Government to connect 600,000 homes to power grid

A troupe of Mbeere drummers entertain residents and guests during the launch of Cianthia, Karerema, Cieria and Kanyaga/Gitiburi rural electrification projects in Mbeere North. About 500 households, schools and churches will benefit from the project that will be powered by the National Grid. The occasion was graced by the Principal Secretary for Energy Principal Secretary Alex Wachira, Rural Electrification and Renewable Energy Corporation (REREC) General Manager Beatrice Njuguna and host Mbeere North MP Geoffrey Ruku.

Power connections

The Government will connect 566,000 homes to the electricity grid at a cost of Sh42bn, Energy and Petroleum Principal Secretary Alex Wachira has said. He said the connections were the beginning of an ambitious plan that would see the government allocate money every year to have 90 to 95 percent of all homes connected to power by 2030.

Wachira was speaking in Mbeere North Tuesday when he commissioned four new electrification projects that will see 600 householders and institutions in Cianthia, Karerema, Cieria and Kanyaga/Gitiburi connected to the national grid.

The PS said priority would be given to areas with low electricity and urged beneficiary communities to look out for people who might want to vandalize the infrastructure. He said vandals cost the government over Sh2bn in damages annually, adding that power and roads infrastructure was the most hit, usually by scrap metal hunters.

A director of the Rural Electrification and Renewable Energy Corporation (REREC) Mark Nderitu said the projects would take about one month to build and asked the beneficiary communities to help speed up the work by wiring their houses and granting wayleaves where necessary. The connections will be free of charge.

He said some 322 projects would be implemented around the country this year under the Last Mile Connectivity Programme with priority to areas that have never had any form of electricity connections ever. He said he expected that the projects would transform the socioeconomic life of affected areas.

Mbeere North MP Geoffrey Ruku said his Constituency had mapped out 684 villages in his constituency that need first time electricity connections through about 300 transformers. Ruku said the electrification of the areas would be followed by the laying of an optic fiber cable to power three proposed ICT hubs.

On national politics, Ruku said politicians needed to respect Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua to ensure harmony in the country’s leadership.

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