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Eng. Muloni to chair EAPP ministerial council

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Ugandan Minister of Energy and Mineral Development Eng. Irene Muloni will chair the East Africa Power Pool (EAPP) Council of Ministers for the next year.

Amb. Liberat Mfumukeko; EAC Secretary General giving his opening remarks at the 12th Council of Ministers opening session.

Eng. Muloni, who replaces Tanzanian Minister for Energy and Minerals, Prof. Sospeter Muhongo, was elected at the weekend during the 12th EAPP Council of Ministers meeting in Arusha, presided over by the EAC Secretary General Amb. Liberat Mfumukeko.

The meeting was attended by five Ministers: Dr. Eng. Seleshi Bekele (Minister of Water Irrigation and Electricity, Ethiopia); Eng. Tarek El Molla (Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources, Egypt); Hon. Dr. Tabitha Boutros (Minister of State for Electricity and Dams, Sudan), Eng. Muloni and Prof. Muhongo, who also chaired the Ministerial Session.

In his remarks, Amb. Mfumukeko emphasized the importance of the EAPP in contributing to socio-economic growth in East Africa.

“The provision of adequate, reliable, affordable and sustainable energy services is a key priority area in our energy sector for realizing the vision we have for East Africa as well as electricity interconnectivity across borders to promote the broader EAC objective of attracting investment and promoting competitiveness and trade,” he said.

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Amb. Liberat urged EAPP to engage with the EAC Secretariat and its Partner States in the formulation of the 10-year Strategic Action Plan which will address the underlying challenges within the energy sector across the region.

EAPP’s main objective is to optimize development of energy resources in the region and to ease the access to electricity power supply to all citizens of the countries in the Eastern Africa Region through the regional power interconnections.

Member countries of the region have actively been implementing power generation and transmission projects. Most of the interconnection projects are now progressing so fast that before 2020 all of EAPP’s members, except Libya and Egypt, will be interconnected by power exchange (trade). Libya and Egypt are already connected but the proposed link between Egypt and Sudan is now at feasibility study stage.

Present at the meeting were senior officers from the member countries’ energy sectors, Independent Regulatory Board members and Development Partners including the World Bank, Power Africa, Sweden, African Development Bank, Norway and China.

As part of the milestones EAPP has so far achieved is development of a detailed process and principles documents that provides a step by step stakeholder process (simulates regulatory process) and technical guidance. This is to support transmission of firm power sale from Ethiopia to Tanzania (200 MWs) for 20 years.

At the closing session, Prof. Muhongo cited that EAPP was also looking to standardize willing charges among its member states in order to facilitate smooth exchange of power within the region.

 

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