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ENERGY CRISIS SITUATION
Kaigangio
#1 Posted : Thursday, August 13, 2009 6:00:00 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 2/27/2007
Posts: 2,768
Hi all,

I have been trying to observe carefully the energy situation in Kenya for the last couple of months and i have come to conclude that we are just in the ‘bad situation' spectrum and we have not seen the worse yet,which is not very far off...
The Government,Kengen and KPLC are treating us to the usual hype blaming the drought to the current energy crisis facing the country. To me their explanation is neither here nor there and should be taken at its face value...LIES!!! Drought has got nothing to do with the current acute power shortage. It is purely lack of forward planning by the Government,Kengen and KPLC and the destruction of water catchment areas by settlers.
To try and understand what i am talking about,let us look at the various forms of power generation stations that are currently operational and their respective contribution to the national grid:

HydroElectric Power (HEP) Stations
1. Kindaruma: It has an installed capacity of 40MW and is composed of 2 hydroturbines each with a capacity of 20MW . This HEP was commissioned in 1968.
2. Kamburu: It has an installed capacity of 92.4MW comprising of 3 hydroturbines with a 31.4MW capacity each. The station was commissioned in 1974.
3. Gitaru: this is the biggest HEP power generation station in Kenya with a total installed capacity equal to 225MW. It is composed of 3 hydroturbines,2 of these have an installed capacity of 72.5MW each and the third one has a capacity 81.5MW. the 72.5MW hydroturbines were commissioned in 1978 and the 81.5MW one was commissioned in 1999.
4. Masinga: It has an installed capacity of 40MW. It is composed of 2 hydroturbines each with a capacity equal to 20MW. The hydroturbines were commissioned in 1981.
5. Kiambere: it originally had an installed capacity of 144MW when it was commissioned in 1988 and was composed of 2 hydroturbines with a capacity of 72MW each. The station was later upgraded to 168MW power generation station in 2008.
6. Turkwel Gorge: it has an installed capacity equal to 106MW. It was commissioned in 1991.
7. Mesco: it has a installed capacity equal to 0.38MW and was commissioned in 1930.
8. Ndula: It has an installed capacity of 2.0MW. It is composed of 2 hydroturbines with a rated capacity of 1.0MW each. It was commissioned in 1954.
9. Wanjii: It has an installed capacity of 7.4MW. it is composed of 4 hydroturbines each of capacity 1.85MW. The station was commissioned in 1954.
10. Tana: it has an installed capacity of 14.4MW and is composed of 5 hydroturbines each with a capacity of 3MW. The hydroturbines were commissioned at different times. The last was commissioned in 1954.
11. Gogo Falls: It has an installed capacity of 2MW and has a potential to generate upto 60MW. It was commissioned in 1957.
12. Sagana: It has an installed capacity of 1.5MW and comprises of 5 hydroturbines each with a capacity equal to 0.3MW. It was commissioned in 1956.
13. Sosian: It has an installed capacity equal to 0.4MW. It is composed of 2 hydroturbines each with a capacity of 0.2MW. it was commissioned in 1955.
14. Sondu Miriu: It has an installed capacity equal to 60MW. It was commissioned in 2008
Geothermal Power (GP) Stations
1. Olkaria I: It has an installed capacity of 45MW and is composed of 3 steamturbines each with a capacity of 15MW . The first unit was commissioned in 1981 followed by the second one in 1982 and the last one 1985.
2. Olkaria II: It has an installed capacity of 70MW. It was commissioned in 2003
Thermal Power (TP) Stations
1. Kipevu I: It has an installed capacity of 60MW and is composed of 2 steamturbines each with a capacity of 30MW . The first unit was commissioned in 1987 and the second one in 1999.
2. Kipevu II: It has an installed capacity of 75MW. It is composed of 6 diesel generators sets each with a power rating equal to 12.5MW. It was commissioned in 1999.
3. Nairobi South: it has an installed capacity equal to 13MW. It was constructed in 1972 and was operational upto 1995 when it was decommissioned. In 1998 it was recommissioned but at generation capacity of 11.5MW. It is normally not on continuous duty,meaning that it is only operational during peak power demand.
Off-Grid Power (OGP) Stations
1. Ngong Wind: It has an installed capacity of 0.35MW and is composed of 2 windturbines with a capacity of 0.15MW and 0.2MW respectively . The two units were commissioned in 1993.
2. Lamu: It has an installed capacity of 2.4MW. It is composed of 6 diesel generators sets installed between 1989 and 2007. It supplies only Lamu township.
3. Garissa: it has an installed capacity equal to 3.4MW. It is composed of 3 diesel generators sets installed between 1996 and 2005. It supplies only Garissa town and the surrounding
At independence in 1963 the total amount of installed power generation capacity was only 28MW.
10 years later between 1964 and 1973 the total amount of power added to the grid was 53MW (from Kindaruma and Nairobi South power stations). The average annual increase in generation capacity during this period was 18.93%. The total installed grid capacity stood at 81MW
10 years later between 1974 and 1983 the total amount of power added to the grid was 287MW (from Kamburu,Gitaru (1st and 2nd hydroturbines),Masinga and Olkaria I (1st and 2nd steam turbines) power stations). The average annual increase in generation capacity during this period was 35.4%. The total installed capacity stood at 368MW.
10 years later between 1984 and 1993 the total amount of power added to the grid was 295MW (from Kiambere,Turkwel Gorge,Olkaria I (3rd steamturbine),Kipevu I (1st steam turbine)). The average annual increase in generation capacity during this period was 8.0%.The total installed capacity stood at 663MW.
10 years later between 1994 and 2003 the total amount of power added to the grid was 257MW (from Gitaru (3rd hydroturbine),Olkaria II,Kipevu I (2nd steamturbine) and Kipevu II. The average annual increase in generation capacity during this period was 3.9%. The total installed capacity stood at 920MW.
From the year 2004 to 2008 the total power added to the grid was 84MW (from Kiambere upgrading and Sondu Miriu). The average annual increase in generation capacity during this period was 0.9%. As of today the total installed capacity is 1004MW or 1.004GW which is attributable to Kengen. Other independent power producers contribute just about 20% (200MW) making 1200MW the total power available in the National Grid.
Between 1963 and 1993 the increase in generation capacities was in tandem with the then growing consumer demand as a result of population growth.
Between 1994 and 2003 was a period full of corruption scandals within the government and parastatals (read KPLC) like Goldenberg which rendered the country broke and the near collapse of the economy. And thus the sharp decline in annual average increase in the generation capacity as there was very little funding going to the energy sector.
After 2004 upto late 2007 there was a landslide decrease in the power generation capacity growth from 3.9% in the previous decade to a paltry 0.9%. This 0.9% increase was attributable to the implementation of Kiambere upgrading and the commissioning of Sondu Miriu power generation stations only….Sadly during this period there was no stable Government to offer a long term power generation and distribution planning and therefore this energy sector was completely overshadowed by the unfolding political events and completely ignored. Hence no funding was availed for any future construction of new power stations and upgrading of the existing ones where possible. Mark you the upgrading of Kiambere and construction of Sondu Miriu HEP stations were started long before 2004. Come 2008 and 2009 we still don’t have any future energy expansion plans as the Government,and Kengen are very busy seeking short term solutions to the growing energy crisis.
The Situation
The current average increase in electricity/power demand is standing at 6% translating into 70MW per annum worth of additional power needed to satisfy the increase in consumer demand. However,Kengen can only afford an increase of a paltry 0.9% or 11.0MW additional power to the National Grid. In effect assuming that all the power stations operated at their full capacities,this would leave a shortfall of about 60MW!!! This means that even if the dams were always full to capacity all the time we would still continue having power rationing!!! This partly explains the erratic blackouts that we experience all the time in our homes and businesses without any prior warning from Kenya Power & Lighting Company (KPLC). With the consumer demand becoming bigger and bigger,the shortfall is also becoming bigger and bigger every year as long as the Kengen remains unable to expand the existing capacity or constructing new power generation stations to meet the increasing annual power demand.
It is clear that the situation may be more serious than we are being made to believe...you see all the dams along river Tana are the main contributors of electricity into the National Grid accounting for about 760MW or 74.3%. These dams are Kindaruma,Kamburu,Gitaru,Masinga and Kiambere. Masinga dam is the first one as you advance along the river downstream,followed by Kamburu,followed by Gitaru,then Kindaruma and lastly Kiambere. The other day Masinga dam was closed due to insufficient water (more water going out of the dam (during power generation) faster than the River Tana can replenish),thus depriving the grid off 40MW…but 40MW cannot cause such a serious energy crisis that we are experiencing now!. So what is going on? Most likely explanation is,if all the other 4 dams are operational,they must be generating at 15-20% of the installed capacity to conserve water or more dams have been shut down and the Kengen/KPLC/Government do not intend to inform the citizenry for fear of starting a panic!!!.
By the way a study carried out in 1960s confirmed the viability of an upper reservoir for the Seven Forks Cascade hydropower complex with a potential of 11 Hydroelectric power stations. So far to date only 5 have been constructed.
It is also worth remembering that other small power stations (Sagana,Mesco,Wanjii,Tana,Ndula) contribute about 26MW and are located in either Maragua or Mathioya rivers which are tributaries of river Tana. The latest available information indicates that they are drying up!!! This has mainly to do with forest interference in the Aberdares which is the source of all these rivers. The Sondu Miliu,Gogo Falls and the Sosian power stations are located on rivers emanating from the Mau forest which have also been extensively damaged by the settlers and as such may not generate at their full capacity.
At an average of 0.9% annual energy growth rate,the Kenyan economy is headed for a complete or total collapse!!!

NEVER TALK OF A RHINO IF THERE IS NO TREE NEAREBY - ZULU PROVERB
...besides, the presence of a safe alone does not signify that there is money inside...
Impunity
#2 Posted : Thursday, August 13, 2009 6:18:00 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 3/2/2009
Posts: 26,328
Location: Masada
We as a country and economy,are in a precarious situation.

The Hague...or Local Triburnal ama TJRC.
Portfolio: Sold
You know you've made it when you get a parking space for your yatcht.

Djinn
#3 Posted : Thursday, August 13, 2009 7:35:00 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 11/13/2008
Posts: 1,565
@Kaigangio - very nice analysis - you should share this with the media - maybe we can start pushing the government to the wall to take very extreme measures,starting with unnecessary govt expenditure (cancel all foreign trips,trim down ministries,sell the +1800 cc cars,etc etc) and divert that money into thermal generation. Hell,we can even sell state house to an investor in the hotel industry - I'm sure our brothers in the Middle East can take that offer in return for some oil and thermal power technical capacity...MK can move back to Muthaiga.


Sometimes I really wonder where the government's real priorities lie - does anyone remember that the tax payer had to foot the debt of the late Wamalwa (a house in Karen worth Kshs 40 million? Why did we do that?) Why do we spend millions on people who get burnt stealing fuel yet we neglect those in IDP camps. Surely someone's head is not screwed on right....

The problem with equality is that we desire that it be with those that have more than us rather that those that have less
mukiha
#4 Posted : Thursday, August 13, 2009 7:40:00 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 6/27/2008
Posts: 4,114
There a huge opportunity for business in the energy sector,but the GoK and the utilities are sleeping on the job.

Lake Turkana Wind Power will add 300MW by July 2012. Phase 1 will go live in June 2010 (next year!!)

Here is an excerpt from their site:www.laketurkanawindpower.com


Project Profile

Overview

Lake Turkana Wind Power consortium (LTWP) is poised to provide 300 MW of clean power to Kenya's national electricity grid by taking advantage of a unique wind resource in Northwest Kenya near Lake Turkana. Using the latest wind turbine technology LTWP can provide reliable and continuous clean power to satisfy up to 30% of Kenya's current total installed power.


Producing Electricity

LTWP will construct a 'wind farm' consisting of 353 wind turbines,each with a capacity of 850 KW. The total foreseen power generated by the initial phase of this wind farm is expected to start production in June 2011 and reach full production of 300 MW by July 2012,adding 30% or more to the total existing installed capacity available in Kenya. Wind turbine technology has seen recent rapid improvement with the development of turbines such as the Vestas V52 that is the design standard selected by LTWP.


Behind the gardens...Behind the wall...Under the tree (Including: Red...Dark Blue...Yellow)
Nothing is real unless it can be named; nothing has value unless it can be sold; money is worthless unless you spend it.
Mpenzi
#5 Posted : Thursday, August 13, 2009 8:09:00 AM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 10/17/2008
Posts: 1,234
thanks kagizzard for this info. i agree with Djinn - u should consider doing a write-up for the press. the situation is getting critical by the day and am not sure those in govt really appreciate or even care to consider the consequences if no massive rain is received between now and october.
Kaigangio
#6 Posted : Friday, August 14, 2009 1:34:00 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 2/27/2007
Posts: 2,768
@ mukiha,

this is good news,but again there is a catch...you see the demand growth at 6% per year would mean that by 2012 an additional more than 280MW will be needed leaving only no spare capacity!! In the next 3 years,i dont think our generation systems will have recovered...may be 60% recovery (enabling them to generate at 60% of the aggregate installed capacities),because the damage already done to the water catchment areas is very extensive and it will take more than 20years to bring them to the level they were 10 years ago....


NEVER TALK OF A RHINO IF THERE IS NO TREE NEAREBY - ZULU PROVERB
...besides, the presence of a safe alone does not signify that there is money inside...
Njunge
#7 Posted : Saturday, August 15, 2009 8:25:00 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 2/7/2007
Posts: 11,935
Location: Nairobi
@Gizzard,
Very good analysis...................If this government was not made of useless,hopeless and thoughtless leaders,bridging the energy gap and producing more is not rocket science.As it stands,LTWPP will initially produce 350MW but the wind corridor has been described as the best wind power area in the world.It has the potential to produce 2000MW.......Where else do natural resources come that cheap other than in Africa?.........What would be our investment?.......Roughly Kshs 140B for clean and damn cheap power......Spread this figure over a period of 5 years and we can kiss blackouts and expensive power,goodbye

Old man about town....
Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm.
Kaigangio
#8 Posted : Tuesday, August 18, 2009 5:14:00 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 2/27/2007
Posts: 2,768
hi all,

Kiratu Murugi aka kiraitu murungi the other day said that the government was to distribute 1.25m energy saving lamps worth ksh 300m so that they could save a cool 50MW of power....whoever advised them on this should be arrested immediately and sentenced to a hundred years in prison without any possibility of a parole....You see the energy saving lamps have a life of about 4000hours continuous duty....from the way we construct our homes and rentals nowadays most of our rooms are usually dark and as such,you expect that on average these lamps are switched for about 5 hours per day minimum...therefore at this rate the lamp life will be 4000/5 = 800 days...this is just about 2 years....Then after that it is the usual story that people cannot afford to buy the ksh 240 energy saving lamp and so they would start buying the normal ksh 50,60w incadescent lamps (high energy consuming types)....

In other words the 50MW saving will disappear after two years and i highly doubt if Kengen would have constructed a power generation station within that time to offset this shortfall.

Why can't the government lend this money to people who wish to install the renewable energy equipment and make it a continuous process? Actually this would be the start of real energy saving which would have a long term economic impact.

@ njung'e

You see apart from the wind we are also located in an area which receives the highest irradiance from the sun for almost 12 hours per day!!!!! We are really endowed with natural energy resources but cursed with visionless pigs!!!


NEVER TALK OF A RHINO IF THERE IS NO TREE NEAREBY - ZULU PROVERB
...besides, the presence of a safe alone does not signify that there is money inside...
simonkabz
#9 Posted : Wednesday, August 19, 2009 6:39:00 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 3/2/2007
Posts: 8,776
Location: Cameroon
Some positive step atop ngong hills,I thnk I saw some 5 windturbines and some construction work going on. Two,probably the old ones,were rotating. Btw wot became of the mumias sugar cogeneration project? Kagizzard u neva mentioned it.

The only reason why some people are still alive is coz its illegal to shoot them!!
TULIA.........UFUNZWE!
The General
#10 Posted : Wednesday, August 19, 2009 8:48:00 AM
Rank: Member


Joined: 6/3/2006
Posts: 553

wind turbines in the field

The thicker the thigh the sweeter the pie.
The thicker the thigh the sweeter the pie.
Kaigangio
#11 Posted : Wednesday, August 26, 2009 3:47:00 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 2/27/2007
Posts: 2,768
Hi all,

it appears that sooner or later we will have a major shortage of petrolium fuels as the rationing starts claiming big casualties...see this link for details....

http://www.nation.co.ke/.../-/ih36cvz/-/index.html

which one will be next??????


NEVER TALK OF A RHINO IF THERE IS NO TREE NEAREBY - ZULU PROVERB
...besides, the presence of a safe alone does not signify that there is money inside...
Kaigangio
#12 Posted : Wednesday, August 26, 2009 3:48:00 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 2/27/2007
Posts: 2,768
Hi all,

it appears that sooner or later we will have a major shortage of petrolium fuels as the rationing starts claiming big casualties...see this link for details....

http://www.nation.co.ke/.../-/ih36cvz/-/index.html

which one will be next??????


NEVER TALK OF A RHINO IF THERE IS NO TREE NEAREBY - ZULU PROVERB
...besides, the presence of a safe alone does not signify that there is money inside...
segemia
#13 Posted : Monday, February 28, 2011 11:02:38 PM
Rank: Member


Joined: 2/20/2009
Posts: 658
What the hell is going on? the blackouts are just but intensifying.

is there anything that Kengen and KPLC are not telling us?

Anybody with information please!

Looks like some guys saw it coming?
fuchu
#14 Posted : Tuesday, March 01, 2011 4:38:34 PM
Rank: Member


Joined: 6/30/2008
Posts: 63
@ Kaigangio, some of your figures have since changed. refresh your links/sources.

There is no acute shortage of electric power. If this was, then the country would result to Emergency Power Producers or Scheduled Power Outages.

What we do not have is a reserve margin, such that if one big generator is out for maintenance, then we are not able to supply power to all Kenyans. That is not acute shortage.

The frequent power blackouts that we experience are due to SYSTEM WEAKNESSES where rotten poles fall, old cables snap, transformers stolen, metal pylons stoles, a drunkard knocks down a pole operational errors and challenges among others. And by the way, how many of us check the outage notices posted in the national newspapers everyday?

To specific points, the technocrats and the players in the sector appreciate the growing electricity demand. In line with this, the following is taking place:
1) there is agressive drilling in our geothermal field. KenGen is already evaluating bids for construction of 2 X 140MW stations in Olkaria. GDC is drilling wells in Menengai, a high potential area. Our potential in Geothermal is huge and with formation of GDC we expect to add more greener power to the grid than before.

2) With the drilled well heads, KenGen and GDC are exploring the idea of portable generators that can generate electricity as we wait for the BIG power stations to be put up.

3) More of wind power is being added to the grid. However, wind power is unreliable as it depends on the quantity and quality of wind, as well as "normal" electricity to be able to generate. As much as we would wish, wind power can only be allowed to contribute about 20% of our total generation.

4) there are thermal power stations coming up: 80MW in Athi River, IPP and 80MW in Muhoroni (KenGen). Already KenGen is commissioning 120MW, financed by the PIBO. There have been several additions that Kaigangio left out:
Iberafrica added 53MW in 2010
Rabai power added 80MW
Tsave power added 72MW a while back.

5) there is systems reinforcement going on where new transmision line and distribution lines are constructed and older one reinforced/upgraded. this will improve the reliability to the end consumer

Generation from geothermal is what will drive DOWN the overall cost of power - Not wind or hydro coz of the low capacity and their unreliability. In a 20 year horizon, geothermal is way cheaper than the other current generation source. Thermal power plants will raise the cost of power even further.

From my desk, I can say the future is not as gloomy as Kaigangio paints. Its more brighter than present. My only worry is that the cost will generally go up in the short term until such a time we have a higher percentage of electricity generated frm Geothermal.

PS am not an official spokesman of any body in the electricity subsector. I work in the subsector and I needed to point out these issues.

You are allowed to engage me.


sparkly
#15 Posted : Tuesday, March 01, 2011 6:24:50 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 9/23/2009
Posts: 8,083
Location: Enk are Nyirobi
I remember the other day museveni saying that uganda is more self reliant on power than kenya;despite
the fact that kenya has been peaceful for more than 40 years and uganda at war for as many years.
Life is short. Live passionately.
Cde Monomotapa
#16 Posted : Tuesday, March 01, 2011 6:34:41 PM
Rank: Chief


Joined: 1/13/2011
Posts: 5,964
Thanx fuchu.
Cde Monomotapa
#17 Posted : Tuesday, March 01, 2011 6:36:17 PM
Rank: Chief


Joined: 1/13/2011
Posts: 5,964
Thanx fuchu. Much enlightend.
For Sport
#18 Posted : Tuesday, March 01, 2011 7:43:44 PM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 12/23/2010
Posts: 1,229
fuchu wrote:
@ Kaigangio, some of your figures have since changed. refresh your links/sources.

There is no acute shortage of electric power. If this was, then the country would result to Emergency Power Producers or Scheduled Power Outages.

What we do not have is a reserve margin, such that if one big generator is out for maintenance, then we are not able to supply power to all Kenyans. That is not acute shortage.

The frequent power blackouts that we experience are due to SYSTEM WEAKNESSES where rotten poles fall, old cables snap, transformers stolen, metal pylons stoles, a drunkard knocks down a pole operational errors and challenges among others. And by the way, how many of us check the outage notices posted in the national newspapers everyday?
...

You are allowed to engage me.




I check the outage notices. I also call the emergency line whenever there is a blackout. First thing I ask is whether there is a scheduled outage - usually there is none.

Good to know something's being done (whatever it is). If the reason for the current outages is credible (taking it with a large bucket of salt) - there must be more drunks, thieves, and like everything else in this country, those posts are rotting at an accelerated rate.

And by the way, with all these blackouts, how come there are no significant changes on my bill?
Njung'e
#19 Posted : Wednesday, March 02, 2011 12:29:38 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 2/7/2007
Posts: 11,935
Location: Nairobi
@Sports,
Laughing out loudly You cracked my ribs..You'll pay for this!!....Bure weweLaughing out loudly smile .


@Fuchu,
That's quite some information and thanks.Some questions if you won't mind.

1.Why should it take 7 years to harness the potential of Menengai (A mere 1000MW) (There is no sense of urgency in Africa i guess)

2.After harnessing the steam,why should GDC sell to IPPs,who in turn will put up the plants,who will sell to KPLc,who will sell to consumers??...Ngai!(I guess this is called a vicious circle).Why not generate and sell to KPLC directly?
Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm.
hisah
#20 Posted : Wednesday, March 02, 2011 3:02:27 PM
Rank: Chief


Joined: 8/4/2010
Posts: 8,977
http://www.angelnexus.com/o/web/25256
$15/barrel oil... The commodities lehman moment arrives as well as Sovereign debt volcano!
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