BY SAMUEL NABWIISO
The African Development Bank approved has approved a senior
loan of US $29.5 million and a concessional loan of US $20 million from the
Climate Investment Funds (CIF) Clean Technology Fund (CTF) to Quantum Power
East Africa GT Menengai Ltd for geothermal project in Kenya .
The funding will support the development of a 35-MW
geothermal power plant at the Menengai geothermal field in Nakuru County,
Kenya, one of three modular geothermal plants in the Menengai field with a
combined capacity of 105 MW.
Geothermal plant ,kenya will develop such plant with the funding from the African Development bank |
The project is part
of the CTF Geothermal Concessional Finance Program under the Dedicated Private
Sector Program designed to finance programs that can deliver development
results, impact, private-sector leverage and investment at scale and can be
deployed rapidly and efficiently.
“Kenya has nearly 7,000 MW of geothermal potential, yet only
about 200 MW is currently being developed,” said Amadou Hott, Vice-President,
Power, Energy, Climate and Green Growth at the African Development Bank.
He welcomed the approval, noting that “the partnership
between the African Development Bank and the CIF to contribute to Kenya’s
efforts in scaling up the development of this renewable resource and boost
economic growth is commendable. The deployment of CTF funds is directly
contributing to unlocking the power of the private sector in driving
long-lasting market transformation and mitigating risks in the geothermal power
sector.”
Quantum Power-Menengai Geothermal Project, the second
geothermal independent power project in Kenya, will strengthen public-private
partnerships and enable the country to harness its abundant geothermal
resources to provide reliable, low-cost, environmentally friendly base-load
electricity.
The Government of Kenya is also putting efforts into
creating an enabling environment to enhance investment flows from private
investors into the energy sector through the implementation of competitive
tender processes in an attempt to lower the unit costs of geothermal power
generation while lowering the costs of doing business and thus improving
Kenya’s competitiveness in the region.
“The African Development Bank has invested considerable
resources and time in the development of the Menengai geothermal steam field
with the objective of enabling Kenya to find a productive source of steam for
on-grid power generation,” said Anthony Nyong, Director for Climate Change and
Green Growth at the African Development Bank. “The financial package being
extended to this project shows strong commitment towards improving Kenya’s
energy sector as well as tangible efforts to curb climate change and encourage
green growth on the continent,” he said.
The project will provide positive environmental effects and
contribute to green growth by developing renewable energy infrastructure
(annual savings of up to 95,100 tons of CO2 equivalent) and increase the
base-load, grid-connected generation capacity (potential to serve 48,800
households per year), at a low generation cost of 7 cents/kWh.
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