen as representing the country’s weak industrial base, which has grown only marginally in the past 20 years. Power consumption hit 1,618 megawatts in September — the highest level yet in the country’s history – according to data from the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) from a previous peak of 1,587 megawatts in May.
Increased power consumption is often a factor of rising economic activity and the slow pace of growth only means the economy is expanding at a snail’s pace. That outcome, however, stands in stark contrast to the ERC’s estimate that demand will cross the 2,800-megawatt mark in 2020, or a 70 per cent growth in the next four years. In 2013, the government announced an ambitious plan to grow the installed power capacity from 1,708 megawatts to 5,000 megawatts to spur industrial growth and light more homes.

Ahsante Ndugu Mkuki. Good thing is that new connections are mostly prepaid meters, ensuring revenue collection and defeating illegal connections.

That money can be reinvested to invest in better infrastructure and also to facilitate the 100% electrification plans.

upuss wanafanya something known as separation kama kwa ploti kila home iko directly connected to pole which is idiotic at best ju ya potential surges na tanglement hii ni propaganda tu

@Jakoyo doesn’t like this

Remember that photo someone posted here of KPLC techies installing in a thatched mud hat?

We were supposed to understand that the goverment (sirkal) should build a new house first before electrifying it.

http://img.pandawhale.com/post-59851-idi-amin-laughing-gif-imgur-3xRZ.gif

Kuja paipu uone vile wakisii huiba stima

Kuna time nilikuwa hapo kwa Njenga on a field study, nilishtuka sana kuona vile hizo waya zimeunganishwa. Hiyo place hata ukinyora kwa chuom unaweza kupigwa shock.

Saw the same thing huko kwa Njenga, nilikuwa nafikiri ni hanging line bana…na pipes za maji zimejaa illegal connections zimepitia kwa sewer

Field study ama kutafuta slices

No doubt, this is good. However, what good is it if the power supply isnt reliable? Couple that with poor customer service! A leaning pole, a broken pole or a blown up transformer takes weeks if not months to repair. Ole wako kama uko mashambani. This is their fb page, just for today.

The best the service (in the energy sector) by Uhuruto to Kenyans would be opening up the power sector to competition.

https://i.imgsafe.org/196a74198d.png https://i.imgsafe.org/196dba8a52.png https://i.imgsafe.org/196dd27be4.png https://i.imgsafe.org/196dd485b9.png https://i.imgsafe.org/196dda7908.png

I beg to differ,wakambodia ndio wamejaa Pipeline, mlolongo, syokimau…Hapo ume ekelea wakisii

wakisii ndio wezi wa stima na maji huko. Na matatu zote ni zao

@Jakoyo likes this very much

Nenda Githogoro uone vile KPLC watawazuia.

this is a blatant lie. what kenya power counts as a new connection to the grid is, replacing of a postpaid meter with a prepaid one. na kitu inaitwa meter separation whereby one meter was being used several meters zitatumiwa now those several meters zinaitwa a new connection. KPLC IS A BIG JOKE

Naonanga wire mingi hapo Githogoro, wanaunganisha aje?