Zimbabwe, Mozambique in power deal that could close Kariba hydro plant
Deal would result in Harare getting discounted power
11 July 2019 - 15:57
byBrian Latham and Borges Nhamire
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Zimbabwe has proposed reducing the flow of the Zambezi River in exchange for getting discounted power from neighbouring Mozambique, say insiders.
The proposal would result in the closing of Zimbabwe’s Kariba South hydro plant, which would bolster critically low levels in the world’s biggest man-made reservoir, said Zimbabwean government officials and a senior manager at the state power utility who asked not to be identified because the talks aren’t public.
The plan would also limit the flow into the already full Cahora Bassa dam in Mozambique, as water wouldn’t have to be pushed through the plant’s turbines, the people said
Opening the flood gates at Cahora Bassa could inundate the low-lying Zambezi Delta on Mozambique’s coast. In return for limiting the river flow, Zimbabwe would want to be compensated with cheap power from Cahora Bassa, which has the capacity to produce 2,075MW, the people said.
Kariba is 28.9% full, according to the Zimbabwe National Water Authority’s website.
The power plant on the south bank of the dam, which straddles Zimbabwe and Zambia, is producing just a third of its 1,050MW capacity. Zimbabweans are currently experiencing power cuts of as long as 18 hours a day because ageing equipment at its power plants keep breaking down and outstanding debts to utilities in South Africa and Mozambique have slashed imports.
Talks between Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa and his Mozambican counterpart Filipe Nyusi began in June. Zimbabwean Energy Minister Fortune Chasi will travel to the Mozambican capital, Maputo, to complete the arrangement when it is ready, said the sources.
A board member at Hidroelectrica de Cahora Bassa SA, the company that operates the Mozambican plant, confirmed an approach by Zimbabwe, declining to be identified as the matter hasn’t been discussed publicly. The company, which is state-controlled, would be wary about lowering prices as it also sells power to South Africa, which might have similar demands, he said. The company isn’t involved in active negotiations, he said.
Kariba Dam is 128m tall and 579m long and, when full, holds 181 cubic kilometres of water, more than three times the capacity of Cahora Bassa and almost five times that of the Hoover Dam. Its wall is flanked by a carved stone statue of nyaminyami, a snake-like river god believed to have been trapped in the dam when it was built. A flood that entombed the bodies of Italian and local workers in the concrete wall is blamed by the Tonga community on nyaminyami.
Officials at Zimbabwe’s energy ministry and at Zesa Holdings , the state power utility, were said to be unavailable when their offices were called.
The proposed plan would not stop water flowing through turbines at the 1,080-megawatt Kariba North power plant on the Zambian side of Kariba Dam.
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Zimbabwe, Mozambique in power deal that could close Kariba hydro plant
Deal would result in Harare getting discounted power
Zimbabwe has proposed reducing the flow of the Zambezi River in exchange for getting discounted power from neighbouring Mozambique, say insiders.
The proposal would result in the closing of Zimbabwe’s Kariba South hydro plant, which would bolster critically low levels in the world’s biggest man-made reservoir, said Zimbabwean government officials and a senior manager at the state power utility who asked not to be identified because the talks aren’t public.
The plan would also limit the flow into the already full Cahora Bassa dam in Mozambique, as water wouldn’t have to be pushed through the plant’s turbines, the people said
Opening the flood gates at Cahora Bassa could inundate the low-lying Zambezi Delta on Mozambique’s coast. In return for limiting the river flow, Zimbabwe would want to be compensated with cheap power from Cahora Bassa, which has the capacity to produce 2,075MW, the people said.
Kariba is 28.9% full, according to the Zimbabwe National Water Authority’s website.
The power plant on the south bank of the dam, which straddles Zimbabwe and Zambia, is producing just a third of its 1,050MW capacity. Zimbabweans are currently experiencing power cuts of as long as 18 hours a day because ageing equipment at its power plants keep breaking down and outstanding debts to utilities in South Africa and Mozambique have slashed imports.
Talks between Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa and his Mozambican counterpart Filipe Nyusi began in June. Zimbabwean Energy Minister Fortune Chasi will travel to the Mozambican capital, Maputo, to complete the arrangement when it is ready, said the sources.
A board member at Hidroelectrica de Cahora Bassa SA, the company that operates the Mozambican plant, confirmed an approach by Zimbabwe, declining to be identified as the matter hasn’t been discussed publicly. The company, which is state-controlled, would be wary about lowering prices as it also sells power to South Africa, which might have similar demands, he said. The company isn’t involved in active negotiations, he said.
Kariba Dam is 128m tall and 579m long and, when full, holds 181 cubic kilometres of water, more than three times the capacity of Cahora Bassa and almost five times that of the Hoover Dam. Its wall is flanked by a carved stone statue of nyaminyami, a snake-like river god believed to have been trapped in the dam when it was built. A flood that entombed the bodies of Italian and local workers in the concrete wall is blamed by the Tonga community on nyaminyami.
Officials at Zimbabwe’s energy ministry and at Zesa Holdings , the state power utility, were said to be unavailable when their offices were called.
The proposed plan would not stop water flowing through turbines at the 1,080-megawatt Kariba North power plant on the Zambian side of Kariba Dam.
Bloomberg
Would you like to comment on this article?
Sign up (it's quick and free) or sign in now.
Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.
Most Read
Related Articles
WATCH: What the City of Joburg has planned for electricity tariffs
Joburg scraps planned levy on prepaid electricity after public outcry
AI may hold the secret to solving renewable energy’s problems
Mining contracts for seventh-consecutive month
Published by Arena Holdings and distributed with the Financial Mail on the last Thursday of every month except December and January.