Categories: bujagali
Date: Oct 13, 2009
Title: The Co-Sponsor of Bujagali Project - Industrial Promotion Services (IPS) Says the Project Cost in NOT Up
The Ugandan Government and the Co-sponsor of the Bujagali dam project issue conflicting statements on the dam project.
Still according to the ERA website, Jacobson charges 18.5 cents per unit for the generation of heavy fuel oil. IPS rubbished allegations that Bujagali is the most expensive dam in the world.
"Comparing dams is absurd," said Kariuki. "There are very many parameters to look at, among them the mode of financing - is it publicly or privately financed, the location of the project and therefore the proximity to raw materials, and the structures involved. Does it require a dam and if so, what type of dam is required - concrete, rock-fill or earth?" He pointed out that Bujagali is the first privately financed power project in sub-Saharan Africa. He also noted that the Ethiopian hydro-power project it was compared with did not entail the construction of a dam and instead utilised water from an upstream constructed earlier. "You also look at the economies of scale - the larger the project the lower the cost per unit. Finally, you look at the time of construction. In 2006, when Bujagali was being procured, the cost of most materials was 200% higher than what it was in 2002."
He pointed out that the assessment done by the lenders independent engineer had concluded that, given the prevailing market conditions, the Bujagali cost was "reasonable". The lenders for the project include the World Bank Group, the African Development Bank, the European Investment Bank, and other European financing institutions comprising KfW/DEG bank of Germany, FMO of Holland and AFD/Proparco of France. On recent statements of energy minister Hilary Onek calling Bujagali a bad project, Kariuki said: "I do not understand why the Government can say that the project is bad or overpriced when in actual fact, the Government approved the entire project, including project cost and terms of financing. Nothing has changed between now and then."