Umeme committed to powering Uganda's prosperity

Jun 10, 2019

Umeme would like to acknowledge the far-sighted leadership of President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni that is championing transformative infrastructure investments

By Patrick Bitature

Umeme would like to congratulate the government for having successfully gone through the 2019 Manifesto Week, that runs from May 13 -24, 2019. 

We particularly would like to applaud the government, for having attained a mid-term manifesto implementation score of 62% to date, according to the Prime Minister, Dr Ruhakana Rugunda. 

There are a number of milestones presented by the various government ministries, departments and agencies, some of the key highlights such as the commissioning of the 183MW Isimba Dam and the expected commissioning of the 600MW Karuma Dam sometime this year - altogether raising Uganda's generation capacity to 1,767MW by end of 2019 are worth mentioning. 

The government's revival of Uganda Airlines, completion of the state of the art Neo-natal and Specialised Women Hospital at Mulago as well as the expansion of Entebbe International Airport and the rehabilitation of Mulago National Referral Hospital, which are both on course are also key achievements.   

We were also glad to learn that the country's tourism foreign exchange earnings grew by 18% from $1.37b in 2015/16 to $1.63b in 2018 as a result of a 19% growth in tourist arrivals, from 1.3 million to 1.54 million in the same period.

This led to a 25% rise in employment- from 504,000 to 628,000 jobs.  

In the three years, Uganda's exports also grew by 24.7% from $2.9b in 2016 to $3.6b at the end of 2018, as a result of growth both in local and international investments - Foreign Direct Investments (FDI) increased by 12% from $626m in 2016 to $700m (Source: UNCTAD)

Private Sector Confidence Index in the economy, as measured by Bank of Uganda is also growing, from 53.6% at the beginning of 2016 and is currently at 58.6% (April 2019) on the back of better prospects.

Thanks to these and many other achievements, real GDP growth, according to the IMF has improved from 5.8% in 2017/2018 and is expected to reach 6.2% this financial year. It is then projected to grow at an average 6.2% for the next five years on the back of government's continued investments in infrastructure.

The IMF in their recent May 2019 Country Report on Uganda estimates that if (infrastructure) investments proceed as planned, growth could range between 6% and 7% over the next five years (3% to 4% in per-capita terms). 

Umeme is proud to power all these achievements

Umeme is particularly proud of being the government's partner in powering all these achievements. In the last 13 years, Umeme has invested $627m (sh2.4 trillion) into doubling the distribution network to over 34,000km from the 16,000km we inherited and growing customer connections by more than four times - from the 290,000 inherited to the current 1,291,811.

And specifically in these last three years alone, Umeme has invested sh784b which has, among many other achievements, allowed us to grow the number of customers by 63% from 793,544 customers at the beginning of 2016 to 1,291,811 at end of 2018.  

Particularly- commercial consumers (extra-large, large and medium industrial and commercial) grew by 63% from 69748 to 113,579 customers. 

Suffice to add is that in line with the government's strategic goal to continue this steady progress and take Uganda to modernity through jobs creation and inclusive development,  

Worth noting is also the fact the number of direct jobs created by Umeme during these three years, increased by 12% from 1,348 to 1,514 employees.

But more significantly, Umeme continued reducing the number of expatriates, from 13 at the beginning of 2015, to six in 2016 and finally four at the end of 2018 - as more Ugandans assumed more senior roles in the business, as a result of a deliberate skills transfer process.

Keynoting is that in 2015, we appointed our first Ugandan as Managing Director, Selestino Babungi. 

With all the above investments and improvements in the electricity sector, it is, therefore, no wonder that according to the Uganda National Household Survey 2016/17, by Uganda Bureau of Statistics, 27% of Ugandan households (50.1%, urban and 17.5%, rural) reported that improved electricity had made their lives better. Better electricity came second to improved transportation services (34%).

In the third position was development projects (25%), construction of new roads (25%), construction of new schools (18%) and new employment opportunities (14%). 

Umeme would like to acknowledge the far-sighted leadership of President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni that is championing transformative infrastructure investments, especially in the energy and transport sectors, that has formed the stimulus for much of the achievements enumerated above. 

We would also like to acknowledge the guidance from our regulators - directly, the Electricity Regulatory Authority (ERA) and indirectly, the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Development (MEMD) and Ministry of Finance, Planning and Economic Development, who together with our generation and transmission partners have made it easy to come thus far. 

An ambitious plan needs solid investments

The next five to 10 years are going to be very critical in the energy sector of our country. 

Uganda will soon have up to 1,767MW once Karuma comes on board and to absorb this extra capacity, the Government, has already set a very noble goal to extend power to 30% of the population by 2020 and 80% by 2040. 

This goal is being supported by an equally ambitious free connections policy, targeting 300,000 new connections per year. This means Umeme's customer base must have crossed the four million-mark by 2017. 

From our estimates, achieving the above targets shall require significant investments focusing on uptake of new capacity, increased access and driving efficiencies in the business operations.

The resulting large geographical footprint shall require opening more service centres, building more substations, extending lines, injecting more transformers and recruiting more people on the ground.  

Over the next six years, we estimate, that up to $450m is required for both capital expenditures (CAPEX). 

According to recent estimates by Ministry of Energy and Mineral Development, when Isimba and Karuma HPP are commissioned and fully absorbed/utilised, it is expected that the weighted generation tariff will reduce from the current US Cents 6.47/kWh (sh243.43) to US cents 5.34/kWh (sh200.93), representing a reduction of 17.45%, which shall be reflected in the end-user tariffs.  


Uganda has tasted the wrath of underinvesting in the sector before - we should not wait to get to where Kenya and South Africa are today. Never again!  

With the approved costs we have today, there is going be various negative implications on the power sector namely:

• Several of our new service centres will be closed and proposed new ones won't be opened, leading to poor service delivery;

• The Government free Electricity Connections Policy (Free connections), will be hard hit and ; 

• Investor confidence, both in the energy sector and largely in the economy could drop and this has a ripple effect on all the other planned targets for government in other sectors as energy is a key driver.

Relatedly, there is a need to urgently close the ongoing concession extension discussions, so as to allow Umeme to mobilise the necessary funding in preparation for the big task ahead.  

Time is of the essence, every day counts.  

The writer is Board Chairman, Umeme Limited

 

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