CLOSE X
Skip to the navigationchannel.links.navigation.skip.label. Skip to the content. Nation Media Group|Africa Review|The East African|Daily Nation|NTV|NTV Uganda|Daily Monitor|The Citizen|N-Soko|Top 40 under 40 Men
Home
Saturday
May 18,  2013
  • Corporate News
  • Money & Markets
  • Opinion and Analysis
  • Special Reports
  • Life
  • Downloads
  • Magazines
GO
Login
Submit
Not registered?  Click here
Forgot your password?
Kenya|Africa|World
Stocks
Seeds of Discord|Enterprise|The Edge|Kenya's Top 100|Top 40 Under 40
BDLife|Digital Business|Enterprise|MBA
Home

Money Markets

World Bank under fire for Kenya, Addis electricity line

The World Bank has been urged to withhold support for a power line that would take electricity from Ethiopia to Kenya, citing environmental and human rights concerns.

An advocacy group urged newly installed bank president Jim Yong Kim to hold fire. “The World Bank needs to rigorously apply its social and environmental safeguards,” a letter to Kim stated.

“Human Rights Watch has very serious concerns that the World Bank has failed to do so as the project currently stands.”

The roughly 1,000-kilometre (620-mile) transmission line is part of a nearly $1.3 billion project to link energy-producing Ethiopia with Kenya — where as many as 80 per cent of the population is without power.

Resettlement

It is also part of a broader plan to link the electricity grids of Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda, spurring growth and saving East African nations around $1 billion a year in energy costs.

But the human rights watch said the project also includes pitfalls for the environment and local residents, some of whom will be displaced.

It said the dam that will be the likely source of the power in Ethiopia — which is not funded by the bank — could cause serious environmental damage to Lake Turkana, a Unesco world heritage site.

It said the dam project has also resulted in a swathe of “abusive involuntary resettlement” of local groups.

While the World Bank says that more than 5,000 people will be directly affected by the power project, it stresses the dam project is not directly linked and energy will come from a large number of existing and future power plants in Ethiopia.

The Ethiopian government is going to use power from Gibe III on the Omo River to supply electricity for 245,000 hectares of state-run irrigated sugar plantations and other projects.

The sugar plantations are already having serious consequences for the 200,000 residents of the Lower Omo including the loss of grazing land and cultivation sites, and forced resettlement into villages.

These residents, from eight groups, rely on the 760-kilometer-long Omo River for growing crops and replenishing grazing lands during annual flooding.

Agencies

Back to Business Daily: World Bank under fire for Kenya, Addis electricity line
  • Most Popular
  • Entrepreneur mints millions from nuts
  • PS, board differ over top airports authority position
  • How three brothers turned Sh5,000 into one million dollars
  • Zuku TV raises monthly fees by 20pc to lift sales
  • Nairobi varsity to expand facilities with Sh2.3bn tower
  • Why Safaricom is keen on growing data usage
  • Treasury to focus funds on projects to spur growth, jobs
  • Changing face of old shopping centres
  • Foreign investor inflows seen supporting shilling
  • ICT summit to chart way for digital services in county govts
  • EABL becomes first company to cross Sh300bn valuation
  • Maryanne Ndegwa: This CEO’s dream was to be a chef
  • Kenya's Mukhisa Kituyi tipped to lead UN trade agency
  • BP makes return to Kenya after exiting in 2007
n-sokoAbout usContact usDigital EditionsSyndicationEditorial TeamHelpPrivacy PolicyTerms RSS