KENYA Rural Electrification Access Expansion Study

 

KENYA Rural Electrification Access Expansion Study

3 month payday loans, car loan emi calculator, discover student loan, loan calc, loan calculator, loan interest calculator, loan payment calculator, savings and loans, simple loan calculator, student loans gov
 KENYA Rural Electrification Access Expansion Study


karachuonyo disbursement of loans 2016/2017  - June 2006


Christophe de Gouvello , AFTEG (TTL)

With contributions from : J. Arungu Olende (consultant),
Joel Maweni (LCSQE),
Josphat Sasia (AFTTR)


Document of the World Bank



ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS

ASAL    Arid and Semi-Arid Lands
BOT    Build Operate Transfer
CBS    Central Bureau of Statistics
CDF    Constituency Development Fund
CFL    Compact Fluorescent Lamp
COFREP    Coffee Farmers Electrification Project
DDC    District Development Committees
ERB    Energy Regulatory Board
ERSWEC    Economic Recovery Strategy of Wealth and Employment Creation
ESCO    Energy Service Company
GEF    Global Environment Facility
GOK    Government of Kenya
IFAD    International Fund for Agricultural Development
IFC    International Finance Corporation
IPPA    Interim Power Purchase Agreement
km    kilometer
KPLC    Kenya Power and Lighting Company
KSh    Kenya Shilling
kWp    Kilowatt peak
LDC    Least Developed Countries
MoE    Ministry of Energy
MSEP    Multi-Sector Energy Program
MWh    Megawatt hour
NSSF    National Social Security Fund
O&M    Operations and Maintenance
PPA    Power Purchase Agreement
PVMTI    Photovoltaic Market Transformation Initiative
SACOS    Savings Cooperatives
SWARE    Single Wire Return by Earth
Wp    Watt peak


SUMMARY

Executive Summary    5


I.    Introduction: Rural Electrification and the ERSWEC    11
II.    Demand Analysis    13
1.    Current level of access to electricity in Kenya    13
1.1.    Electrification rate and Geographical distribution of connected customers    14
1.2.    Geographical distribution of non connected households    19
2.    Energy and capacity requirement to achieve access goal    22
2.1.    Estimate of the number of additional rural households to be served until 2010    22
2.2.    Estimate of the domestic needs for electricity services of rural households and additional productive and social uses that would be triggered by the corresponding extension of access to electricity.    22
2.3.    Calculation of corresponding energy to be served and additional capacity required in rural areas to reach the goal of 20% of access in 2010.    23
3.    Electricity needs in productive and social sectors in rural areas    24
3.1.    Methodology    24
3.2.    Sector programmes    24
3.2.a.    Agriculture    25
Fish industry    25
Livestock    26
3.2.b.    Education    26
3.2.c.    Health    30
3.2.d.    Information and Communications    31
3.2.e.    District development plans    34
3.2.f.    Water and Irrigation    34
3.2.g.    Cooperatives    37
3.2.h.    Micro and small scale enterprises    37
Posho mills    38
Bakeries    38
Hotels and restaurants    38
3.2.i.    Jua Kali sub-sector    39
III.    Structure, Organization and Performance of the Rural Electrification Program    39
1.    Current structure of the Power Sector    39
2.    Institutional Setting for Rural electrification    40
3.    Expenditures and Sources of Financing    41
4.    Outcomes of the RE Program    44
IV.    Solar Photovoltaic Electrification    45
1.    The market is still driven by low cost small and low quality products    46
2.    Fee-for-service arrangements as a way to make quality and size affordable    48
3.    Main lessons of the Kenya solar experience:    49
4.    Integrating photovoltaic systems and grid extension in large rural electrification projects    49
V.    Analysis of Options for Faster Access Expansions    50
1.    Global Institutional Framework under the National Energy Policy    50
2.    Options for Detailed Design of the Institutional and Financial framework    51
2.1.    Revised modalities for customer financial participation :    51
2.1.a.    A new tariff structure that takes into account operational costs and new customers willingness to pay    52
2.1.b.    A new connection policy that maximizes both the number of beneficiaries and revenues    52
2.2.    A new Financing Mechanism:    54
2.3.    Private Public Partnerships to leverage additional implementation capacity    55
2.4.    Ensure that the regulatory framework provides for integration of new technical solutions    57
2.5.    Set up a strong institutional champion for expanding access    58
2.6.    Multi-Sectoral Partnerships for maximizing ratchet effect on rural development    59
2.7.    Options for Public Private Partnership to scale up access to electricity    59
2.7.a.    Options to increase access rate inside “KPLC domain” as defined by the French consultant proposal:    60
Option a: Inject more financing into current KPLC electrification procedure:    60
Option b: Improve the efficiency and the pace by preparing larger volumes of projects awarded to same contractor in the same area:    60
Option c: Delegate to larger private sector entities the densification of whole compact areas    60
2.7.b.    Options to increase access rate outside “KPLC domain” as defined by the French consultant proposal:    61
Option a: Turn key contracts for clusters of RE schemes:    61
Option b: Built Operate Transfer (BOT) contracts for electrifying large compact areas:    63
Option c: Distribution licenses for large rural areas    61
VI.    Conclusions and Recommendations    64

Bibliography and Data Sources    68

Annex 1 – Projection of Population per District 2000-2006    70
Annex 2 - Distribution of households by main type of lighting    76
Annex 3 – Field Visits : Main Findings    77
Annex 4 – Map of the Kenya Electricity Grid    81



Executive Summary


Rural Access and Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation
The Government of Kenya adopted in 2004 an Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC), which recognizes three main pillars for economy recovery namely: (i) strengthening economic growth; (ii) enhancing equity and reducing poverty; and (iii) improving governance. The ERSWEC reiterates that the achievement of the three pillars is dependent on adequate and reliable access to least-cost energy. Since agriculture continues to be the mainstay of Kenya’s economy, ensuring adequate access to electricity in rural areas is an important component to achieving the objectives of the ERSWEC. This is confirmed by investigations made by this study regarding specific energy needs for the different sectors of productive and social activities in the rural areas, for agriculture, livestock, fishery, tea and coffee cooperatives, telecommunications, water pumping and health and education services.

The Government of Kenya has adopted a National Energy formulated in the Sessional Paper No 4 of 2004 consistent with the ERSWEC, which set double target of a 20% access rate to electricity in rural areas and 40% in 2020.

Breadth of the challenge to attain the target of 20 % of rural access by 2010
On the basis of existing data issued by the Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS) on demography and households amenities surveys and most recent KPLC statistics on domestic customers, it has been estimated that the current rate of direct access to any kind of electricity services would be around 14.5 %, of which about 8.6% is   provided by the KPLC grid. Since the second number relies on population projections that may suffer from some bias, it should be used with caution. It is therefore recommended that the monitoring and evaluation plan of future access development projects should integrate mini-census to improve the quality of this estimate.

However, even taking into account such intrinsic uncertainties, a large gap remains between these two figures, due to:  (i) illegal and/or secondary connections, (ii) connection to private mini-grids, (iii) individual gensets and (iv) use of individual solar PV systems. Although some households manage to get some electricity services, this also means that this access is not regulated, that is, they do not benefit from any regulatory protection regarding safety standards, quality and continuity of the supply, or price charged to them for these services. Field observations and interviews of users of such alternative has led to the conclusion that these non regulated options are generally proportionally very expensive, work only a limited number of hours per day and are not reliable.  Individual homes or shops served by local private mini-grid are charged around 500 Ksh per month for one single 40W bulb used only six hours per day, when the corresponding bill would be less than 90 Ksh per month (A0 category). Individual gensets are even more expensive. PV solar systems sold on the market are of poor quality and fail quickly.

The number of additional customers that should be served to reach the 20 % target in rural areas by 2010 has been estimated on the basis of Population Projections for 2010 by CBS. If all households are to be connected as new legal customers, about one million new rural connections should be done by this date. While these figures seem impressive, the characteristics of the Kenya population settlement may help a lot to achieve large volumes of connections. Kenyan population is concentrated in less than one third of the national territory, as a result of high density of population in the western part of the country. This density is mainly due to the historically high concentration of population in the rural areas of the highlands facilitated by the exceptional climatic conditions and quality of soils; in certain districts, the rural density is more than 500 inhabitants per square kilometer. This is also a region where the main grid is already in place, which should help to increase the electrification rate relatively quickly at a relatively low cost by densifying the existing distribution grid. While detailed demand survey is lacking and should certainly be done as a necessary preliminary step to prepare any ambitious rural electrification program, rough preliminary estimates indicate that the additional capacity required to serve these one million additional rural customers plus some productive uses could be around 70 MW.

The need for a new model to scale up access
However, past performance of the current institutional and financial arrangement for rural electrification over the last three decades indicates that such an ambitious goal would be out of reach without reshaping it deeply: As of end FY2004/2005, the cumulative number of new customers connected by the Rural Electrification program established in 1973is only 101,793. The limitations of current RE institutional model have been pointed out by several studies and include institutional and management constraints, depletion of the Rural Electrification Fund by operating losses worsened by the allocation formula and by inadequate tariffs, high unitary investment costs, and a restrictive connection policy that limits the integration of domestic customers. Besides the RE program, KPLC is also connecting urban and rural customers using its own resources. However, the current pace of connection, either by the RE program or by KPLC on its own, and either urban or rural, is around 50,000 new customers per year. On average, the rate of rural electrification has increased by 0.3% per year. Even assuming significant improvement of KPLC implementation capacity, which may concentrate on its core urban market, the ambitious objective set by the Sessional Paper No4 to support the implementation of the ERSWEC cannot be attained without leveraging additional resources and implementation capacity and without improving the efficiency of the use of the public resources that can be allocated for rural electrification.

The GOK has already taken a number of steps to address some of the issues identified. In particular, it has prepared a draft Energy Bill which will establish a Rural Electrification Authority and a Rural Electrification Fund, and which will remove KPLC monopoly in power distribution activities by permitting the award of distribution licenses to third parties. Several studies have also been initiated to facilitate implementation of the decisions already taken in the Sessional Paper on Energy regarding: (i) the institutional set-up for RE, (ii) the need for cost recovery tariffs; and (iii) a new connection policy for connecting customers to facilitate the achievement of access targets.

Key recommendations
Endorsing the Government’s decision to establish a specific institutional and financial mechanism for rural access expansion separate from the current set-up for the main system, and on the basis of lessons from international experience in this area, the study is proposing key principles that should structure this new arrangement, which are the following:
Establish a new tariff structure for rural electrification that takes into account operational costs and new customers’ willingness to pay. On one hand current tariffs do not even cover O&M cost, and on the other hand, results from the few households surveys and field visit observations are supporting the evidence commonly faced in other African countries that substitutable energy expenses are significantly higher than the bill that would be charged by applying the existing tariff corresponding to these categories of customers
Adopt a new connection policy that maximizes both the number of beneficiaries and revenues. A reshaping of the actual connection policy is required to fix both the non-desired side effects of the current one and to overcome the bottleneck of the high direct and indirect connection costs.
Develop Private Public Partnerships to leverage additional implementation capacity. On one hand, even if additional funding like the support provided by the French and the Spanish cooperation allows KPLC to increase its contribution to electrification, the objective of 40% rural access by 2020 seems to be far beyond even improved KPLC capacity. On the other hand, experience of former projects, like PVMTI, consultation of different Kenyan stakeholders and experience of on-going public private partnership in other countries in the region, shows that there is a number of national and international stakeholders that are interested, and sometimes even already involved (agriculture cooperatives, PV dealers, SACOS, hire purchase companies, banks, contractors, etc.), that could play a more active role to implement the ambitious access target set up by the Set up a new Financing Mechanism. It is acknowledged that scaling up access would require  setting  up of an appropriate financing mechanism to channel public resources that are necessary to fill the gap between the initial investment cost and the resources that can be brought upfront by the customers and the private sector. According to the lessons from the PVMTI project, the appetite of the Kenya financial market to finance the share of investment cost that can be borne by the service provider, either KPLC or other private operators, may not be enough. As a consequence, there may also be a need for setting up a guarantee fund.
Complete the regulatory framework to provide for integration of new technical solutions. Besides the conventional grid, new and more cost-effective technologies are available. On one hand, low cost grid technologies like single wire return by earth (SWARE) have been tested in different countries that reduced significantly the investment cost required to serve low and dispersed loads. On the other hand, over the last decades, the technological progress has benefited more to the new decentralized electrification systems than to the already very mature grid technology. It is therefore recommended to review  the technical specifications currently enforced by the ERB and to provide an adapted regulatory framework for decentralized solutions.
Set up a strong institutional champion for expanding access. One of the key lessons from other rural electrification programs in other countries is that it is essential to set up institutionally a strong and autonomous champion whose unique commitment is to expanding access. The reason for recommending such a separate arrangement is to avoid new access expansion efforts ending up being high- jacked by inefficiencies, lack of specific capacity – especially regarding innovative solutions - and different ranking of priorities (urban growth, industrial demand development) that generally rule the power sector. The new Bill prepared by the Government will establish a Rural Electrification Authority (REA). It is recommended that the composition of its board should incorporate representatives of the civil society in a proportion that guarantees its autonomy.
Organize multi-Sectoral partnerships for maximizing ratchet effect on rural development. The development of social and productive uses of electricity requires coordinated multi-sectoral actions that seldom occur timely and spontaneously. Investigations made during this study have revealed that there is a considerable potential for increasing impacts of projects and programs executed on the same territory by other sectors. The reason is that these projects and programs are facing technical and financial limitations to provide adequate energy infrastructure, especially because they cannot account with economy of scale to get access to cost effective and reliable energy equipment and O&M services.

Options for a new model based on Public Private Partnership
The participation of private companies in developing access to electricity inside or outside the areas already served by KPLC can be sought under a range of legal arrangements which vary according to the degree of autonomy and protection awarded by the sector authorities to the participating private companies. This ranges from simple works contracts, as done currently under the RE agreement, to fully integrated licenses awarded through competitive bidding, including a number of intermediary options of which advantages and limitations can be examined in the specific geographical and legal context of Kenya.

Three potential options for Public Private Partnership to increase access rate outside “KPLC domain” have been determined by the study, which are the following:
Option a: Turnkey contracts for clusters of RE schemes:
This is the model currently being implemented under the Spanish and French funded programs. Instead of bidding limited number of schemes to each contractor, a large number of schemes (dozens) are bid at the same time.
Advantages:
This option has already been road tested through the Spanish and French funded programs, and as such will benefit from the lessons learned when implementing these programs.
Limits
This option allows neither the leveraging of additional private human and financial resources nor the bringing in of innovation related to decentralized solutions.
Option b: Distribution licenses for large compact rural areas
Distribution licenses for compact rural areas are awarded through a competitive bidding process to the candidate that would commit for the higher number of connections against the pre-determined envelope of subsidies.

The committed amount of connections is to be (i) built under a limited time and (ii) operated and maintained during the whole license period. Revenues are collected directly by the local rural electrification company that the winner will be requested to create in the license area. The choice of the technology is of the responsibility of the licensee, to the extent that each technology used complies with technical specifications or standards to be attached to the tender document.

Advantages:
The size of the area bid and the perspective of a series of tendering, the protection offered by the license, which ensures that revenue from customers can be secured over a period long enough to recover the investment, and the economic viability facilitated by the first cost subsidy can attract large private companies that are reliable over the long term, able to bring in significant amount of financing and able to achieve quickly ambitious targets. The competitive process will ensure that the candidates will optimize the use of the public subsidy. To win, international companies tend naturally to team up with local ones to reduce costs, as observed for instance in Senegal.

Limitations and risks:
This model supposes to elaborate quite a complex procurement process and to prepare a number of documents that are part of the tender package. This assumes that the REA receives technical assistance to prepare the first bidding package. Detailed preliminary market surveys for each license areas are important to provide enough information to candidates to prepare reliable proposals. Credibility, especially regarding financial and regulatory commitments from government, is essential. It should be clear that expected cash flow is adequate to cover more than O&M cost. It is worth note that all these conditions have been met by the Rural Electrification Agency of Senegal, where economic power of rural seems to be less than in Kenya.
Option c: Build Operate Transfer (BOT) contracts for electrifying large compact areas:
This option is similar to the previous one but differs with it to the extent that only functions are awarded but not licenses; KPLC remains accountable to the regulator. After several years of operation during which the winner of the bid collects the bills and maintains the equipment he has committed to install, the assets and the activity are transferred to KPLC.

Advantage:
No license needs to be issued, which simplifies the process. The choice of technology and the marketing can be innovative and more cost effective, and thus more customers are served than is the case in a scheme where the number of customers does not result from competition. As for the previous option, the long period of the contract generates a cash-flow that allows it to leverage private financial resources to be brought by bidders to maximize the number of connections.


Limitations and risks:
This model assumes that the duration of the contract is properly determined ex ante on the basis of business plan simulations to ensure a reasonable financial return to potential bidders and that KPLC provides enough energy to the licensee’s grid for him to serve his final customers.
Since the selected firm is a subcontractor and not a licensee, it has no formal link with the regulator and its contract with KPLC is not directly regulated. Private companies will commit themselves and engage money only to the extent they trust KPLC’s capacity to honor the contract over such a long period. The risk is that KPLC would interfere in their relation with the clients and thus no firm wants to engage money ; as a result the leverage effect would be nil. The risk exists when assets are transferred to KPLC when it lacks experience in managing a very different scheme.

This option is very similar to the arrangement that has been implemented in Morocco by the national public utility, ONE. However, KPLC doesn’t have the same cumulated 20 years experience on solar PV systems that ONE had before setting up such an arrangement.

Taking into account the specifics of Kenya and the possibility of benefiting from technical assistance based on previous experience, the study concludes that option b would be the most efficient and less risky option.



I.    Introduction: Rural Electrification and the ERSWEC
In the past two decades, Kenya has experienced a slowdown in growth levels across all economic sectors, and increased poverty from 48 percent of the population in 1990 to about 56 percent in 2003. During that period, agriculture grew by just about 1 percent. Manufacturing sector faced stagnating investment and negative productivity, and the quality of delivery of energy and other infrastructure services declined. With a relatively small urban population (around 25% only), Kenya remains mainly a rural country, and agriculture continues to be the mainstay of Kenya’s economy, accounting of 24% of the GDP in 2005. In order to turn economic performance around, and to improve the well-being of the population, the new Government that came into office in December 2002, has formulated an Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC)  .  ERSWEC key policy objectives are: accelerated economic growth and employment creation; increased productivity across all sectors; equitable distribution of national income; reduction of poverty through provision of basic services to the population; and improved rural / urban balance.

The ERSWEC reiterates that the achievement of the objectives is dependent on adequate and reliable least-cost energy. This implies that growth in energy supply to various sectors has to be at the minimum, commensurate with the rate of expansion of the economy. Otherwise it would become a constraint to economic growth and the achievement of the ERS objectives.

The recent recovery of agriculture is acknowledged to be one of key elements, which allowed the Kenyan GDP to grow at an accelerated pace.  The 2005 Economic Survey registers a 5.8 per cent growth, up from 4.9 per cent in the previous year; the survey shows that in spite of the worst drought, farmers raised their production by 6.7 per cent, reflecting increased activities in the agricultural sector, and improved investment, not only in the sector, but also in other sectors in the rural areas.

As a consequence, ensuring adequate energy supply for the growth of activity in the rural areas is an important component to achieve the objectives of the ERSWEC.
This is confirmed by the investigations made by this study regarding the specific energy needs for the different sectors of activity in the rural areas. Main conclusions, which are detailed in section II.3 below, are the following:
•    Agriculture, Livestock and Fishery Sector: While more analytical work would be needed to get a more precise picture, consultation of experts in the Ministry of Agriculture led to the conclusion that electricity is required to improve productivity for: (i) food processing (including post harvest processing); (ii) irrigation; (iii) food preservation (in particular refrigeration and cooling); and (iv) horticulture. Electricity is also required for fish preservation –cooling, drying, and processing. Just as the fish industry has been growing steadily, so has the requirement for energy in this sub-sector. The lack of cooling services, has, for example, resulted in the loss of many catches with attendant loss in incomes, profits and livelihoods.  The poultry sub-sector is also a fast growing user of energy, although data on the energy requirements in the sub-sector is not readily available
•    Cooperatives Sector.  There are two main types of cooperatives in Kenya: (i) those for production and marketing and (ii) those for saving and credit also known as (SACOS).  There are hundreds of production cooperatives operating in different parts of the country, covering such areas as coffee (900 coops), cotton, dairy (400 coops), horticulture, pyrethrum, etc.  Most of these cooperatives would like to apply electrical processing equipment that adds value to their products: pulping for coffee factories, ginneries for cotton, cooling tanks for dairies, etc.  For example, substitution of diesel by electricity for the pulping process has been for years identified as a key productivity gain for Kenyan coffee producers.
•    Education Sector : the Education Sector has witnessed tremendous growth since independence; the number of students enrolled at various levels of education has substantially increased. Enrolment in formal public primary schools grew from 891,533 pupils in 1963 to 7.2 million pupils in 2004 due primarily to the introduction of Free Primary Education. The number of primary schools has increased over the years to stand at 19,587 in 2004. Boarding schools, in particular, require electricity for lighting, heating and cooking, computer applications and laboratories.  Only 20 percent of the schools are connected to the grid,  the remaining 80 percent rely on generators. Currently less than 5 percent of the primary schools have electricity,          the schools in rural areas rely on generators, paraffin oil, and wood.
•    Health Sector. There are eight provincial hospitals, 75 district hospitals, 460 health centers and 1,600 dispensaries in Kenya, most of which are located in rural areas. Only about 5% of dispensaries have access to electricity and about 50% of the health centers are connected to electrical supply. Of the district hospitals about 90% are connected to electricity while about 90% have stand by generators.
•    Water Sector. Electricity is required for pumping water from the bore holes which is currently done by diesel operated water pumps. Many boreholes have been dug in Arid and Semi Arid Lands (ALAS) but have had to be abandoned for lack of pumps. This is one more example of unmet demand.
•    Telecommunication Sector. The communications sector is a major consumer of electricity in the rural areas, most of which are supplied by the service providers, who put a high premium on reliability and quality of their services to the customers. They have hundreds of repeater stations in the rural areas throughout the country. Because of the need to cool some of the equipment at the stations, electricity requirements at the stations are relatively high. Consequently the service providers have to make major investments to meet the electricity demand for their stations, but without benefiting from the economy of scale that could generate a large electrification program. Communications service providers are keen to work out modalities for KPLC to connect many of their rural stations, bearing in mind their stringent reliability and service quality requirements.

The objective of this study is then to try to quantify the challenge that the ambitious target of 20% access rate in rural areas by 2010 would mean, and, considering the institutional and financial arrangement currently in place for rural electrification, to explore possible ways to face such a challenge.
II.    Demand Analysis
1.    Current level of access to electricity in Kenya
This section presents the figures regarding direct access to electricity in rural and urban areas estimated from the different sources currently available in Kenya. Access is defined here as an individual access at household level to a grid, a mini-grid or any individual systems generating electricity (individual genset, individual solar PV system, etc.).

KPLC statistics provide monthly updated figures regarding number of customers served by RES schemes or directly by KPLC and distinguishes between rural and urban.. These statistics are organized in 4 main regions: Nairobi Region, coast, West Region and Mount Kenya Region.  The four regions are subdivided into eleven sub-regions and detailed according to 59 smaller areas (see Annex 1 - KPLC Statistics - Number of customers per region and Sub-region, April 2006). 

On the other hands, CBS statistics provides the distribution of rural households and urban households by districts and provinces in 1999 and demographic projections until 2010 (see Annex 2 - Projection of Population per District 2000-2006, Analytical Report on Population Projections, Vol VIII Kenya 1999 Population and Housing Census, Central Bureau of Statistic).

On that basis, it is possible to estimate electrification rates at two different point of time, e.g. 1999 and 2006. While the focus of this study is more on rural access, it has been possible to calculate  a separate estimate of the electrification rate for rural and urban areas for the year 2006.  It should be noted that is has not been possible to check precisely if the definitions of rural areas / population used by CBS and by KPLC were identical or not . As a result the split in these two categories is to be used with caution . For that reason, the global urban+rural figures are always presented together with the disaggregated ones.

Perhaps more important, it has also been possible to estimate the number of households that are not yet connected to the grid, both in the urban and rural areas. Both connection rate and unconnected households are detailed for the 7 provinces.  This required a cautious work of re-aggregation of detailed KPLC data per administrative province. So far it was not possible to get disaggregated data at the districts level, since it has not been possible to re-aggregate the detailed KPLC data per districts . However, since the electrification rate remains very low in most of the districts, the simple demographic data is also useful to get a sense of the distribution of non connected households at the district level. This information is also presented in annex 2.

It should also be noted that the KPLC figures do not capture illegal connections or secondary connections, which would lead to higher figures, nor other means of access to electricity (private mini-grids, individual gensets and PV). However, a specific CBS Report on Housing Conditions and Households Amenities dated 1999 provides the Distribution of households by main type of lighting (see annex 3), which include electricity independently of the origin (grid, local mini-grid or individual genset) and individual solar PV systems. While this data is not very recent, it gives a sense of the relative importance of other means to access electricity services.
1.1.    Electrification rate and Geographical distribution of connected customers
From 2000 to 2006, the total number of KPLC customers has increased from around 500,000 to around 800,000 (see table 1 below). This includes all categories of customers, including small, medium and large commercial customers, industrial customers and street lighting. Domestic customers (urban+ rural) correspond only to tariff categories A0 and A0&D0. These two categories, which together represent 81.5% of the total number of KPLC customers, determine the number of households that are getting access to electricity through KPLC grid (Rural Electrification Schemes + KPLC connections). This number has increased from around 400,000 to 650,000 during the period 2000-2006.
Annual growth of domestic connections varied between 6 to 8% per year during the period with a peak of 12% in 2002, which means around 50,000 new domestic connections every year .
Table 1:  Evolution of Domestic Customers – 2000-2006
Tariff Category(KPLC+RES)    2000    2001    2002    2003    2004    2005    2006
AO only (Domestic)    356,541    378,751    430,580    468,848    504,535    548,251    594,691**
AO & DO (Domestic)    44,581    47,279    46,424    49,582    50,609    51,168    51,540**
Total Domestic    401,122    426,030    477,004    518,430    555,144    599,419    646,231**
Annual growth        6.2%    12.0%    8.7%    7.1%    8.0%    7.8%
A0 as % of total    70.5%    70.5%    72.5%    72.9%    73.5%    74.6%    75.0%*
A0&D0 as % of total    8.8%    8.7%    7.8%    7.7%    7.3%    6.9%    6.5%*
A0 + A0&D0 as % of total    79.3%    79.3%    80.4%    80.6%    80.9%    81.5%    81.5%
Total customers all categories    505,951    537,079    593,621    643,274    686,195    735,144    792,922
* estimated; ** calculated as a percentage of the total
Sources: KPLC, Annual Report and Accounts 2004-2005, and KPLC database for April 2006 total figure. See also detail of KPLC statistics for all categories of customers in Annex 1.

Not surprisingly, KPLC domestic customers (all categories) concentrate principally in the Nairobi Region (41%). While also quite concentrated, the distribution of rural customers is significantly different, since 30% of them are located in the Rift Valley Region and 23% in the Central Region (see table 2).

The comparison of these figures with CBS statistics, especially population projections for the year 2006, gives an estimate of the access rate nationwide and for each province, both for rural and urban population.

However, two caveats need to be stressed with respect to the population projections results.  First, the further we move away from 1999 into the future, the less reliable the projections' results become.  And, second, internal migration plays a major role on sub-national projection outcomes.  This is so because, obviously, migration patterns will directly influence sub-national populations but also because migration rates applied to sub-national populations bring a bias of their own in the calculations.  Indeed, if one apply a positive migration rate to a sub-national entity, its population will grow more rapidly than in reality because you apply a positive rate to a growing population -  in fact, it generates a snowball effect ; the opposite is true with negative migration rates and the population decrease faster than in reality. But since the latter situation is less frequent in the case of Kenya (only 3 districts out of 70 are deemed to have negative rates), the use of these projections may induce a slight over-estimate of the global population projections that I used, and thus a slight underestimate of the rate of access.

Therefore, these results should be used with caution, and it is recommended that, when large projects will be prepared, the monitoring and evaluation plan integrates mini-census of selected areas to improve the quality of the access rate determination and the measurement of it evolution along the project.

Table 2 : Regional distribution of domestic customers (A0 and A0&D0 categories only) - April 2006)

     Urban  connected    Rural  connected    Total  connected
Provinces    No. of households    % of total urban households    No of households    % of total rural households    No of households    % of total households
Nairobi    263,656    50%    0    non applicable    263,656    41%
Central    49,878    10%    27,543    23%    77,421    12%
Coast    74,912    14%    13,752    11%    88,663    14%
Eastern    28,189    5%    21,778    18%    49,968    8%
North eastern    0    non applicable    5,025    4%    5,025    1%
Nyanza    25,049    5%    10,964    9%    36,013    6%
Rift Valley    70,489    13%    36,572    30%    107,062    17%
Western    12,067    2%    6,356    5%    18,423    3%
Kenya    524,240    100%    121,991    100%    646,231    100%
Source: KPLC database
note: in KPLC statistics, all domestic customers in Nairobi (city) are considered urban, and all domestic customers located in the North Eastern province (Garissa, Mandera, Wajir) are registered as rural.

Considering that the number of connected households is accurately measured by the number of A0 and A0+D0 KPLC customers, this gives an estimate of the current national electrification rate of 8.65% in April 2006. This is significantly below the figure of 15% frequently quoted in different texts . However, it should also be noted that the KPLC figures do not capture illegal and/or secondary connections, which would lead to higher figures of households effectively connected, nor other means of access to electricity (individual gensets and PV).

A specific CBS Report on Housing Conditions and Households Amenities dated 1999 provides the distribution of households by main type of lighting (see annex 3), which includes electricity independently of the origin (grid – legal or illegal connections - , local mini-grid or individual genset) and individual solar PV systems. While this data is not very recent, it gives a sense of the relative importance of other means to access electricity services. According to this survey, the proportion of households having access to some electricity services - either as a registered KPLC customer or through any other mean – was 14% in 1999.

This means that only 61% of people accessing electricity are getting it officially through KPLC. This also means that the rest about 39%, are getting access to electricity under non regulated conditions without any regulatory protection regarding quality standards, safety standards or price paid.

While no precise figure exists regarding the number of solar PV systems effectively working as of today, it should be noted that the number of such systems sold in the country has significantly increased (see section IV Solar Electrification). While the CBS survey counted only 28.531 households using such systems in 1999, it is estimated that the current number of such systems could be around 200,000. Such an increase represents an additional 0.5% in terms of households having access to electricity.

Urban electrification rate is of course higher (26.4%) peaking at 31.1% in Nairobi. Rural electrification rate is lower (2.2%) peaking at 4.21% in the Coast Province (see table 3 below).

According to KPLC data for the year 2000, the number of domestic customers was 401,122, which represented a rate of electrification of 6.4% nationwide. This means that although the population has grown 12.7% in the period (see annex 2), the electrification rate – measured on the basis of registered domestic KPLC customers - has increased by 2.05%, which is  0.33% per year.

Table  3: Access to electricity in April 2006 (KPLC grid)
     Number of Household (2006)(1)    Households connected (2)
(KPLC customers statistics 2006, A0 & A0+D0 only)
    Rural    Urban    Total    Number Rural    elec rate rural    Number Urban    elec rate  urban    Number Total    elec rate total
Nairobi    0    848,232    848,232    0    non applic.    263,656    31.08%    263,656    31.08%
Central    822,846    171,760    994,606    27,543    3.35%    49,878    29.04%    77,421    7.78%
Coast    326,469    298,768    625,237    13,752    4.21%    74,912    25.07%    88,663    14.18%
Eastern    970,210    89,595    1,059,805    21,778    2.24%    28,189    31.46%    49,968    4.71%
North eastern    195,673    35,255    230,928    5,025    2.57%    0    0.00%    5,025    2.18%
Nyanza    954,698    128,027    1,082,724    10,964    1.15%    25,049    19.57%    36,013    3.33%
Rift Valley    1,483,383    326,654    1,810,037    36572.31    2.47%    70489.35    21.58%    107061.66    5.91%
Western    734,994    84,660    819,654    6,356    0.86%    12,067    14.25%    18,423    2.25%
Kenya    5,488,272    1,982,950    7,471,223    121,991    2.22%    524,240    26.44%    646,231    8.65%
Source: (1) Analytical Report on Housing Conditions and Households Amenities, Vol X, Kenya 1999 Population and Housing Census, Central Bureau of Statistics, and Analytical Report on Population Projections, Vol VIII Kenya 1999 Population and Housing Census, Central Bureau of Statistics. Number of rural and urban households in 2006 have been estimated by applying the projection of population growth from 1999 to 2006 to the number of rural and urban households established by the 1999 census.
(2) KPLC, Annual Report 2004-2005. See also details regarding number of KPLC customers of all categories in Annex 1..
Table  4: Access to electricity in 2000 : comparison between connection to KPLC grid only and access to electricity including all possible means (grid, mini-grid, individual genset, PV)
    Access to Electricity
(grid, mini-grid, genset, PV)
(based on CBS survey, 1999)    Access to KPLC grid only
(based on KPLC data, 2000)
Regions    Number of Household 1999 (Census 1999)    Number electricity users 1999    Access rate %     Nb Households 2000
(proj CBS)    Number Domestic customers KPLC 2000    Connection rate %
Nairobi    638,928    336,640    52.4 %    682,689    194,068    28.4%
Central    912,760    149,691    16.3 %           
Coast    521,047    102,758    19.6 %           
Eastern    950,565    64,512    6.7 %           
North eastern    146,176    8,072    5.5 %           
Nyanza    956,979    49,089    5.1 %           
Rift Valley    1,478,354    146,901    9.9 %           
Western    699,016    23,859    3.4 %           
Total Kenya    6,301,825    881,522    14.0 %    6,636,122    401,122    6.4%

1.2.    Geographical distribution of non connected households
By subtracting the number of rural and urban domestic customers from CBS households, it is possible to get an estimate of the remaining population which doesn’t have access to the public service of electricity. As of today, it can be estimated that around 6.8 out of 7.5 million households (e.g. around 91.3%) have no access to the public service. Table 5 below gives the split in rural and urban population. These figures do not take into account illegal connections and sub-connections, and for that reason may be slightly overestimated.

Table 5 gives also the regional distribution of this population. While the non-connected urban population concentrates principally in Nairobi (40% of total), the non-connected rural population is slightly more evenly distributed among provinces, with the exception of the provinces with smaller populations (Coast and North Eastern). As a matter of fact, these figures largely reflect how the provinces have been administratively delimitated, some being very small, others quite large. As a result, it is more appropriate to examine the settlement of these populations to better perceive where it concentrates and where the major efforts should be done to increase future rates.

Table 5:Geographical distribution of households without access to the public service of electricity
     Households not connected to KPLC grid
Regions    Number Rural    % rural    Number Urban    % urban    Number total    % total
Nairobi    0    -     584,576    40.1%    584,576    8.6%
Central    795,302    14.8%    121,882    8.4%    917,184    13.4%
Coast    312,717    5.8%    223,856    15.3%    536,574    7.9%
Eastern    948,432    17.7%    61,406    4.2%    1,009,838    14.8%
North eastern    190,648    3.6%    35,255    2.4%    225,902    3.3%
Nyanza    943,733    17.6%    102,978    7.1%    1,046,711    15.3%
Rift Valley    1,446,811    27.0%    256,165    17.6%    1,702,976    25.0%
Western    728,638    13.6%    72,593    5.0%    801,231    11.7%
Kenya    5,366,281    100%    1,458,711    100%    6,824,992    100%
Source: (1) Analytical Report on Housing Conditions and Households Amenities, Vol X, Kenya 1999 Population and Housing Census, Central Bureau of Statistics, and Analytical Report on Population Projections, Vol VIII Kenya 1999 Population and Housing Census, Central Bureau of Statistics. (2) KPLC, Annual Report 2004-2005
2) KPLC, Annual Report 2004-2005.

Indeed, the geographical distribution of population in Kenya is very specific since the population settlement is highly contrasted in Kenya: while large regions remain very low densely populated – mainly the Northern part of the country – the highlands and the borders of the Victoria Lake are impressively highly populated (Western Region, Nyanza Region, the Central Region and the southern part of the Eastern Region). This can be easily observed in the maps on the next page (Fig 2 and 3).
Since the rural electrification rate is still very low nationwide (less than 4 percent), the areas where the rural population concentrates are the same where the non-connected rural households also concentrate. As a consequence, these maps give a realistic view of where rural electrification programs should focus to increase rate of electrification.
The rural density is so high in these areas – it can be above 500 persons per square km - that it should be technically possible to increase very quickly and at a relatively low cost the number of grid connections.

However, observation of the past trends has shown that the pace of access expansion through connections to KPLC grid has remained very low (+0.33% per year), meaning that it would require around 35 years (e.g. to year 2041) to increase the electrification rate from the actual level of 8.65% to the target of 20%. Such observations call for new modes of intervention in order to significantly accelerate this pace.




Fig. 1: KPLC interconnected grid, 2005


Most of the Kenyan population is concentrated in less than one third of the national territory, as the result of very high density of population in the western part of the country. This density is not the result of urbanization but is mainly due to the historically high concentration of population in rural areas of the highlands facilitated by the exceptional climatic conditions and quality of soils. As a consequence, the development of urban centers has principally occurred in that part of the country, which also triggered the concentration of the grid infrastructure in the same region. The main grid being already in place, this should help to increase the electrification rate relatively quickly at a relatively low cost by densifying the existing distribution grid.

Fig.2: Geographical Distribution of Kenya Population

Fig. 3: Density of Population in Kenya

(Source: Les Afriques au Sud du Sahara, Geographie Universelle, Belin-Reclus, p.331, 1994)

2.    Energy and capacity requirement to achieve access goal
This section presents an estimate of the minimal additional demand that would have to be served to reach the objective stated in the Sessional Paper N0.4 of 2004 of serving 20% of the rural population by 2010 .
For this purpose, the following steps have been followed:
1.    Estimate of the number of additional rural households to be served until 2010.
2.    Estimate of the demand for electricity uses:
-    domestic needs for electricity services of rural households
-    additional productive and social uses that would be triggered by the corresponding extension of access to electricity.
3.    Calculation of corresponding energy to be served and additional capacity required
2.1.    Estimate of the number of additional rural households to be served until 2010
On the basis of population projection data established for 2010 by CBS, it is estimated that the additional number of households that would have to be served would be around 1 million rural households. While the focus of this study is more on rural access, a similar calculation has been done for urban access, which gives an estimate of around 525,000 additional urban households that would have to be connected to reach an urban electrification rate of 50% nationwide by 2010. These results are presented in the table 6 below.
Table 6: estimate of number of additional households to served to reach the goal of 20% of rural access and 50% of urban access by 2010.
     estimated nb of households in 2006    estimated nb of households in 2010    targeted connection rate 2010    nb of households already connected in 2006    additional households to be connected by 2010
rural    5,488,272    5,885,219     20%    121,991    1,055,053
urban    1,982,950    2,126,370     50%    524,240     538,945
total    7,471,223    8,011,589     28%    646,231    1,593,998
Source: calculated from :
(1) Analytical Report on Population Projections, Vol VIII Kenya 1999 Population and Housing Census, Central Bureau of Statistics.
(2) KPLC data 2006.

2.2.    Estimate of the domestic needs for electricity services of rural households and additional productive and social uses that would be triggered by the corresponding extension of access to electricity.
Precise results would require detailed surveys of domestic needs and productive and social uses in rural areas, including the determination of the statistical distribution of rural households according to different level of needs and willingness to pay; such detailed demand analysis should be undertaken later, for instance when preparing a new access expansion project.

For the time being, data available are very limited. As a consequence estimated average consumption patterns per household have been established on the basis of the limited data available, field trip observations and patterns observed in other countries in the region. This average pattern is presented in tables 7 and 8 below. Since the objective of this section is to determine the minimum additional demand to be served to reach the objective stated in the Sessional Paper N04 of 2004, it has been assumed that all new connected households would be equipped with efficient Compact Fluorescent Lamps, which is the most cost effective option . In case CFLs are not widely distributed in future RE projects, the estimate would have to be considerably increased.

Table 7: estimated average pattern for basic domestic demand per type of use in rural areas (energy and additional capacity)

    Nb    average wattage (W)    average daily use    energie per day (Wh)    energy per year (kWh)    max demand (W)    coeff of simultaneity    additional capacity required (W)
lamps
(all CFLs)    5    10    3 hours    150    55    50    0.3    15
Radio    1    15    5 hours    75    27    15    0.3    4.5

Table 8: estimated average pattern for basic domestic demand per household in rural areas (energy and additional capacity)

                energie per day (Wh)    energy per year (kWh)    max demand (W)        additional capacity required (W)
total basic demand                225    82    65        19.5


2.3.    Calculation of corresponding energy to be served and additional capacity required in rural areas to reach the goal of 20% of access in 2010.
One the basis of the above estimates, additional energy and installed capacity required to reach the goal of 20% of rural access to electricity in 2010 can be calculated and are estimated at around 86,646 MWh/year, and 21 MW  respectively. Of course, it is important to stress that these estimate do not include the productive and commercial/uses that would also develop when access rate increases. Additional data and investigations will be required when preparing a project to calculate upstream impact of the new connections on the transmission and the generation.

Table 9: estimate of additional energy and installed capacity required to achieve
 20 % access rate in rural areas
additional rural households to be connected until 2010    additional energy to be served per year for domestic, productive and social uses    additional installed capacity required
1,055,053    86,646 MWh/y    21 MW

3.    Electricity needs in productive and social sectors in rural areas
3.1.    Methodology
Very little data exists on electricity requirements of the different sectors of activity in the Kenyan rural areas. To get quantitative figures of the electricity demand related to productive and social uses in these areas would require a detailed survey which was not possible to undertake in the context of this study. Such a survey should be undertaken when preparing the next large rural electrification project. In the context f this study, the following methodological steps have been followed:
(i)    Review of current and planned sector programs and development reports to assess their requirements for electricity;
(ii)    Discussion with officials of various ministries, notably ministries of Energy and of   Planning and National Development;
(iii)    Interviews with experts in the ministries of Agriculture, Health, Education, and Water and Irrigation;
(iv)    Discussion with officials of the Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), the Kenya Power and Lighting Company (KPLC), the Communications Commission of Kenya and  telephone network providers – Telecom Kenya, Celtel and Safaricom;
(v)    Review of data provided by the respective ministries - Energy, Planning and National Development, Education, Health- by various bodies such as CBS, KPLC, CCK, Telecom Kenya, Celtel and Safaricom;
(vi)    Field visits to selected trading centers to better ascertain current sources of energy for households, businesses, their expenditures on energy and the impact of readily available electricity on livelihoods, and o business and commercial activities; a summary of the main observations made during the field visits is presented in annex 4.
3.2.    Sector programs
Review was undertaken of current and planned development programs of various sectors covering Agriculture and Rural Development, Education, Health, General Economic Services (Trade and Industry; Tourism and Wildlife; Labour and Human Resources Development; Gender, Sports and Social Services; and Youth Affairs), Information Communication Technology, Physical Infrastructures, Public Administration, and Water and Irrigation.

This was supplemented by discussions with officials of a number of ministries e.g. Energy, Planning and National Development, Agriculture Health, Education, and Water and Irrigation all of which also provided additional data on activities in the rural areas. Discussions were similarly held with government organizations such as KPLC, the Communications Commission of Kenya (CCK), Telkom Kenya, the Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), National Irrigation Board, National Water Conservation and Pipeline Corporation; these too provided valuable information and data. Furthermore, discussions were held with a private sector cell phone service provider, Safaricom, which also shared with us information and data on their electricity requirements in the rural areas. 

A selected number of sectors, including, agriculture, health, education, administration, information communication technologies, water and irrigation and co-operatives are examined below as part of an attempt to highlight the high level of unmet or under-served demand for electricity in the rural areas; also examined are the micro and small-scale enterprises many of which are located in rural areas. A limiting factor in this effort is the lack or adequacy of data on the demand for these activities, current or planned.

3.2.a.    Agriculture
Agriculture plays a major role in Kenyan economy: about 80 per cent of the population depends on agricultural activities; moreover, agriculture directly contributes 26 per cent of the country’s GDP and a further 27 per cent indirectly through linkages with manufacturing, distribution and other sectors. The agricultural sector cuts across different levels of electricity use, ranging from households; small and medium scale enterprises, including cottage industry; and agro- based industries, such as dairying, tea, coffee and sugar production. Electricity is also used other activities such as irrigation, crop drying, food preservation (in particular refrigeration and cooling), general food processing (including post harvest processing), irrigation, food storage, industrial processing and horticulture. Agricultural activities would expand significantly and productivity improved greatly if electricity were available for these activities To be sure, different levels require different types of energy depending on availability, accessibility, affordability, sustainability and socio-cultural factors among others. A selected number of sub-sectors are highlighted below, fishing, livestock, and poultry.

Fish industry
 Just as the fish industry has been growing steadily, so has the requirement for energy in this sub-sector. But this requirement has not been fully met, far from it. The fish industry is large and employs thousands of people and with an annual turnover of KShs 17 billion. A strong case can be made for supplying selected beaches with adequate electricity for fish storage and preservation (cooling and drying); suitable areas within the vicinity of the beaches could also be supplied for processing the fish. No firm data is available for electricity requirements but they are quite large. The inadequacy, and in many cases, complete lack of cooling services, has, for example, resulted in the loss of many catches with attendant loss in incomes, profits and livelihoods. While no figures are available, the unmet as well as underserved demand is high. The on-going development of the sub-sector policy will go a long way in addressing the electricity supply challenges facing the industry.

Livestock
Significant progress has been made in enhancing local and international market access for beef. This should be reflected in increased sales. Nevertheless, the unavailability or inadequacy of energy, in particular electricity, constitutes a major constraint in the development of livestock based industries in the rural areas. Electricity is, for example, required for operating abattoirs and for dairying.

In the dairy industry, the implementation of reforms that includes the regularization of the informal milk sub-sector, revival of the KCC and improved extension services has led to significant growth in milk output (3.5 per cent in 2005). Moreover, the Government has initiated the review and formulation of various policies aimed at streamlining the dairy industry; this will result in expansion of activities and increased productivity in the industries and attendant increase in demand. Milk is pasteurized or converted to yogurt or to mala. Electricity is the main source of energy; some plants use diesel for normal operation or as standby, while others use firewood or charcoal. The total electricity consumption, estimated at 3,015,600kWh (in the year 2000), is thus expected to increase significantly in the light of these new developments. A Dairy Commercialization Project, to be funded by I FAD, is planned for 2006/2007 will enhance dairy production and add value to the milk. This too will result in increased demand for electricity.

The poultry sub-sector is also a fast growing user of energy – for providing controlled heat and light incubation. Most of poultry breeding activities are located in rural and peri-urban areas. Data on the energy requirements in the sub-sector is not readily available but we believe it is substantial and, as noted, fast growing.

3.2.b.    Education
The education sector has witnessed tremendous growth since independence; the number of students enrolled at various levels of education has substantially increased: enrolment in formal public primary schools grew from 891,533 pupils in 1963 to 7.2 million pupils in 2004, due primarily to the introduction of Free Primary Education in 2003. The net national enrolment rate in public primary schools rose from 67.8 per cent in 2002 to 82,2 per cent in 2004. The number of primary schools has increased over the years to stand at 19,587 in 2004; of these, 17,678 are public schools and 1,839 are private ones. There are 1,160 day/boarding and 18,427 day primary schools. Table 10 shows the number of primary schools, public and private, in the period between 1999 and 2004, broken down by province
.

Table 10: Number of Primary Schools by Province, 1999 -2004


Province    1999    2000    2001    2002    2003    2004
    Public    Private    Public    Private    Public    Private    Public    Private    Public    Private    Public    Private
Coast    1 031    82    1 019    143    1 007    131    1 004    143    1 034    120    1 039    138
Central    1 752    84    1 842    152    1 751    216    1 763    253    1 766    471    1 774    460
Eastern    4 071    96    4 115    123    4 044    130    4 048    134    4 098    285    4 112    215
Nairobi    188    58    183    185    164    178    188    182    188    94    189    141
Rift Valley    4 663    106    4 515    170    4 583    206    4 554    225    4 768    464    4 763    446
Western    1 926    16    1 923    29    1 915    31    1 895    30    1 956    92    1 985    53
Nyanza    3 648    127    3 677    429    3 509    460    3 411    469    3 575    316    3 604    372
North Eastern    181    -    179    5    183    5    194    5    209    15    212    14
Total    17 460    569    17 453    1 236    17 156    1 357    17 057    1 441    17 594    1 857    17 678    1 839
TOTAL    18 029    18 689    18 513    18 498    19 451    19 517
Source: Ministry of Education, Kenya



At the secondary level, enrolment grew to 862,908 students in 2003 (415,246 girls and 447,662 boys). The number of secondary schools, both public and private, has increased from 151 at independence to 4,100 in 2004. Of these 860 are boarding, 920 are boarding/day and 2,320 are day schools. Enrolment in secondary schools has increased from 738,085 in 2000 to 923,134 in 2004, an increase of 25.1 per cent.  In spite of increased enrolment in secondary schools, the sub-sector is still faced with issues of access, equity and quality, mainly because growth of educational facilities at this level has not kept pace with growth in demand. Table 11 shows a brake down of public and private secondary schools for the period 1999 to 2004.

The education sector is a large consumer of energy given that learning/teaching institutions rely on energy for lighting, heating and cooking. Of Kenya’s 20,000 educational insti¬tutions, about 90 per cent use wood fuel to prepare meals. Firewood collection leads to the destruction of trees that could absorb carbon dioxide emissions and degrades local ecosystems. Also, in some schools children use significant amounts of time search¬ing for fuel wood – time which could otherwise be spent on learning. Currently, less than 20 per cent of all the secondary schools have access to grid connection while 30 per cent use stand alone generators and other forms of energy. Less than 5 per cent of the primary schools have electricity and most of the schools still rely on standalone generators, paraffin and wood fuel.

The demand for electricity in rural schools, especially primary schools, while relatively low at the present time, has the potential of growing substantially if certain actions are implemented. Among these is the expansion of the current Rural Electrification Program so that as many primary schools as possible are connected; those far away from the grid should be provided with stand alone generators or supplied from other decentralized systems such as solar photovoltaic (PV), wind small scale hydro or a combination of these; indeed there is an ongoing Government PV solar electrification project to electrify some public secondary schools in Arid and Semi-Arid districts of North Eastern and Rift Valley Provinces. It has also, for example, been suggested that the Government in its endeavor to increase the stock of human skills should put in place policy measures to address the low transition rates from primary to secondary schools, currently estimated at below 50 per cent as a way of supporting the country’s overall development goals. Provision of conventional energy in secondary schools is one of the strategies to help the Government realize this noble goal. All in all there is a need to increase availability of electricity to secondary schools to 40 per cent by 2008, 50 per cent by 2010 and 80 per cent by 2015. Provision of use of generator should also be increased from the current 30 per cent to 50 per cent in 2010 and 70 per cent in 2015.

The school mapping project, started in 2004, is not yet complete. It is undertaking a census and providing geographic locations of all schools; in the process the schools connected to the grid, as well as those using stand alone generators or other energy sources will be identified and mapped. When complete the initiative would provide useful information for assessing energy demand, including that for electricity, met and unmet, served and underserved, in schools in the country, both rural and urban, and for preparing the necessary strategies for meeting such demand.


Table 11: Number of Secondary Schools by Province, 1999 - 2004
    1999        2000        2001        2002        2003        2004   
Province    Public    Private    Public    Private    Public    Private    Public    Private    Public    Private    Public    Private
Coast    150    16    146    17    153    31    150    38    143    43    142    43
Central    605    36    514    43    629    36    602    48    661    65    683    65
Eastern    576    88    645    100    611    73    634    86    706    90    713    90
Nairobi    48    47    48    47    48    47    48    47    48    47    48    47
Rift Valley    600    128    527    139    666    160    674    152    813    164    818    164
Western    406    16    356    13    449    14    448    14    453    17    452    17
Nyanza    581    47    531    44    663    52    669    52    737    62    740    62
North Eastern    22    3    24    3    22    3    22    -    22    -    25    2
Total    2,988    381    2,791    406    3,241    416    3,247    437    3,583    488    3,621    490
TOTAL    3,369        3,197        3,657        3,684        4,071        4,112   
Source: Ministry of Education, Kenya




3.2.c.    Health
Among the public hospitals, there are two national referral hospitals, eight provincial hospitals, 75 district hospitals, 460 health centers and 1,628 dispensaries in Kenya. Table 12 shows the public health facilities broken down by province. Unfortunately, no information has been provided on private health facilities of which there are many and whose number is growing in the rural areas.


Table 12: Government Health Facilities *

Province
    Hospital    Health Centers    Dispensaries    Total    %    GoK Facilities/
100,000
population
 Central     15    56    234    305    13.8    7.6
 Nairobi     7    33    59    99    4.5    3.7
 Coast     16    45    185    246    11.2    8.6
Eastern    18    59    307    384    17.4    7.6
North Eastern     3    9    38    50    2.3    3.7
 Nyanza     15    79    187    281    12.8    5.8
Rift Valley    33    114    554    701    31.8    8.6
Western    8    65    64    137    6.2    3.6
Kenya      115    460    1628    2203    100.0    6.7

Source: Ministry of Health, Kenya

Typical equipment which requires energy in a dispensary includes refrigerators for vaccines, sterilization equipment, examination lamps, microscopes and centrifuges. In the health centre the equipment which requires energy to operate includes examination lamp and general lighting, refrigerators, sterilization equipment, heaters, suction machines, microscopes, centrifuges, transfer incubators, kitchen cooking equipment, ironing equipment and incinerators.

In the district hospitals the number of equipment requiring energy to operate is even larger and includes:- examination lamp, general lighting, refrigerators, suction machines, dental equipment, heaters, kitchen cooking equipment, laundry equipment, theatre and sterilization equipment, mortuary plants, physiotherapy equipment, maternity and nursery equipment, ophthalmic equipment, pharmacy equipment, stand by generators, and incinerators. All referral and provincial hospitals are connected to the grid; so are about most the district hospitals.

The number of dispensaries has been growing steadily in the rural areas, especially so in recent years, in response to increased population and ever mounting multiplicity of health problems. At present, dispensaries rely more on gas and only about 5 per cent of them have access to electricity. About 50 per cent of the health centers are connected to electrical supply and about 20 per cent have stand by generators; 5 per cent of health centers uses solar power; charcoal and firewood are used mainly for cooking. Of the district hospitals about 90 per cent are connected to electricity while about 90 per cent have stand by generators.

Here again one can appreciate, even without complete data, the fact that there is large unmet demand in the rural areas. It is the health centers and dispensaries most of which are located in the rural areas that will drive of demand for electricity by the health facilities in these areas.

3.2.d.    Information and Communications
The communications sector is a major consumer of electricity in the rural areas, most of itself supplied by the communications service providers, which put a high premium on reliability and quality of their services to the customers. They have a large and fast growing number of repeater stations in the rural areas throughout the country. For each station, the following are required: two generators, batteries and a rectifier. Consequently the service providers have to make major investments to meet the electricity demand for their stations. This demand is huge, and yet it is not reflected in the current electricity demand data in the country. Because of the need to cool some of the equipment at the stations, electricity requirements at each station are relatively high. If this demand were to be reflected it would constitute a significant portion of the total rural electricity requirements.

Table 13 provides a sampling of the communications stations not connected to the grid installed by the Telkom Kenya Corporation, a major provider of line telephone network in Kenya. This is but a small portion if the total number of stations that are self supplied by Telcom Kenya. The supply of electricity to such stations is an expensive undertaking, one that has undoubtedly resulted in a lower rate of growth in meeting communications needs of the rural population, and that would, furthermore, greatly benefit from connection to the grid where possible. Electricity supply constraints may have, directly or indirectly affected the quality of communications services provided to the rural areas..

Table 13: Sample of Telkom Kenya sites not connected to the grid

                Type of  power
Exchange    Make    Region    District    KPLC                   DEG    Solar
                    standby    Dual   
Bura Tana    LCON    Eastern    Tana Riv    ---        2x8KVA   
Cheptiret    MB    R.Valley        --    1kVA       
Dadaab    RA/TER    Eastern        --        2x8KVA   
Eshibuye    LCON    Western    Kakamega    ---            2KW
Faza    ‘’    Coast    Lamu    ---            2kW
Gabra Tula    ‘’    Eastern    Isiolo    ---        2x8KVA    2kW
Habsweni    PCM/TER    Nothern?        ---        2x8KVA   
Ianzoni    LCON    Eastern    Machakos    ---            2kW
Kadel    ‘’    Nyanza    Migori                2kW
KenduBay    ‘’    Nyanza    Rachuonyo    ---            2kW
Manga    ‘’    Nyanza        ---            20kW
Migwani    ‘’    Eastern    Kitui    ---            2kW
Modogashe    PCM/TER    Eastern        ---        2x8KVA   
Mpeketoni    LCON    Coast    Lamu    ---            2kW
Mtomo    ‘’    Eastern    Kitui    ---            2kW
Namanga    ‘’    R.Valley        --            2kW
Ndalu    ‘’    R.Valley        ---            2kW
Ndaragwa    ‘’    Central    Nyandarwa    ---            2kW
Okia    ‘’    Southern?        ---            2kW
Plateau    ‘’    R.Valley    Ouasingishu    ---            2kW
Rhamu    ‘’    N. Eastern    Mandera    ---        2x8KVA   
SKinangop    ‘’    Central    Nyandarwa    ---            2kW
Songhor    ‘’    Nyanza    Nyando    ---            2kW
Tausa    ‘’    Coast    Voi    ---            2kW
Tawa    ‘’    Eastern     Mkuweni    ---            2kW
Wenje    MB    Eastern                2x8KVA   

Source: Telkom Kenya

Safaricom is the main provider of cell phone services in Kenya. Table 14 too, gives a breakdown of the Safaricom stations throughout the country - 34 in all. Of these the Safaricom has applied to be connected by KPLC in 12 stations. A three phase 10kVA supply is needed at each station so a total 340kVA is currently self supplied. But this figure is bound to rise rapidly in the immediate future in the face of unprecedented growth in cell phone services. It has, for example, been reported that Safiricom is signing up on average 100, 000 new users each month and targets 5.5 million customers by 2007; this represents an annual rate of growth of 25 per cent.

Communications service providers are keen to work out modalities for KPLC to connect many of their rural stations, bearing in mind their stringent reliability and service quality requirements.

A Rural Telecommunications Project, to be funded by China is being planned; this would involve installing repeater stations at locations throughout the country within the vicinity of each Divisional Headquarters. The demand for electricity to supply the stations is expected to be enormous. The service provider-Telkom Kenya- would like to co-ordinate it effort with KPLC toward meeting the electricity requirements for the proposed project.

The cell phone industry, spearheaded by Safaricom and Celtel companies, has come out as a major contributor to economic growth in the country. The number of cell phone users has grew by a staggering 56.9 per cent in the past year; the number of cell phone users is currently estimated at 5.6 million, a sizeable portion of which lives in the rural areas; this has brought with it a fast growing demand in the rural areas for charging cell phones.



Table 14: Safaricom sites without power




Source: Safaricom

3.2.e.    District development plans
The District Development Committees (DDCs) were established as part of Government policy of decentralizing decision-making. The committees deliberate on projects at the district level. They examine on-going projects in the various sectors to ascertain constraints and challenges facing their implementation. They also make proposals on new projects; in the process they determine priorities for the project and programs, down to the divisional or lower levels. The priority projects and programs are then presented to line ministries for funding and implementation. In the rural electrification sub-sector, the DDCs presented to the Ministry of Energy a list of rural electrification project priorities for 2004/05 & 2005/06, broken down by constituency. There 210 constituencies, most of them in the rural areas. The priority projects which run into thousands cover a wide range of activities from schools, health facilities, water pumping from boreholes, irrigation projects; they also relate to connecting markets/trading centers, administrative centers, as well as such community projects as orphanages and children’s homes; others are concerned with supplies to productive activities including coffee factories. The estimated cost for the projects the two years alone is about Kshs8.9 billion   (see Table 15). Even if only a small fraction of the list were to be implemented, the demand for electricity in the rural areas would increase manifold.
3.2.f.    Water and Irrigation
Apart from the huge requirement for electricity in the water sector for domestic purposes, there is a significant and growing demand for irrigation, pumping from boreholes and other activities the rural areas.  The National Irrigation Board which is responsible for public irrigation projects in the country has provided valuable information on its irrigation activities. In Western Province, for example, it is involved in a project at Bunyala, currently covering 200ha of rice. Diesel generators are used to supply the electricity for irrigation.  A major drawback is the inadequacy or unreliability of power supplies. Plans are already in place to increase the area under cultivation to 500ha in 2007, and to 1000ha by 2008. More farmers would like to be included in the project, but there are inadequate supplies: at present four old diesel generators supply a total of 160kVA; with the planned expansion, 3MVA would be required by 2009.

The Ahero irrigation project in Nyanza Province is bigger: 1,000ha are under cultivation at the present time, planned to increase to 1,200ha in the year 2007 and then to 1,500ha in 2008, with attendant increase in the requirements for electricity for irrigation. With increased activities, more villages will come up, and the size of existing ones grow substantially, all of which will result in increased demand for electricity – for irrigation, milling, other productive activities, and to meet lighting requirements in the growing number and size of the villages/ trading centers.

 Close by Ahero is the West Kano scheme of 1,000ha, with water being pumped from Lake Victoria. Plans are under way to expand this project, too. This will undoubtedly result in increased demand for electricity, for pumping, milling and to meet the expected growth in the needs of the villages/ trading centers.


Table 15: Rural electrification project priorities for 2004/05 & 2005/06, broken down by constituency; also given estimated cost in million KShs
Nairobi     Coast cont.    Eastern cont.    Nyanza    RValley    Western
Constituency    Cost    Constituency    Cost    Constituency    Cost    Constituency    Cost    Constituency    Cost    Constituency    Cost
Dagoreti    4.2    Msambweni    54.0    Kilome    16.5    Rongo    27.0    Baringo C.    84.0    Kimilili    48.5
Mathare    2.0    Kinango    30.0    Manyatta    17.87    Nyatike    84.0    Baringo E.    73.5    Bumula    46.0
Total    6.2    Mwatate    15.5    Runyenjes    25.5    Uriri    36.5    Baringo N.    102.5    Webuye    112.5
Central         Voi    21.5    Tigania W.    13.3    Migori    38.0    Keiyo N.    38.5    Sirisia    49.0
Limuru    3.0    Wundanyi    24.0    Igembe    2.5    Bomachoge    28.3    Keiyo S.    13.5    Kanduyi    25.0
Kabete    38.2    Taveta    32.5    Ntonyiri    16.0    Bobasi    51.0    Saboti    30.5    Mt. Elgon    52.5
Lari     59.5    Magarini    167.0    Tigania E    13.0    S Mugirango    13.5    Kwanza    49.6    Lurambi    33.5
Githunguri    25.0    Malindi    11.5    Gachoka    28.0    Kisumu Rur    41.5    Cherangani    21.0    Shinyalu    34.5
Kiambaa     38.5    Bahari    18.0    Siakago    118.5    KisumuT W.    4.5    Buret    16.0    Ikolomani    15.5
Kinangop    30.0    Kaloleni    15.0    Tharaka    108.0    Nyando    18.5    Konoin    9.0    Malava    20.0
Ol Kalau    30.7    Ganze    57.5    Moyale Dist    28.0    Kisumu T. E    9.5    Samburu W.    4.0    Budalangi    31.0
Ndaragwa    41.0    Galole    ---    S. Imenti    66.5    Kasipul Kab    39.0    Samburu E.    ---    Butula    92.5
Kipipiri    94..5    Bura    4.0    N. Imenti    74.9    Karachuonyo    169.0    Eldama R    18.5    Nambale    18.5
Mwea    21.0    Garsen    160.0    C.  Imenti    36.46    Gwassi    32.7    Mogotio    44.2    Funyula    4.5
Ndia    34.5    Lamu E.    36.0    Mwingi N.    64.0    Mbita    12.5    Laikipia E.    126.1    Amagoro    83.5
Kerugoya    24.2    Lamu W.    24.0    Mwingi S.    19.5    W.Mugirango    67.7    Laikipia W.    136.1    Butere    22.0
Gichugu    11.0    Total    829.3    Total    1,364.23    Kitutu Masab    149.5    Belgut    36.0    Mumias    45.7
Mathioya    48.4    Eastern        N Eastern        N.Mugirango    75.5    Kipkelion    132.0    Matungu    37.5
Kiharu    30.4    Kangundo    38.0    Wajir S.    ---    NyaribariChache    68.0    Ainamoi    4.0    Khwisero    15.5
Kangema    66.1    Machakos T.    37.5    Wajir N.    ---    Kitutu Chache    101.5    Marakwet E    174.0    Lugari    53.0
Kigumo    71.4    Yatta    13.0    Wajir East    ---    NyaribariMasaba    165.5    Marakwet W    109.5    Malava    20.5
Kandara    34.7    Mwala    131.5    Wajir W.    ---    Bonchari    32.0    Bomet    36.8    Sabatia    20.0
Maragwa    36.0    Kathiani    11.5    Dujis    ---    Total    1,869.2    Chepalungu    33.0    Hamisi    29.0
Juja    28.0    Masinga    30.0    Ladgera    ---    Rift Valley        Sotik    11.5    Emuhaya    33.0
Gatundu S.    19.5    Saku    5.0    Fafi    ---    Kapenguria/Sigo    40.5    Subukia    6.0    Vihiga    17.5
Gatundu N.    21.05    Laisamis    ---    Total    ---    Kapenguria/Kac    57.5    Naivasha    49.5    Total    960.7
Gatanga    40.8    Kitui S.    149.0    Nyanza        Sigor    71.5    Nakuru T    10,0       
Othaya    62.05    Mutito    77.0    Ndhiwa    59.0    Kacheliiba    135.5    Rongai    21.0    Gran Total    8,884.63
Kieni    14.7    Kitui Central    53.4    Rangwe    89.5    Turkana C.    ---    Molo    26.0       
Tetu    41.0    Kitui West    92.8    Gem    90.5    Kajiado South    104.1    Kuresoi    19.5       
Mathira    24.9    Nithi    44.0    Ugenya    18.5    Kajiado C.    71.5    Tinderet    22.0       
Mukurweini    49.0    Isiolo S.    33.0    Alego Uson    31.0    Kajiado North    3.0    Aldai    56.0       
NyeriTown    12..5    Isiolo N.    ---    Rarieda    46.8    Eldoret North    41.5    Narok N    242..5       
Total    1,051.6    Makueni    5.5    Bondo    21.5    Eldoret South    50.0    Narok S    212.5       
Coast        Kibwezi    69.0    Kuria    206    Eldoret East    43.0    Kilgoris    112.0       
Kisauni    9..5    Mbooni    79.0    Nyando    11.5    Mosop    52.5    Total    2,803.40       
Likoni    14..5    Kaiti    34.5    Nyakach    16.7    Emgwen    52.0               
Changamwe    --            Muhoroni    13.0                       
Matuga    134.8                                       
Source: Ministry of Energy, Kenya
Within the Rift Valley Province, in Baringo’s Marigot area, there is an irrigation project for maize at three different locations, covering, respectively, 500ha at Pakeria, 250ha at El Dume, and 250ha at Sendai. There are plans to expend the project that will result in increased demand for electricity for milling and other productive activities associated with the expected growth in settlements around the project areas.

The Mwea scheme in Central Province is a major rice irrigation project that has grown steadily over the years; 6,000ha are under cultivation, planned to increase to 10,000ha. Irrigation is by gravity; nevertheless, large community settlements have grown in step with the expansion of the scheme and are expected to get bigger; some of the settlements are connected to the grid while others are not. There will be need for more electricity, first and foremost for increased rice milling, and also for SMEs that are springing up at a fast rate around the scheme, as well as for lighting.

In the Coast Province the main irrigation projects are at Bura and Hola. The Bura scheme is for cotton farming and horticulture; pumping for irrigation is supplied by a diesel plant rated at 3MVA. A total of 600ha are currently under cultivation, planned to increase to 2,500ha in 2007 and then to 6,000ha. Electricity requirements will increase accordingly – for irrigation pumping, milling, preservation, SMEs, and general lighting in the expanded settlements. There is also a good potential for using solar PV to meet household requirements at the two locations.

The Hola undertaking is also for cotton farming and horticulture. Phase I has involved the cultivation of 900ha pumped by a diesel plant, rated at 480kVA; the plant is being rehabilitated; and arrangements are in place, during phase II, to expand land cultivated to 2,500ha. Here again, the demand for electricity will increase by a large margin to meet requirements similar to those of Bura.

There are also other smaller projects throughout the country, for example mango in Nyanza, Sigor in the Rift Valley and Kilifi in the Coast, all of which are planned for expansion with attendant increase in electricity requirements.

The National Water Conservation and Pipeline Corporation is charged with, among others, the task of drilling and equipping boreholes throughout the country, based on the priority listing by the District Development Committees. No firm data is available on the number of boreholes currently in use but attempts are under way to collect and collate the data. Most of the boreholes are located in rural areas. Energy is required for pumping water from boreholes; only a few of these are connected to the grid, with the rest relying almost exclusively on generators for water pumping, an undertaking which has turned out to be extremely expensive, especially so in Arid and Semi-arid Lands (ASALs) - in the light of exacting logistics and the long distances involved in transporting the fuel, thus adding to the already high prices. Water so pumped would be available, not only for drinking, but also for other productive purposes such as irrigation, livestock use, agriculture and the like.

The National Water Conservation and Pipeline Corporation has an on-going program for drilling boreholes – about 188 in 2006 and estimated at 250 in the year 2007. The depth varies considerably from 60m to well over 300m, the latter mainly in arid areas; the rated output for the generators range from 5kVA to 11kVA, with some as high as 22kVA. Even without firm data on the number of boreholes, the ballpark demand for electricity to meet pumping requirements for the ever growing number of boreholes throughout the country is large.
3.2.g.    Cooperatives
There are two main types of cooperatives in Kenya: (i) those for production and marketing and (ii) those for savings and credit also known as (SACOS). Hundreds of cooperatives of the first category are operating in different parts of the country, covering such areas as coffee (900), cotton, dairy (400), horticulture, pyrethrum, etc.

Most of the production and marketing cooperatives would like to use processing equipment that adds value to their products: pulping for coffee factories, ginneries for cotton, cooling tanks for dairies, etc. For example, diesel generators are widely used in the pulping process in the coffee factories. Substitution of diesel by electricity has for years been identified as a key productivity gain for Kenyan coffee producers. An IDA  loan (Second Coffee Improvement Project Cr 20620, MUS 46.8) and the first phase of the European Union both sponsored the Coffee Factories Rural Electrification Project (COFREP I) targeted the electrification of 168 factories out of 896.

It turned out that of the 168 factories, 59 had already been connected; the remaining 109 factories were connected after long delays, arising largely from KPLC’s limitation to implement the project and poor management of the program, including coordination problems between Ministry of Energy and KPLC. The European Community has provided support for survey and design for an additional 177 factories under COREFII; these preparatory works were completed in December 2004. However, no financing has been secured so far to proceed with COFREP II.

The above examples point to the importance of electricity and the appetite of cooperatives to be supplied with electricity in order to dramatically reduce their energy cost and increase their productivity; they also highlight the difficulties that rural stakeholders face to be connected to the grid.

Agro-industries are expected to be the back bone of agricultural development on Kenya that would also ensure a wide range of agricultural related economic and industrial activities in the country with concomitant increase the demand for electricity.
3.2.h.    Micro and small scale enterprises
Micro and small scale enterprises (SMEs) are businesses employing up to 50 workers. Cottage industries are a component of SMEs and refer to bakeries, brick making, fish preservation (cooling, drying and smoking), milk processing, posho mills, small restaurants and tobacco curing; most of these require electricity input. Other SMEs cover a wide range of activities such as manufacturing, trade, restaurants and hotels, service providers and construction, The majority of these are – over 66 per cent - are located in rural areas.
Posho mills
These are mills for crop grinding (mainly maize, millet or sorghum); most posho mills (about 88 per cent according to an estimate reported in 2000) with access to the grid use electricity because the latter is cleaner and more convenient (than diesel); furthermore it is cheaper to produce maize flour from electricity driven mills. The average consumption per mill in the year 2000 was estimated at about 3.1kWh per annum, or a total of 73,656kWh. With improved economic situation in the rural areas, the number of posho mills is expected to increase accordingly; this would result in increased demand for electricity, the preferred energy source.
Bakeries
Most bakeries use electricity, except for those without access to electricity; it was estimated that about 183 small scale bakeries in the rural areas consume on average 8,580kWh per year. The number of bakeries has since risen substantially as has their demand for electricity.
Hotels and restaurants
Many of these are to be found all over the country, including in trading centers in the rural areas; mostly the electricity is used for lighting, entertainment, refrigerators
Total consumption of electricity by the cottage industries was estimated at 343,947,816kWh for the year 2000.  Unfortunately there is no breakdown for the hotels and restaurants in the rural areas and for those in urban areas; this notwithstanding, it is reasonable to assume that, with the noted increase in economic and other activities in the rural areas, the number of hotels and restaurants has grown substantially in these areas, and that their demand for electricity has also by a large margin.

Table 16 shows annual energy consumption by type and sector in the year 2,000. It shows that the share by the cottage industry for that year was 30 per cent and that for rural households was 8 per cent. Unfortunately the data not disaggregated the share of the cottage industries located the rural areas and which in urban. Other pieces of information provided are incomplete at best; for example, in a table on total electricity consumption by sector, the consumption of electricity in the agricultural sector is shown as zero; we believe, however, that a significant amount of electricity is consumed in the sector.

Table 16: Annual energy consumption by type and sector
               Type of energy              % share
Sector    Firewood
(43.8%)    Charcoal
(46.0%    Wood wastes
(0.6%)    Farm residue
(6.4%)    Electricity

(0.7%)    Kerosene

(2.2%)    LPG

(0.2%)    Total demand
(100%)
Rural household    89.4%    46.2%    61.9%    99.5%    8%    53.1%    5.6%    80%
Urban household    2.3%    36,5%    38.1%    0.5%    61.8%    46.3%    66.7%    13%
Cottage industry    8,3%    17,3%    0%    0%    30.2%    0.79%    27.7%    7%
Total    100%    100%    100%    100%    100%    100%    100%    100%

Source: Study on Kenya’s Energy Demand, Supply and Policy Strategy for Households and Small-scale Industries and Service Establishments

3.2.i.    Jua Kali sub-sector
The Jua Kali is a fast growing informal sub-sector in both urban and rural areas and includes artisans with a wide variety of skills such as welding, machining, carpentry, shoe making, motor and bicycle repair etc. The sub-sector depends on electricity for electric machines, welding, battery charging, spraying machines, electric jacks, motor rewinding, sewing machine repair, wood work, band saws, computer repair, chemical mixers, boilers, hatcheries, electroplating chrome plating and driers, among others. A couple of examples can be seen in the field visits report presented in annex 4. Experience has shown that, for those in the rural areas, productivity and quality of work are improved by a large margin and business expanded substantially, following their connection to the grid. No information is available on the level of demand for the sub-sector, but it is believed that the demand is substantial and growing rapidly, and that much of the demand is unmet or under-served

III.    Structure, Organization and Performance of the Rural Electrification Program
1.    Current structure of the Power Sector
The power sector has been undergoing restructuring since the mid-90s. The GoK, through the Ministry of Energy (MoE), is responsible for policy formulation whilst the Electricity Regulatory Board (ERB), established in 1998, is responsible for regulation of the power sector.
To date, the structural reforms developed under the just concluded multi-donor supported Energy Sector Reform and Power Development Project and the ongoing Energy Sector Recovery Project, have focused on creating and enhancing commercial relationships between the main players, eliminating government subsidies to the sector (except for the rural electrification program), introducing an autonomous regulatory system and securing private sector participation in power generation.
Since 1998, the following main developments have taken place in the power sector;
i)    Unbundling of the power sector into two entities; KPLC and KenGen as on 1st September, 1997.
ii)    Transfer of assets as of June 1999;
iii)    Implementation of an Interim Power Purchase Agreement (IPPA) between KenGen and KPLC. The IPPA was intended to run for a period of 2 years from 1st August 1999; but has been extended to 30th June, 2006.
iv)    Adjustment of retail tariffs that took effect from 1st August 1999 responding to exchange rate fluctuations and pass though policy for fuel prices  ;
v)    Publication of ERB’s Retail Electricity Tariffs Review Policy Framework in 2005
Today, publicly owned generation assets are owned, managed and operated by Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) since 1999. The KenGen supplies about 80 per cent of the total generated energy while the private sector provides the balance. KenGen is a listed company in the Nairobi Stock Exchange; until recently, its shareholding currently was 70 per cent Government and 30 per cent private. In 2006, the Government, as part of its policy to divest its ownership in public enterprises, undertook to sell its shareholding in KenGen to the public. The 30% sale was to raise about Kshs. 7.85 billion (US$ 109 million equivalent).  At the closing date of the Initial Public Offer, the total subscription was about Kshs. 26.4 billion (US$ 366.4 million).  This implies an oversubscription of Kshs. 18.5 billion (US$257.4 million).  The overwhelming favorable outcome of the IPO demonstrates the confidence the public has in KenGen.

All publicly owned transmission and distribution assets are managed and operated by KPLC, which is responsible for transmission and distribution functions throughout the country. KPLC is a listed company in the Nairobi Stock Exchange; until recently its shareholding was 52 per cent Government and 48 per cent private. In 2006, the National Social Security Fund (NSSF) has disposed part of its shareholding in KPLC to private shareholders thereby reducing the total public sector shareholding (NSSF and Ministry of Finance) from 52% to 48%.  Thus, the private sector now holds the majority of shares in KPLC. 

2.    Institutional Setting for Rural electrification
Kenya’s Rural Electrification (RE) program dates back to 1967 when the East African Power and Lighting Company (the predecessor to KPLC) began setting aside 1 per cent of its total yearly gross sales revenue for the electrification of rural areas.  Subsequently in 1973 GoK, through grant funding from the Government of Sweden, established the Rural Electrification Fund [REF].  KPLC was then mandated by the GoK to carry out execution, and operation and management of rural electrification schemes, including maintenance of accounts and records of such schemes.  An RE unit was established in the MoE with responsibilities for planning and evaluating the economics of schemes proposed by the District Development Committees [DDCs] and for monitoring implementation, by KPLC, of rural electrification schemes.  A Committee was set up for approving RE schemes submitted by the DDCs which were the designated entities for originating proposals for RE schemes.  The RE was to support sub-economic schemes whose selection was to be guided by the criteria set out in the rural electrification master plan.  The Government was to bear all the capital expenditures as well as any shortfalls on operation and maintenance costs.

The current RE institutional model with its dependence on KPLC for program implementation and operation management is limited in that KPLC lacks adequate management, capacity, technical skills, and human and financial resources to scale up the program to the levels required to achieve rapid access expansion.  Field visits and conversations with several stakeholders suggested weaknesses in KPLC capacity to market its services, or respond to business opportunities from customers’ requesting connections.  Given its limitations and the challenges it faces in improving its operational and financial performance in the areas it currently serves, KPLC is not positioned to introduce new decentralized technologies which are necessary to expand access to remote areas from the grid.

During interviews KPLC informed the Bank of the recent initiatives it has taken to enhance its management, and technical capacity to address the rural electrification agenda.  However, in view of the modest pace of electrification observed in the past a huge challenge still remains for KPLC to expand access within the urban and peri-urban areas. Leveraging KPLC efforts by bringing in other players, financing mechanisms and technologies, amongst other measures, will be necessary for the achievement of the GoK objectives of increasing access to electricity to 40% by 2020 in the rural areas.

Also noted was the inadequacy of planning capacity within GoK exemplified by lack of a systematic aggregated data base of sectoral demand for electrification; and the appearance that the criteria of sub-economic schemes that is needed for eligibility to REF resources (under the 1973 GoK/KPLC Agreement) is not always adhered to, but instead schemes may be funded under the RE due, amongst other things, to the inability of sponsors to raise connection costs.

3.    Expenditures and Sources of Financing
The data on capital expenditures and financing sources, numbers of customers connected, connection costs per customer, operating costs etc; since the inception of the RE program show the limited contribution that the program has made to the rural electricity expansion.

Table 17 summarizes the expenditures and financing sources between 1973 and 2001/02 in nominal Kenya shillings.  The figures will be expressed in constant US$ terms in the REES, but are given here to give a broad indication of the composition and trends of expenditures as well as of the sources of financing.

Table 17:     RE Expenditures and Financing Sources

    1973-1985    Ave. Ann. Increase    1986-1998    Ave. Ann. Increase    1999-2005    Ave. Ann Increase    Total    %
Expenditures                               
Investment    184.0    15.3    3495.0    268.8    5038.0    719.7    8717.0    57
Operating Losses    36.0    3.0    1047.0    80.5    5578.0    796.9    6661.0    43
Total Exp.    220.0    18.3    4542.0    349.3    10,616.0    1516.6    15378.0    100
                               
Financing Sources                               
REF    190.0    15.8    2387    183.6    9747.0    1392.4    12324.0    78
Consumers    19.0    1.6    299.0    23.0    219.0    31.3    537.0    3
Donors    54.0    4.5    1096.0    84.3    1926.6    275.2    3076.6    19
Total Financing    263.0    21.9    3782.0    290.9    11892.6    1666.0    15937.6    100
Surplus/Deficit                            559.6   


Composition of RE Expenditures. Over the period 1973-2002, operating costs constituted about 43 percent of the total expenditures while investment expenditures made up the balance of 57%.  Under the 1973 GoK/KPLC Agreement KPLC recovers its operating costs for RE schemes, in the first instance through revenues from electricity sales to RE customers, and then covers any resulting deficit from the REF. 

Calculation of Operating Costs. The methodology for calculating operating costs was prescribed in the 1973 Agreement with the GoK and was subsequently detailed in Minute No. 216/77 of the Electricity Development Committee Meeting of May 15, 1977.  In the methodology overheads  are apportioned between RE and other KPLC customers on the basis of the number of customers, irrespective of the size of customers.  The resultant high allocation of overheads to RE customers contributes to the overall losses from this group of customers, losses which KPLC recovers from the REF.  The fact that the operating costs assigned to RE customers exceed revenues from this category of customers has limited the amount of the REF levy that can be used for investment and expansion of electricity to rural consumers. A revision of the allocation formula based on the marginal costs would release additional funds for investments. However this measure alone is unlikely to cause the RE program to break even financially, since tariffs do not fully cover O&M costs.

Inadequacy of Tariffs to Cover O&M Costs. Nearly 40% of current KPLC customers belong to the A0 category, which tariff is 1.55 Ksh/kWh for energy, which corresponds to 1.9 USc/kWh. Considering that the least cost generation options are around 5 USc/kWh (Olkaria II extension cost is estimated at 4.9 USc/kWh), it means that current tariff charged doesn’t even cover half of the generation cost. As a consequence, without tariff adjustment, there is no way for rural electrification revenues to be sustainable, even if investment cost is highly subsidized, since revenues do not even cover O&M costs. However, capacity to pay is significantly higher, even in poor non connected rural areas, demonstrating that there is room to adjust tariffs.

As a result, it would be necessary to achieve full recovery of O&M costs and recovery of capital investment, through adjustment of tariffs, albeit on a phased approach for the KPLC system with the exception of the isolated systems where the O&M subsidy might remain for a longer period as a matter of social policy. These issues are expected to be further examined by an ongoing tariff study.

High Investment Costs. A comparison of investment costs per customer for Kenya’s RE program with other countries suggests that there is scope for cost reduction.  These figures are as follows : Kenya-US$1700, South Africa-US$1130, Bolivia-US$750, and LDC average-US$1380. This very high figure seems to be the direct reflection of the combination of (i) the policy choice to give priority to productive and commercial loads, which does not create incentive for KPLC to maximize connections and (ii) high up-front connection fee /internal wiring that make it difficult for residential customers to connect. As a result the number of connections is relatively low compared to investment cost, leading to very high average connection cost. This is confirmed by the recent figures of the RE project being funded by the French cooperation and implemented by KPLC: the total investment is estimated at Ksh 2,5 billion (USD 35.6 million) for a total number of 21,740 connections . As a consequence, such a high average connection cost is not representative of the unitary connection cost that should be possible to get in the highly populated Kenyan rural areas, with a different policy and different financial arrangement.
The combination of less costly standards and arrangements to maximize the number of connection would very probably allow for significant reduction in the average connection cost and increase in the number of customers connected for a given amount of investment resources.  At present KPLC charges for costs of supervision amount to about 17.5 %, an amount that is excessive and could be reduced to about 10%, thus helping to reduce the investment costs per customer connected.

Table 18: RE Percentage Financing by Source

    1973-1985    %    1986-1998    %    1999-2005    %    Total    %
Financing Sources                               
REF    190.0    72    2387.0    63    9747.0    82    12432.0.    78
Consumers    19.0    7    299.0    8    219.0    2    537.0    3
Donors    54.0    21    1096.0    29    1926.6    16.0    3076.6    19
Total Financing    263.0    100    3782.0    100    11892.6    100    15937.6   

Relative Contribution of Different Sources of Financing to RE Expenditures.  The REF contributed 59% to the total financing of the RE over the 30-year period to 2002 while donors financed 19 %, consumers 5% and KPLC 18% .  Apart from the initial Swedish grant, the bulk of the donor funding occurred during the period 1987-1991, but declined substantially between 1992 and 1997 as donors shunned Kenya due to disagreements over political liberalization.  Donor interest was revived in the late 1990s when the EU provided funding for the electrification of coffee factories (Ksh 375 million) and the Spanish Government provided about US$10.6 million in 1998 followed by another US$10.3 million in 2001 towards rural electrification. Subsequently the French also provided Euro 9.2 million for rural electrification in 2000 followed another Euro 30 million in 2006.

While the ratio for calculating the KPLC’s contribution was increased from 1% out of its gross sales revenues to 2% in 1985, the relative contribution of the company actually declined during the period 1986-1998 due to the higher donor contribution.  The substantial increase in the relative contribution of the REF in recent years reflects that a 5 % levy payable by consumers on the basis of electrical energy consumed was introduced in 1998 through Legal Notice No.96 of 1998 pursuant to the provisions of the Electric Power Act, No.11 of 1997.

Private Sector Participation in RE. Thus far there has been no private sector financing of rural electrification except in the context of auto-generation and informal distributors.  Informal distributors are not legal given KPLC’s monopoly distribution rights and hence there has been no systematic effort to collect data on the performance of these activities, and yet they do play an important role in electricity in some places such as Namanga on the border with Tanzania.

4.    Outcomes of the RE Program

With the indicated levels of expenditures and financing, since 1973 the RE had connected 101,793 customers by the end FY2004/05.  The cumulative numbers of connected customers for selected years since 1985 is shown in table 19 below:

Table 19: evolution of the number of customers connected under the Rural Electrification Program
Fiscal Year    No of customers
1984/85    6,069
1989/90    19,067
1994/95    43,718
2004/05    101,793

These are clearly modest achievements over a 30-year period and in relation to the Government’s development objectives for rural electricity expansion. The issues described above (institutional and management constraints, depletion of the REF by operating losses worsened by the allocation formula and by inadequate tariffs, high investment costs) have contributed to this modest progress in the quest for rural electricity expansion.  In addition, another serious constraint is the recent GoK policy change to confine RE program to financing public and commercial services (administrative and health centers, schools, commercial undertakings and productive uses) and the high costs of connecting customers.  With this change, RE customers are required to pay a flat connection fee of Ksh 15,000 for single phase connections and Ksh 40,000 for three-phase connections, plus taxes.

The current policy of the Ministry is to confine the RE support to institutional and commercial customers. In practice, this means that efforts are concentrated on trade centers where public and commercial services (administration, health centers, schools, shops, jua kali (artisans) other productive uses, etc.) are generally located. As a result of this preference for public and commercial services, domestic customers are considered not eligible as such for connections financed under these RE schemes. It is then for KPLC to undertake the additional enrollment campaign and works to connect these domestic customers under the condition that these customers accept to pay the connection fee charged by KPLC. If the potential domestic customers are less than 600 meters from existing transformer, they are required to pay a flat connection fee of KShs31,500 for single phase connections and KShs 43,000 for three-phase connections.  Customers located more than 600 m from existing transformers are required to pay full connection costs based on a quotation by KPLC.  The absence of a financing mechanism for customers to spread payments over time (there is currently a possibility of splitting the cost in three payments only, which is not widely implemented as per observations during field visits), such as through the monthly bill is a serious constraint as many potential customers cannot afford the high connection costs.  The policy of excluding households from support under the RE program combined with KPLC’s high connection costs results in cases where, households in close proximity to RE and with ability to pay monthly electricity bills, remain without electricity because they cannot afford to pay connection costs.

On the ground, this policy appears also to be difficult to apply without generating problematic side-effects.
    A significant share of potential new beneficiaries is lost for a while: To the extent that both the processes of financing and enrolling customers are different in the respective RE and KPLC schemes, it appears to be generally impossible for KPLC to piggy-back on RE schemes and connect the domestic customers in the particular area. On top of that, the connection fees charged by KPLC are perceived as a major bottleneck by the customers, even if some limited flexibility regarding payment is theoretically proposed but not always applied in practice. As a consequence, it may take years before these customers are connected; the potential for increasing access to the RE schemes will thus remain marginally realized.
    Evolution of access rate becomes more difficult to measure: It has been observed in the field that in order to overcome these barriers, potential customers organize themselves in a way that only one customer formally applies for connection and the others – either shops or households - get secondary connections from him. The result is a growing disconnect between the number of officially registered domestic customers and the number of households actually getting access to electricity. This may make it more difficult for the GOK to measure progresses toward the targeted 40% access rate.

IV.    Solar Photovoltaic Electrification
While there are no reliable statistics available on individual solar systems in Kenya, different sources agree around the rough figure of at least 200,000 such systems installed in the last decade. Since this is a private market and retail is split in a number of retailers, it difficult to get precise data to check this estimate. Nevertheless, this estimate seems to be consistent with the annual volume of PV modules imported, which according to members of the Kenyan PV Association (name to be checked), is around 30,000 solar modules imported in 2005, some of which were re-exported to other countries in the sub-region. In regard to global capacity that these sales may represent, a study done in 2001 indicated a 20% annual average growth over the period 1995-2000. . A more recent study done in 2004 indicated that imports were around 800 kWp in 2004 (see Table 20) .
Table 20: PV Imports/Sales into Kenya, 1999 - 2003
Year    1999    2000    2001    2002    2003    2004
Total kWp    430    510    670    750    730    800
Source: 1) Kenya Revenue Authority Statistics, cited by Magambo, 2004
2) Electrik Link Ltd, Magambo, April 2004

Besides the 9 main importers/distributors , the total number of “PV dealers” is estimated around 150, most of which are small retailers. As a result, it can be said that the PV industry is well established in Kenya and has developed far beyond the early stage generally observed in other Sub-Saharan countries. When compared to the smaller figure of 101,000 rural customers connected to the grid by the Rural Electrification Program since 1973, the contribution from the fully private based PV industry to the increase of rural access to electricity service in the last decade is far from negligible.
1.    The market is still driven by low cost small and low quality products
The PV sector is facing a number of problems that considerably limits the effectiveness of its contribution. One of these is the low quality of the cheapest and most sold products.  These cheap products are generally installed by the users themselves without a proper selection of the battery size or installation of a load controller. As a matter of fact, the very small size of systems bought in Kenya is one of the parameters that limits its growth, since such modules are not the priority of the main international manufacturers. As a result, this demand has to be served as a secondary market of the marginal production that does not comply with any specification of the main market for large systems located in industrialized countries. {to be reviewed}

As a consequence, while there is no real survey of which proportion of the approximately 200,000 systems are actually working today, it can be estimated that more than 60% of the systems may not be working properly or even working at all today.

Two different segments can be roughly distinguished:
-    a large segment of the very small systems (10-20 Wp), consisting mainly in amorphous silicon solar modules bought in small retailers shops by customers looking for the cheapest price, some of them of bad quality and installed without load controllers. Typically, modest customers will buy a cheap, low quality amorphous panel for 3,000 ksh, a car battery for 2,500 ksh and 2 to3 twelve volts incandescent bulbs for 200 ksh, for a total cost of 5,700 ksh (i.e. 83 USD). Today this segment represents probably more than 80% of total number of systems sold and 50% in kWp.
-    a limited segment above 45 Wp , consisting mainly crystalline solar modules, which is subdivided by richer individuals that can afford them and in institutional programs . Most of these systems benefit from proper design regarding adequacy of size to needs and to battery and include a charge controller. According to observations made in Nairobi, the unitary retail price of a complete good quality 50 Wp system (50 Wp crystalline panel, one charge controller, 8 lamps 11W, one 100 Ah solar battery) is around 34,000 ksh (i.e. 496 USD).

The main issue is the payment capacity of the majority of customers, who end up buying very small systems (20 Wp and below) of bad quality. It should be noted that several brands of amorphous silicon solar modules have improved the quality of their products in the last years. However, according to a recent study, there are still at least two widely available brands that perform well below their advertised levels.

A couple of programs have tried to address this issue as a means of improving the quality and the size of systems.  According to available surveys, there is a contrast between the very limited savings capacity and the quite significant capacity to pay on a monthly basis for electricity services. As a consequence, financing the purchase of the systems should allow customers to get access to better and larger systems.

PVMTI, a program co-funded by IFC and GEF initiated in 1999, is the most important program that tried to enhance the financing capacity of the sector and increase the share of good quality products sold in the Kenyan market, mainly by offering loans to intermediaries that would in return offer loans or lease to individual customers. However, one of the main lessons of the PVMTI program is that the appetite for loans of both the financial intermediaries and final customers is surprisingly low. While there may be some need for financing from part of the intermediaries, the main need expressed by them seems to be more for risk sharing and guarantee.

Regarding the final customers, the debt capacity is generally limited to one single loan at the same time. This is typically the condition imposed by micro-finance institutions and saving and credit cooperatives (SACOS). As a result, individuals prefer not to preempt the possibility to take a loan for more urgent priority, especially if the loan for PV has to be several years long to make installments bearable. As a consequence, the PVMTI programs faced major difficulties to commit its 5 million dollars credit line, and even after finally managing to commit it, it couldn’t achieve significant results in terms of number of PV systems actually purchased by final customers (less than 200).
The Ministry of Energy is preparing a program intended to increase the installed generation capacity to 12 MW by the year 2008/9, by developing the institutional market to electrify 120 schools and to increase PV connected consumers from current estimated 200,000 to 350,000.
While institutional programs are important to ensure a core business where quality is ensured through technical specifications imposed in tender documents, the issue remains how to ensure that modest rural household can get access to better quality and larger PV systems that would fulfill their basic electricity needs (principally lighting, radio and/or TV) for which they are spending relatively large amounts of money for bad quality products (paraffin, battery charging).

The economic calculation below illustrates that overcoming the barrier of the initial cost can contribute significantly to address this challenge.

2.    Fee-for-service arrangements as a way to make quality and size affordable
Field observations have shown that when there is no grid, current expenditures for a single household can range around 300 to 700 ksh A particular household using a genset indicated that it spent up to 300 ksh per day on gasoline; one small mini-grid is charging 500 ksh per month for one single bulb 6 hours per day.

It is possible to estimate what could be the value of  a solar system that an Energy Service Company (ESCO) could install in rural household if charging a similar monthly bill. Fee-for-service means charging a monthly bill against the delivery of a service, which is typically what electricity distribution company does when charging a tariff to its clients.
This calculation has be done for the case of a customer who is currently paying 500 ksh per month either for paraffin oil or for getting a limited service from a private mini-grid and would pay the same amount  to an ESCO for a better service. Assuming that the ESCO will deliver the service to that customer for  20 years, and assuming a remuneration above the pure-cost recovery of 14% a year (i.e. a discount rate of 14%), the net value of the revenue that the ESCO will get from this customer is more than 42,000 ksh (i.e. around 620 USD). This has to be compared to the retail price of the good quality 50 W solar system indicated above (34,000 ksh, i.e. USD 496). Considering the economy of scale from which an ESCO will benefit, wholesale price of a similar system will be significantly lower, and even considering that the ESCO will have to replace the battery and fixed operational costs, this calculation shows the breadth of the improvement that a well designed fee-for-service program could bring to this customer. (to be reviewed)

The result compared with the value that a micro-finance institution could finance against the same monthly installment of 500 Ksh over 12 months at a 14% interest rate. A similar calculation shows that the loan would not be more than 6,000 ksh (i.e.82 USD), which is more or less the value of a low quality 15Wp system without load controller.

Table 21: economic calculations based on current energy expenditure that can be displaced by individual solar systems

    Ksh    USD
Monthly energy expenditure that can be substituted by a solar system    500 ksh    $ 7.3
Value of 1 year loan that can be financed    5,593 ksh     $ 82.0
Net present value of ESCO revenue for fee-for-service over 20 years    42,370 ksh     $ 619.0

3.    Main lessons of the Kenya solar experience:
The main lessons derived  from this analysis are the following:
-    there is a real demand and acceptability of PV systems on the Kenyan market;
-    the market is well developed in regard to import and retail network;
-    there is a significant capacity already built regarding designing, installing and maintaining PV systems;
-    there may be a potential for significant growth of sales of larger and better products if  the initial investment cost can be overcome;
-    financing individual purchases through individual loans is not an appropriate answer;
-    fee-for-service model is worth to be explored as a means to provide good quality electricity services to individual households through individual photovoltaic solar systems.

4.    Integrating photovoltaic systems and grid extension in large rural electrification projects
It is important to stress that a fee-for-service model does not necessarily restrict the choice of the technology to serve customers to solar systems. A conventional power distribution company is a de facto a “fee-for-service” electricity service provider, in which the fee is determined by the tariff and the service measured in kWh.
To the extent that level of services are similar – which is a reasonable assumption for modest rural households requiring only lighting and electricity to power radio/TV - a distribution company can either provide the service through a connection to the grid or through the installation of an individual solar system. The parameter to decide which technology should be chosen is the cost of each solution.

Studies have compared the cost of delivering electricity services through the grid or through individual solar systems. Regarding the cost of the grid solution, key parameters are the number of customers to be connected at the same time and the length of the grid to be built to connect them to the existing grid. Such comparison is not easy to do because it requires a detailed data on number of rural electrification projects, and also a reliable estimate of cost associated to the installation and operation of solar systems. While such a comparison could be done using Kenyan figures, the exercise couldn’t be realized in the context of this study because of lack of sufficient data.

However, for indicative purposes, figure 4 below presents the results of the comparison made in the context of poor peasant regions in the northeastern part of Brazil. This figure shows that for small groups of less 25 households (around 150 persons), individual photovoltaic systems (PV systems) are cheaper than the grid extension if these groups are located at more than 6 kms from the existing grid, assuming a cost of 700 USD per individual PV system.








Fig.4
Kenya is characterized by very high regional contrast in terms of demographic densities (see maps in Fig 2 and 3). According to statistics published by the Central Bureau of Statistics of Kenya, on the one hand, 11 out of 70 districts had a density lower than 19 persons per square kilometers. These 11 districts, located in low lands in the north, the east and the south of the country represent more than 60% of the national territory. On the other hand, exceptionally high rural densities are observed in the high and fertile lands of the western region, as high as 500 persons per square kilometers.
As a result it is expected that the role the solar photovoltaic technology could play in achieving the ambitious target of 40% rural access at the national level would differ from one region to the other.



V.    Analysis of Options for Faster Access Expansions
1.    Global Institutional Framework under the National Energy Policy
For many years Kenya did not have an energy sector policy and strategy for guiding expenditure priorities in the sector. Sessional Paper No. 4 on Energy, which is consistent with the ERS objectives, charts the way forward and provides key policy directives that will govern and shape the implementation of various activities particularly the Rural Electrification Program in the foreseeable future. Some of the policy strategies include:
(a)    Establishment of a Rural Electrification Authority that provides an institutional framework for rural electrification and strengthens the Rural Electrification Fund (REF). This is to promote both grid and off-grid rural electrification with a view to increasing rural access to power from the current 4 percent to at least 40 per cent  by 2020;
(b)    Revising the legal framework for the energy sector to: (i) create more space for private sector participation through the creation of a common access power transmission system (a separate transmission company) and removing the Kenya Power and Lighting Company’s (KPLC) monopoly for distributing power; and (ii) strengthen the regulatory framework by harmonizing the institutional set-up in the energy sector for the petroleum and electricity sub-sectors by bringing all regulatory functions of these sub-sectors under one entity, the Energy Regulatory Commission;
(c)    Developing a plan to increase utilization of renewable energy particularly plans to harness more solar (through increasing installed PV capacity by 10% annually), wind, and small-scale hydros, as alternatives to grid extension for the provision, of electricity for telecommunications repeater facilities, water heating, crops drying, refrigeration, and water pumping; and
(d)    Promoting public private partnerships in the expansion of the rural electrification program.

Therefore, Sessional Paper No. 4 of 2004 opens a wide range of new options and arrangements to implement the objective of scaling access to electricity.

2.    Recommendations and Options for a New Institutional and Financial framework
This section explores the different institutional arrangements that could be considered to face the challenge of scaling up access to electricity services in Kenya in order to achieve the goal set by the National Policy. The different key principles/recommendations that should structure this new arrangement according to the diagnosis of the current situation and to international experience are first presented in sub-sections 1 to 6. Section 7 lists different forms of public private partnerships that could constitute a mean to unleash the implementation capacity of access expansion programs to be funded by both the international donor community and the government of Kenya.
2.1.    Revised modalities for customer financial participation:
A basic condition to ensure that electrification is viable, is to ensure that the customer’s financial contribution will at least cover the O&M costs plus amortization. If not, the activity will generate a structural deficit and will not be able to survive on a standalone basis. This is supposed to ensure that potential beneficiaries effectively become customers and to define the appropriate level of customer financial participation.

2.1.a.    A new tariff structure that takes into account operational costs and new customers willingness to pay
Almost 40% of current KPLC customers belong to the A0 category and it can be taken for certain that the proportion of similar modest customers will be even higher in rural areas when getting access to electricity. The current A0 tariff is 1.55 Ksh/kWh for energy, which corresponds to 1.9 USc/kWh. Considering that the least cost generation options are around 5 USc/kWh (Olkaria II extension cost is estimated at 4.9 USc/kWh), this means that current tariff   does not cover half of the generation cost. Without tariff  increase, rural electrification will not be sustainable, even if investment cost is highly subsidized, since revenues do not even cover O&M costs. However, the ability  to pay is significantly higher, even in poor non-connected rural areas, demonstrating that there is room to adjust tariffs. Results from few households surveyed during field visit, indicated that  current energy expenditures for lighting and radio/TV in non-connected rural areas is above 300 ksh/month, which is far more than the average bill charged to A0 rural customers. The value of 300 Ksh/month corresponds to a monthly consumption of more than 200 kWh/month, when average monthly consumption of A0 clients is around 20 kWh/month. Such substitutable energy expenditures are generally considered as representing a conservative estimate of what people would accept to pay to get far better lighting and electricity for TV and radio. As a result, a new tariff policy is required as a pre-condition for sustainability large scale access expansion programs. Moreover, since metering small and distant consumption is very expensive and may increase significantly O&M costs, it is recommended that flat tariff fee option be developed for modest consumers.

The government has already hired a consultant to revise the tariff structure. Depending on the outcome of this global study, additional tariff refinements may be required to ensure cost recovery under specific regional circumstances. This would be of the responsibility of the regulatory commission.
2.1.b.    A new connection policy that maximizes both the number of beneficiaries and revenues
Adjusting the tariff structure is not enough.  If too many targeted customers do not meet the conditions to be connected, then there will not be enough revenue and again the system will become unsustainable. In fact, to the extent that the tariff issue is addressed, the more clients served, either domestic, service or productive, the bigger the revenue and the more sustainable will be the corresponding electrification project. Today, the current connection policy, especially as it is applied on the ground, does not create the enabling environment for maximizing the number of customers.

Regarding the use of RE Fund resources, the current policy of the Ministry is to concentrate on RE schemes serving public and commercial services (administration, health centers, schools, shops, joacalis, other productive uses, etc.). In practical, this means generally the concentration of efforts on trade centers where these services are generally located. Whenever KPLC is asked by the Ministry to electrify a trade centre, a load survey and the design of the scheme are done by KPLC.  KPLC also does the tendering of the works to be executed and  the selection of a contractor (to be reviewed). Customers are asked to pay flat connection fees of, respectively, 15,000 Ksh for single phase connections and 40,000 Ksh for tri-phase connections, plus taxes. Usually, the localities to be electrified are first proposed to Ministry by District Development Councils (DDC).

As a result of this preference for public and commercial services, domestic customers are considered not eligible as such for connections financed under these RE schemes.
It is then left to KPLC to connect these domestic customers under the condition that the required financial contribution from the customers is secured. If the potential domestic customers who apply for a connection are within 600 meters from existing grid, then KPLC charges them a flat connection fee, which is 34,000 Ksh for single phase connections and 42,000 Ksh for tri-phase connections, plus taxes. If they are located beyond 600 m from the grid, they receive from KPLC a quotation of the full cost of the works that are necessary, which determines how much these customers have to pay to be connected. In both cases, there is some flexibility for the customers to pay the connection cost in up to three installments; however, on the ground observations have revealed that customers are frequently not aware of such an option. The same policy applies to projects forwarded to KPLC by Constituency Development Funds (CDFs).

In a situation where the demand of a customer changes, i.e. from pure domestic to productive use, which necessitates  a need for the reinforcement of the grid upstream,  the customer has to reapply under a new category and to receive a new quotation to determine how much he/she has to pay for the reinforcement of the grid.

On the ground, this policy appears to be difficult to implement without generating at least two problematic side-effects. The first problem is that a significant share of potential new beneficiaries is lost for a while. To the extent that both the processes of financing and enrolling customers are different in the respective RE and KPLC schemes, it appears to be generally impossible for KPLC to piggy-back on the RE schemes and connect the domestic customers of the area. On top of that, the connection fees charged by KPLC are perceived as a major bottleneck by the customers, especially when it appears that connecting them would require an increase in the capacity of the grid, which initially meant for only the priority customers (public/commercial services); in that case, the full cost of the works are charged to them by KPLC. As a result, it may take years before these customers are connected.

Because of these constrains, the potential for increasing access is only marginally realized, and the revenues obtained from the restricted number of customers connected remains limited, thus reducing the return that could be expected from the infrastructure assets that have been built.

The second problem is that the results of the program in term of access expansion become more difficult to measure. It has been observed in the field that, especially in densely populated areas where potential customers are close form each others, households spontaneously develop strategies to benefit unofficially from the grid extension. As result these households are not accounted as beneficiaries in official KPLC statistics. To overcome these barriers, potential customers organize themselves in a way that only one customer formally applies for connection and the others get secondary connections from such a customer.  This occurs for instance in trading centers where shops officially connected offer secondary connections to other shops or to domestic tenants. This also occurs in highly densely populated peasant areas where one member of a community formally applies and secondary connections serve several neighbors. This results in a misrepresentative between official KPLC figures regarding the number of domestic customers and the number of households actually getting access to electricity.

However, as mentioned above, it seems that a number of potential customers can afford to pay the monthly bills but cannot pay upfront the connection and internal wiring costs.
To overcome this bottleneck, which seems to prevent a significant increase of the access rate, it is suggested to create the possibility to spread these costs in the bill over several years, as an additional separate component in the bill besides the consumption charged according to tariff. This would constitute in fact an extension of the basic principle that underlies the calculation of tariffs, which is to spread generation, transmission and distribution cost along the economic lifetime of the equipment and then charged it to customers through the tariff. Such a measure, which has already been adopted in other countries (i.e. Senegal), may allow for a far greater proportion of households located in area already electrified to apply for connection.

The government is currently initiating a study to revise the current connection policy. Depending on the outcome of this study, which may not consider the new institutional arrangements proposed in the next section, additional specific modalities may need to be developed and enforced by the regulatory commission.
2.2.    A new Financing Mechanism:
Assuming that both the tariff structure and the connection policy have been adjusted to solve the above mentioned issues, and that on the basis of what has widely been observed in other countries, one can expect that the cash flow expected from the sales of electricity services will both cover the O&M costs of appropriate low cost delivery arrangements and serve a certain amount of debt or capital, there remains generally a gap to fully finance rural electrification investments. This gap defines the amount of first cost subsidies that need to be financed under an appropriate financing mechanism.

This was one of the objectives of the original Rural Electrification Fund,  created in 1973. However, as explained in above  section, the fund was also used to cover ex-post calculated operational deficit of the RE schemes, which is a function which should not be required anymore, except for the existing 5 large diesel based isolated grids. To the extent that these systems are integrated to KPLC assets, such operational unbalance should be addressed as a specific issue – which is not related to objective of access expansion - by both the government and KPLC.

Further studies when preparing specific access expansion projects could determine precisely what the O&M costs are associated to these projects what are the expected revenues from the customers, what share of the investment cost can be covered by these revenues after discounting O&M costs, and thus what is the gap to be fulfilled by the financing mechanism. As detailed below, the amount of public financing to fill the gap can be optimized by a competitive process.

It is acknowledged that scaling up access require to set up an appropriate financing mechanism to channel the investment cost subsidies and financing that are necessary to fill the gap between the resources that can be brought by the customers and the service provider. According to the lessons from the PVMTI project, the capability of the Kenya financial market to finance the share of investment cost that can be borne by the service provider, either KPLC or other private operators, may not be enough. As a consequence, there may also be a need for setting up a guarantee fund.

Possible sources of funding for the REF are:
    Levies charged on electricity customers paid through their bills;
    International financings from donors
    Financial contribution from the Government budget;
    Revenues from REF activity, i.e. reimbursement of loans made by the REF to access providers if any.

The proposed Energy Bill will provide for the establishment of a new Rural Electrification Fund, which will substitute the current one. Detailed modalities for this fund need to be further developed.
2.3.    Private Public Partnerships to leverage additional implementation capacity
While additional funding like the support provided by the French and the Spanish cooperation agencies allows KPLC to increase its contribution to electrification, the objective of 40% access by 2020 seems to be far beyond even improved KPLC capacity: preliminary figures shows that this objective will require around 2 million additional connections in less than 14 years, when current total number of KPLC is only 787,804. According to its statistics, KPLC has connected only 144,565 rural customers ( 85,714 rural customers under RE schemes plus 58,851 rural customers connected out of RE schemes) in the last 33 years (since 1973). And, while precise statistics are not available, in most localities electrified by KPLC, performance regarding rate of connection appears to be still rather low, generally less than 50%, even in urban areas.

As a consequence, the achievement of the ambitious national objective will require unprecedented efforts both to densify connection in areas already covered by KPLC and to accelerate the implementation capacity in the vaster remaining areas. Since KPLC human resources that can be allocated to expanding access are limited, it is, therefore, recommended that KPLC’s mission should be reviewed so that it is made responsible for access expansion in the areas where it already has MV and LV lines and those it has plans for extending access to in the next 2-3 years. It is also recommended that these areas should be listed as to constitute the territorial basis of the KPLC distribution license.

Outside this “KPLC domain”, legal and regulatory conditions should be created for Public Private Partnerships, as a way to attract new players and increase the implementation capacity. The national policy has already stated this possibility as an option to be promoted and the proposed bill has made provisions to ensure a legal basis for such private participation by allowing the issuance of different types of licenses and permits.

Lessons from previous  projects, such as the PVMTI, consultation with different Kenyan stakeholders and on-going public private partnership in other countries in the region show that there is a number of national and international stakeholders that are interested, and sometimes even already involved (agriculture cooperatives, PV dealers, SACOS, hire purchase companies, banks, contractors, etc.), that could play a more active role to implement the ambitious access target set up by the Nation Energy Policy.

Box 1: Rural Cooperatives and Rural electrification:
The experience of previous rural electrification programs implemented with cooperatives, including the Cofferr Factory electrification project financed by the European Union and the PVMTI,  illustrates at the same time (i) the importance of electricity and the willingness of cooperative to get electricity in order to reduce dramatically their energy cost and increase their productivity and (ii) the difficulty for rural stakeholders that are not from the sector to ensure their own electrification. By releasing such constrains, a rural electrification program can thus leverage very important impacts on the activities of these cooperatives.
These cooperatives are also used to providing inputs to their members. Generally members have an account were the revenue of the sale of the production is transferred and from which payments for goods purchased by the member are retained at the source.
SACOS cooperatives provide loans against savings accumulated by the members (the ratio is generally around 3 to 1).
Collection of bills and other O&M activities that require direct interaction with customers (bill payment collections, enrollment of new customers, reporting of incidents at customer level, etc.) are very costly for utilities in rural areas. The reason is that such activities require long trips that are staff time consuming and generate high transportation costs. Securing payment is also difficult because the cost of enforcing default payers disconnection is also high and often difficult to manage socially.
The presence of a cooperative in the area offers great opportunities to delegate efficiently such functions at a far lower cost: easy communication channels with potential customers are already in place, payments can be retained at the source, and other functions can also be delegated (see box 2).
As a consequence, the advanced development of rural cooperatives in Kenya is a trump card for potential providers of electricity services in rural areas, to reduce the cost and improve the reliability of the commercial development and management of customers and revenues. Production and marketing cooperatives have already developed and centralized the demand for significant productive uses that will ensure immediate load and SACOS can provide members very competitive financing for the additional equipments that can be ran after electricity is there.

Box 2: Functions that can be fulfilled by rural grassroots organizations
1.    Enroll applicants, collect down payments, identify bad debtors beforehand.
2.    Assist applicants to choose the level of service most appropriate for their needs and payment abilities, primarily during the period that new users are brought in (this ability to pay is easily ascertainable for local rural organizations since all members have similar activities and are well aware of their neighbors’ level of business).
3.    Run  the payment-collection service on behalf of both the operator and the user. This service makes the payment period flexible and makes it possible to spread out payments to the association since it is always accessible to payers. In the case of individual payments at the market or at a banking institution, this flexibility is limited. Above all, this service eliminates the cost of travel that would be paid by the user in the case of individual payments at the market or at a banking institution. This cost can represent a significant increase to the base rate.
4.    Guarantee the continuity of payments from customers that are temporarily experiencing financial difficulties (sickness, accident, etc.) by making their payments for two or three months, in accordance with current practices of solidarity in the region.
5.    Pass along to the operator the users’ requests for upgrade/ system changes.
6.    Facilitate technical communications between users and the operator by identifying and resolving minor problems  and by correctly recording more complex problems.
7.    The cooperative/ local organization can better manage the social cost of the decision to take a system back from a bad debtor or to exchange it with a less expensive system.
8.    Be involved in managing a local “guarantee fund", the surplus from which will be returned to village associations that are project partners.
9.    Foster an attitude of individual and collective responsibility concerning the equipment and the proper functioning of the project. The users and the associations see that the project will provide them with a benefit that they really want, so they are inclined to contribute actively to the project’s success. This includes carrying out certain tasks as a form of collective contribution in addition to the individual payments.
10.    Pass along to the operator the requests to buy household electrical appliances that would work with the systems, assuming the operator develops a commercial business to distribute the most appropriate equipment.
11.    Help to train new users to decentralized electrification systems (PV, windmills) during the first few months of operation.
12.    Manage and paying monthly bills for collective equipment such as: lighting for a community room and public lighting, church, video devices and parabolic antenna/ decoder for community use, collective pump system with a fire hydrant, school, computer, internet modem, etc.
13.    Manage and paying monthly bills for productive equipment used collectively such as equipment for processing crops.

2.4.    Ensure that the regulatory framework provides for integration of new technical solutions
Besides the conventional grid, new and more cost-effective technologies are available. On one hand, low cost grid technologies like single wire return by earth (SWARE) have been tested in the past by KPLC and implemented with success in different countries that reduced significantly the investment cost required to serve low and dispersed loads. It is therefore recommended that the technical specifications currently enforced by the ERB be revised and adapted grid standards be provided for rural areas.

On the other hand, over the last decades, technological progress has benefited more to the new decentralized electrification systems than to the already very mature grid technology. This applies to solar photovoltaic individual systems, to windmills and to hybrid systems. As a result, the maximum distance of competitive expansion of the grid from existing one against decentralized solutions has been considerably reduced, especially when it comes to electrifying small rural communities (see economic comparison between grid and PV in section above).

On top of that, the lack of an appropriate electronic database and hardware/software for modeling MV networks doesn’t allow either for anticipating upstream constrains that may result from the connection of new grid schemes and customers, or for estimating the cost and planning appropriate reinforcement investments. As a result, future beneficiaries may not get the full benefits from the new assets created under national and international funding. On the contrary, already connected customers may suffer a degradation of the service.

Efficient use of public resources requires that the most cost-effective technical solution be selected. The regulatory framework for electricity services delivery should be completed to ensure that new cost effective technologies are not discriminated against, including when it comes to the technology to be used by distribution licensees to comply with their obligations. Since the nominal installed capacity of decentralized individual systems is generally very low, for instance far below the 100 kW threshold below which no permit is required, it is recommended to address regulatory issues of such systems in the contracts under which public resources would be injected in Public Private Partnerships (regulation by contract). These regulatory clauses should, among other issues, address minimum technical standards applicable to components and minimum service level associated with regulated tariffs (especially for flat fee tariff if any).
In case grid extension is considered the most cost effective solution, assessment of the impact on upstream grid and provision for necessary reinforcement should be mandatory.


2.5.    Set up a strong institutional champion for expanding access
Developing and multiplying Public Private Partnerships presupposes an important work of promotion, technical preparation, procurement procedures, financial resource management and monitoring that require the set up of a specific institutional capacity. Since this is related to implementation of the energy policy and not to its elaboration, it is recommended that this capacity be located outside the Ministry.

It is also recommended that a specific institution  be set up for access expansion rather than merging it in the current power sector entities, i.e. KPLC. The reason for recommending such a separate arrangement is to avoid new access expansion efforts ending up being high jacked by inefficiencies, lack of specific capacity – especially regarding innovative solutions - and different ranking of priorities (urban growth, industrial demand development) that generally rule the power sector. One of the key lessons from rural electrification programs in other countries is that it is essential to set up institutionally a strong and autonomous champion with a commitment for expanding access to electricity. As a matter of fact, as noted above, the proposed Energy Bill will establish a Rural Electrification Authority (REA).
It is recommended that the composition of the board should be balanced, that is representatives of the civil society be integrated in a proportion that guarantees the board’s autonomy.  It is recommended that at least five members be from non- governmental institutions and be selected on the basis of competence in the following respective areas:
-    economy
-    finance
-    electrical engineering, including experience in
-    legal
-    rural development

It is suggested that this REA be in charge of the allocation of the resources of the Rural Electrification Fund to be created by the new law.
The REA should also be responsible for the preparation, the tendering process and the awarding of the contracts implementing the options to be retained among those proposed in the following section. It is also suggested that the regulatory commission should delegate certain functions to the REA, for instance, the elaboration of technical specifications (that are different from standards, which may be referred to in technical specifications), the selection process of licensees or permit holders for rural electrification, etc.
2.6.    Multi-Sectoral Partnerships for maximizing ratchet effect on rural development
Working on the premise that the advent of electricity in an un-served area does not always spontaneously induce expected use of electricity for social or productive uses, the REA should also be in charge of specific activities to ensure that these highly beneficial uses of electricity in terms of poverty alleviation take place and be maximized. Since the main barrier is that the development of social and productive uses of electricity requires coordinated multi-sectoral actions that seldom occur simultaneously, the REA should develop multi-sector energy sub-programs (MSEPs) together with other entities, agencies and ministry departments in charge of programs in other sectors. As a matter of investigations made during this study and presented above that there is a considerable potential for increasing impacts of projects and programs executed on the same territory by other sectors. The reason is that these projects and programs are facing technical and financial constraints to provide adequate energy infrastructure, especially because they cannot provide for economies of scale to get access to cost effective and reliable energy equipment and O&M services. MSEPs should provide the specific coordination needs, the technical assistance, and - when necessary - last resort financing for purchasing and installing energy equipment to ensure full effectiveness of multi-sectoral interfaces between access expansion projects supported by the REA and other sectoral programs.
2.7.    Options for Public Private Partnership to scale up access to electricity
The participation of private companies in developing access to electricity inside or outside the areas already served by KPLC can be sought under a range of legal arrangements which vary according to the degree of autonomy and protection awarded by the sector authorities to the participating private companies. This ranges from simple works contracts, as done currently under the RE agreement, to fully integrated licenses awarded, to competitive bidding, including a number of intermediary options of which advantages and limitations can be examined in the specific geographical and legal context of Kenya.
2.7.a.    Options to increase access rate inside “KPLC domain” as defined by the French consultant proposal:
Option a: Inject more financing into current KPLC electrification procedure:
Under this scenario, distribution infrastructure and connection investment financing is boosted but no change is introduced regarding the procedures under which KPLC connects new customers located in sub-locations where its MV grid is already present . KPLC first register applications from new customers, then makes quotation and design of works to be done, and, accordingly to its procedures, awards a contract to a selected contractor to do the works on a turnkey basis. Only the financing constrain is released by allocating earmarked loans to KPLC from a revolving fund.
Option b: Improve the efficiency and the pace by preparing larger volumes of projects awarded to same contractor in the same area:
KPLC creates an internal commercial and technical taskforce specialized in electrification supported by an international consultant to bring in international experience, and which moves from one district to another to boost the local commercial and technical KPLC capacity to design and implement either urban of rural electrification schemes, including reinforcement of MV lines when necessary. As a result the applications are boosted and a large number of “densification projects” are elaborated quickly in same district and are awarded all together to contractor that should meet higher implementation capacity requirement. This option is quite similar to the arrangements adopted to implement the electrification program financed by the French cooperation, but adding to it the diagnosis and works of the reinforcement of upstream MV lines when necessary.
Option c: Delegate to larger private sector entities the densification of whole compact areas
Areas where statistics show that there is a significant potential for densification, are delineated and bid to private firms for densification. The contract includes both the commercial part and the works, including the technical design. Assets are transferred to KPLC for operation when commissioned.

Preliminary studies should determine a reasonable volume of financing required to reach at least 40+% electrification rate in the considered area. The winner would be the candidate that would commit for the higher number of connections. The payment would be done partially or totally on an OBA basis. OBA, i.e. output based aid, means that the payment is made progressively after commissioning effective connections. It can be added as an additional specification of the tender that all social and commercial services that apply for connection in that area shall be included in bidders proposals. A variation of the above principle is to allow the winner to continue to connect additional customers beyond the initial number committed against a fix average payment per connection to make it attractive to increase the connection volume.

To a certain extent, this is similar to the Revenue Management Contracts experimented by NEPA in Nigeria to reduce high non commercial losses which were able to attract 9 international firms. This model could be applied either in rural or urban areas and could be tested in the Kibera slung area.

2.7.b.    Options to increase access rate outside “KPLC domain” as defined by the French consultant proposal:
Option a: Turnkey contracts for clusters of RE schemes:
This is the model currently being implemented under the Spanish and French funded programs. On the basis of a revised master plan, RE schemes are identified and pre-designed by KPLC. Instead of bidding limited number of schemes to each contractor, a large number of schemes (dozens) are bid at the same time.
Advantages:
This option is already road tested through the Spanish and French funded programs, and as such will benefit from the lessons learned when implementing these programs.
Limits
This option does allow neither to leverage additional private human and financial resources nor to bring in innovation related to decentralized solutions. It does not increase the management capacity of rural electrification beyond the current limited KPLC capacity ( e.g. does not improve operational efficiency or address marketing problems after initial connections). Resulting cost per customers are also considered by the GoK to be relatively expensive .
Option b: Distribution licenses for large rural areas
Because of the insufficient pace of electrification in the past, we recommend to develop Public-Private Partnerships to attract new players in the area of rural electrification and thus leverage additional resources and implementation capacity.
Based on international experiences where specific rural distribution companies or cooperatives have been established in both developing countries and in industrialized countries (Bangladesh, Morocco, South Africa, Senegal, USA, France, etc.), an alternative that can be envisioned in Kenya is to award rural distribution licenses to the private sector through a competitive bidding process., jointly with generation licenses where interconnection with KPLC is not possible.

The master plan and other preliminary studies would delineate the adequate size perimeters of supply areas that can be made viable and attractive to new players, the volume of investment required to achieve a minimum target in terms of access rate in that area, and an estimate of the amount of first-cost subsidy that would required to make the activity sustainable and attractive.

Each corresponding rural electrification distribution license will then be awarded to the candidate that would commit for the higher number of connections against the pre-determined envelope of subsidies, which would be disbursed on an OBA basis. In order to avoid the bottleneck of the high cost of the connection fee and internal wiring, the contractual commitment of the licensee should cover connection cost, internal wiring and energy conservation lamps. The committed amount of connections would have to be (i) built under a limited time (for instance 2-3 years) and (ii) operated and maintained  during the whole license period. The tariff would be determined by the Rural Electrification Authority on the basis of surveyed expenditures for lighting (paraffin, etc.) and other substitutable uses (i.e. battery charging for TV) and would be part of the tender.
Revenues will be collected directly by the local rural electrification company that the winner will be requested to create in the license area.

It is suggested that the choice of the technology should be of the responsibility of the licensee, to the extent that each technology used complies with technical specifications or standards to be attached to the tender document .

The master plan becomes only indicative and no more detailed design of each individual scheme by KPLC is required, since everything is included in the contractual commitment signed with the licensee. KPLC commercial campaigns are no more necessary either, since the licensee will be free to elaborate its own innovative commercial strategy.
Advantages:
The size of the area bided and the perspective of a series of tendering (which justifies the effort to prepare a bid since incremental cost for the next will be low and the probability to get at least one success is higher), the protection offered by the license (which ensure that revenue from customers can be secured over a long period), and the economic viability (which results from the first cost subsidy) can attract large private companies that are reliable over the long term, able to bring in significant amount of financing and able to achieve quickly ambitious targets.

The competitive process will ensure that the candidates will optimize both the investments and the O&M cost, and will create an incentive to maximizing the financing (equity + debt) brought by the candidates besides the subsidy, as a way to increase the proposed number of connections. To win, the candidates will naturally tend to form groupings to aggregate different expertise and comparative advantages. Typically, electrical works firms mastering the grid technology may team up with PV industry firms to get the best technology mix, as observed for instance in Senegal. International companies may team up with local ones to reduce costs.
Limitations and risks:
This model supposes to elaborate a quite complex procurement process and to prepare a number of documents that are part of the tender package. This supposes that the REA receives technical assistance to prepare these documents and to become familiar with the whole process. Good preliminary market surveys for each license areas are important to provide enough information to candidates to prepare reliable proposals. Credibility especially regarding financial and regulatory commitments from government is essential. It should be clear that expected cash flow is enough to cover more than O&M cost. All these conditions have been met by the Rural Electrification Agency of Senegal, where economic power of rural seems to be less than in Kenya. Finally, if the whole design is not enough credible, the main risk is the REA not be able to attract enough candidates to award the number of licenses that are necessary to achieve the target.
Option c: Built Operate Transfer (BOT) contracts for electrifying large compact areas:
This option is similar to the previous but differs to the extent that only functions are awarded but not licenses. The main objective and the process remains the same (bid compact areas for the maximum number of connections against a pre-determined amount of public financing). After several years of operation during which the winner of the bid collects the bills and maintains the equipment he has committed to install, the assets and the activity are transferred to KPLC. The period of operation has to be 15 years at least to ensure coverage of private financing brought by bidders. From the legal perspective, the selected firm works formally as a subcontractor of the licensee, i.e. KPLC. This is the model being implemented in Morocco. The model can be technology specific (for instance only individual PV systems in areas identified by the master plan) or technology neutral.

A variation of this option would be to offer the possibility to the customers to buy PV systems through installments along a similar period. Such variation could even be implemented independently, as it is being currently successfully implemented in Bolivia.
Advantage:
No license need to be issued, which simplifies the process. The choice of technology and the marketing are innovative and more cost effective, and thus more customers are served than in a scheme where the number of customers does not result from competition. The long period of connection generates a cash-flow that allows leverage to private financial resources to be brought by bidders to maximize the number of connections.
Limitations:
Since the selected firm is a subcontractor, it has no formal link with the regulator and its contract with KPLC is not regulated. Private companies will commit themselves and engage money only to the extent they trust enough in KPLC capacity to honor the contract over such a long period. The risk is that no firm wants to engage money and then the leverage effect is nil. They may not want to take the risk that KPLC, which remains the licensee, interferes in their relation with the clients and put at risk the cash-flow based revenue. There is then no difference with the option c below, except that the contractor can choose the technology (i.e. individual PV systems) and the commercial relation with the clients, including intermediaries like local organizations or cooperatives. But then the risk exists when assets are transferred to KPLC that KPLC lacks experience in managing a very different scheme, which supposes to maintain a large number of decentralized PV systems and collect bills from customers with no meter and that are not connected to the grid.

This option is very similar to the arrangement that has been implemented in Morocco by the national public utility ONE to expand solar photovoltaic based rural electrification for scattered rural population. However, KPLC doesn’t have the same cumulated experience than the one the ONE of Morocco has acquired on solar since 1985 before deciding on its own to elaborate BOT type tenders. Would KPLC be able or even willing to lead a process of offering BOT contracts with solar on its own license area? So far the Bank would consider this path to uncertain regarding effective implementation and absorption capacity by KPLC and would not advise the GOK to follow it.

VI.    Conclusions
While specific surveys would be necessary to get a more precise and quantified picture of the situation, consultations and data gathered by the study confirm that lack of access to electricity constrains rural development in Kenya. There is evidence of unmet electricity needs in productive activities and social services, namely agriculture, livestock, fishery, tea and coffee cooperatives, telecommunications, water pumping, health and education services. This supports the recognition by the ERSWEC and the Sessional Paper N0.4 of 2004 on Energy that adequate access to electricity is condition to achieve achieving the objectives of the ERSWEC, namely the strengthening of the economic growth – which still depends largely on rural activities – and enhancing equity and reducing poverty.

On the basis of existing data issued by the Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS) on demography and households amenities surveys and the most recent KPLC statistics on domestic customers, it has been estimated that the current rate of access to any kind of electricity services would be around 14.5 %, of which about8.6% is provided by the KPLC grid. The gap between these two figures is due to (i) illegal and/or secondary connections, (ii) connection to private mini-grids, (iii) individual gensets and (iv) use of individual solar PV systems. Although these households manage to get some electricity services, this also means that this access is not regulated, that is they do not benefit from any regulatory protection against poor safety standards, bad quality and discontinuity of the supply, and very high price charged to them for these services. However, this also demonstrates the willingness to pay from these populations, which is illustrated by the impressive development of the small and low quality PV solar market.

On the basis of population projections for 2010 made by CBS, the number of additional rural customers that should be connected by this date to reach the target of 20 % access rate in rural is around one million. While these figures seem impressive, the characteristics of the Kenya population settlement may help a lot to achieve large volumes of connections. The Kenyan population is concentrated in less than one third of the national territory, as result of very high rural density of population in the western and center parts of the country. High density populated regions are also the ones where the main grid is already in place, which should help to increase the electrification rate relatively quickly at a relatively low cost, mainly by densifying the existing distribution grid.

However, the past performance of the current institutional and financial arrangement for rural electrification over the last three decades indicates that such an ambitious goal would be out of reach without reshaping it deeply: the current pace of connection, either by the RE program or by KPLC on its own, either urban or rural is around 50,000 new customers per year. On average, the rate of rural electrification has increased 0.3% per year during the period 2000-2006. The limitations of current RE institutional model have been pointed out by several studies and include institutional and management constraints, depletion of the Rural Electrification Fund by operating losses worsened by the allocation formula and by inadequate tariffs, high unitary investment costs, and a restrictive connection policy that limits the integration of domestic customers
Even assuming significant improvement of KPLC implementation capacity, which may concentrate on its core urban market, the ambitious objective set by the Sessional Paper No4 to support the implementation of the ERSWEC cannot be attained without leveraging additional resources and implementation capacity and without improving the efficiency of the use of the public resources that can be allocated for rural electrification.
The GOK has already taken a number of steps to address some of the issues identified. In particular, it has prepared a draft Energy Bill which will establish a Rural Electrification Authority and a Rural Electrification Fund, and which will remove KPLC monopoly in power distribution activities by permitting the award of distribution licenses to third parties. Several studies have also been initiated to facilitate implementation of the decisions already taken in the Sessional Paper on Energy regarding: (i) the institutional set-up for RE, (ii) the need for cost recovery tariffs; and (iii) a new connection policy for connecting customers to facilitate the achievement of access targets.

Endorsing the Government’s decision to establish a specific institutional and financial mechanism for rural access expansion, separate from the current set-up for the main system, and on the basis of lessons from international experience in this area, the study is making the following key recommendation to structure this new arrangement:
    Set up a strong Institutional Champion committed exclusively to expand access. This would require a detailed description of the roles and responsibilities of the future Rural Electrification Authority, and of the corresponding human and financial means to be committed by the government.
    Complete the regulatory framework so it provides for integration of new technical solutions and partners, including the dynamic solar PV industry. This would require additional work on the basis of other international experience but taking into account the specifics of the Kenya legal background;.
    Develop Private Public Partnerships to leverage additional resources and implementation capacity. This would require several additional studies, especially market analysis, feasibility studies and promotion of the concept.
    Establish a new tariff structure for rural electrification that takes into account operational costs and rural customers’ willingness to pay. A tariff study is currently being done, which may need to be completed in case the specific case of rural electrification is not covered.
    Adopt a new connection policy that maximizes both the number of beneficiaries and revenues. A study is in progress which would provide proposals to solve current issues. Specific provisions may be required in the case of rural areas.
    Set up a new Financing Mechanism to provide and optimize first cost public subsidy. According to the option(s) retained, the appropriate mechanism(s) would still need to be designed.
    Organize Multi-Sectoral Partnerships for maximizing ratchet effect on rural development. This would require specific studies to identify more precisely, in each areas considered to be electrified, what are the other projects going on in the same area and what additional provisions should be taken, beside the basic electricity infrastructure to work out efficiently the interface with the future electrification program.
Participation of private companies in developing access to electricity inside or outside the areas already served by KPLC can be sought under a range of legal arrangements which vary according to the degree of autonomy and protection awarded by the sector authorities to the participating private companies. This ranges from simple works contracts, as done currently under the RE agreement, to fully integrated licenses awarded through competitive bidding, including a number of intermediary options of which advantages and limitations can be examined in the specific geographical and legal context of Kenya.

Three potential options for Public Private Partnership to increase access rate outside “KPLC domain” have been determined by the study, which are the following :
Option a: Turnkey contracts for clusters of RE schemes:
This is the model currently being implemented under the Spanish and French funded programs. Instead of bidding limited number of schemes to each contractor, a large number of schemes (dozens) are bid  at the same time.
Option b: Distribution licenses for large compact rural areas
Distribution licenses for compact rural areas are awarded through a competitive bidding process to the candidate that would commit for higher number of connections against the pre-determined envelope of subsidies.

The committed amount of connections is to be (i) built under a limited time and (ii) operated and maintained during the whole license period. Revenues are collected directly by the local rural electrification company that the winner will be requested to create in the license area. The choice of the technology is the responsibility of the licensee, to the extent that each technology used complies with technical specifications or standards to be attached to the tender document. This is the model being implemented in Senegal, and, with some variations, in Argentina and South Africa.
Option c: Built Operate Transfer (BOT) contracts for electrifying large compact areas:
This option is similar to the previous but differs to the extent that only functions are awarded but not licenses. After a several years of operation during which the winner of the bid collect the bills and maintain the equipment he has committed to install, the assets and the activity are transferred to KPLC. This is the model adopted in Morocco, and, with some variations, in Bolivia.

Option (a) allows neither for the leverage of additional private human and financial resources nor for bringing in innovation related to decentralized solutions. It has also been noted by GoK that option (a) resulted in relatively high cost per customer. Since KPLC doesn’t have the same records as ONE and does not have such an cumulated experience of 20 years on solar PV systems, option (c) does not seem to be appropriate in the context of Kenya to attract the strong private partners required to face the ambitious target. Option (b), e.g. awarding distribution licenses for large rural areas, is recommended as the preferable option to be further explored on the basis of previous international experiences.

The size of the area bid and the perspective of a series of tendering, the protection offered by the license, which ensures that revenue from customers can be secured over a period long enough to recover the investment, and the economic viability facilitated by the first cost subsidy can attract large private companies that are reliable over the long term, able to bring in significant amount of financing and able to achieve quickly ambitious targets. The competitive process will ensure that the candidates will optimize the use of the public subsidy. To win, international companies tend naturally to team up with local ones to reduce costs, as observed for instance in Senegal.

While this model is supposed to elaborate quite a complex procurement process, the future Rural Electrification Agency can receive technical assistance to prepare the first bidding package and benefit procedures road tested in other countries in the region. However, it should be stressed that significant preparatory work would be required to pave the way for an ambitious implementation of this option, among others detailed domestic and productive demand surveys, indicative feasibility studies and business plans and preparation of legal documents, and the Rural Electrification Authority should be operational.





Bibliography and Data Sources

Data and statistics
1.    Annual Report KPLC, 2004-2005.
2.    Number of Metered Customers RE per sub-region and tariff, March 2006.
3.    Population Distribution by Administrative Areas and Urban Centers, 1999 Population and Housing Census, Vol 1, Central Bureau of Statistics.
4.    Atlas of Population and Development Indicators, Kenya 1999 Population and Housing Census, Central Bureau of Statistics, October 2003.
5.    Analytical Report on Housing Conditions and Households Amenities, Vol X, Kenya 1999 Population and Housing Census, Central Bureau of Statistics.
6.    Analytical Report on Migration and Urbanism, Vol VI, Kenya 1999 Population and Housing Census, Central Bureau of Statistics.
7.    Analytical Report on Population Projections, Vol VIII Kenya 1999 Population and Housing Census, Central Bureau of Statistics.

Legal and Policy Documents:
1.    The Energy Bill, Bill for Introduction into the National Assembly, July 2004.
2.    Sessional Paper N0.4 of 2004 on Energy, Ministry of Energy
3.    Task Force 4 Report on Rural Energy, March 2003, Ministry of Energy
4.    Roadmap for Reform of the Rural Electrification Program, Ministry of Energy, October 2005.

Institutional and Financial Arrangements
1.    Report by EDF to Ministry of Kenya on Rural Electrification Institutional Reform, November 2004.
2.    Financial Assessment of RE activity within KPLC, report by EDF to Ministry of Energy financed by AFD.
3.    Review of the Existing GOK/KPLC Agreement on the Rural Electrification Programme Fund, Discussion Paper by ISG, December 1999.

Studies on Rural Electrification in Kenya: Supply options and Demand Assessment
1.    Study on Kenya’s energy demand, supply and policy strategy for households, small scale industries and service establishments, August 2001, Kamfor Company.
2.    Study of non-electrified Households in electrified Areas, Study by EDF for Ministry of Energy financed by AFD., Feb 2004.
3.    Rural Electrification Master Plan, Tractebel and Kaburu Okelo &Partners, 1997
4.    Development of MV and LV networks in Rural Zones, report by EDF to Ministry of Energy financed by AFD, November 2004.

Documents on PV in Kenya
1.    An overview of the Kenyan photovoltaic industry market, Study Report, Electrik Link Ltd, by Kiremu Magambo, April 2004.
2.    Renewable Energy Department Activities and set up. Extract from Strategic Plan, Ministry of Energy, 2006.
3.    Study for Solar Quality and Specifications and Market Penetration, BCEOM, FONDEM, Energy Alternatives Africa Ltd, August 2001.
4.    “Field Performance Evaluation of Amorphous Silicon (a-Si) Photovoltaic Systems in Kenya: Methods and Measurements in Support of a Sustainable Commercial Solar Energy Industry”, Energy and Resources Group (ERG), University of California, Berkeley and Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy (STEP) Program, Princeton University, 2000.
5.    “Photovoltaic module quality in the Kenyan solar home systems market”, R. D. Duke, A. Jacobson, D. M. Kammen
6.    Energy and Resources Group (ERG), University of California, Berkeley and Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy (STEP) Program, Princeton University, in Energy Policy 30 (2002) 477–499,  2000.
7.    “Putting Soar Home System programs into perspective. What lessons are relevant?” F. van der Vleuten, N. Sta. R. van der Plas, final draft for Energy Policy, 2006.
8.    “Solar electricity in Africa: a reality”, R. van der Plas, M. Hankins, in Energy Policy 26 (1998) 295–305.
9.    PVMTI News, No5, March 2004
10.    “The value of vigilance: Evaluating Product quality in the Kenya Solar Photovoltaic Industry”, A. Jacobson, , Umboldt State University & D. Kammen, University of Califormia, Berkeley, June 2005.
11.    “An Overview of the Kenyan Photovoltaic Industry Market Study Report”, K. Magambo, Rencon Associates, for Electric Link Ltd, April 2004.

Documents related to current or future Donors Programs
1.    Support to Rural Electrification Programme in Kenya, Final Intervention Document, Ministry of Energy of Kenya, in collaboration with Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland, May 2005.
2.    ESMAP – Energy SMEs Program, Aide-mémoire of June 2005 mission.

Documents related to Multisectoral Aspects:
1.    Draft national Policy for the Sustaimable Development of Arid and Semi Arid lands of Kenya, December 2004.
2.    Education Sector Report, February 2006.
3.    Health Sector Working Group, February 2006.
4.    Physical Infrastructure Sector MTEF Report, February 2006.
5.    Agriculture and Rural Development Sector Report, February 2006.
6.    Public administration sector Report, February 2006.
7.    Kisima (Newsletter published by the Ministry of Water and Irrigaton and the Water and Sanitation Program-Africa), issue 2, July 2005
Maps

No.1    Interconnected and Isolated grids
No 2    Current Levels of connectivity for households and Market Centers by District
No 3     Current Levels of Connectivity for Schools and Health Facilities by District
No.4    Distribution of Telecommunication Facilities



VII.    Annex 1 - KPLC Statistics - Number of customers (all categories) per region and Sub-region, April 2006

        KPLC    RES    Urban (KPLC+RES)    Rural (KPLC+RES)    Total (KPLC+RES)
Sub-Region    Major Towns    Urban    Rural    Urban    Rural    connected    % of total urban custom    Connected    % of total rural custom    Connected    % of totalcustom
Nairobi South    Nairobi City     102,425      -     -     -      102,425     15.9%     -     0.0%    102,425     12.9%
     Machakos     2,627     1,202      1,024      2,099      3,651     0.6%    3,301     2.2%     6,952     0.9%
     Kajaido     5,963      702     608     524      6,571     1.0%    1,226     0.8%     7,797     1.0%
     Makueni    -      -     986      4,260      986     0.2%    4,260     2.8%     5,246     0.7%
     Kibwezi     596      493     346     896      942     0.1%    1,389     0.9%     2,331     0.3%
     Garissa    -     3,661     -     -     -     0.0%    3,661     2.4%     3,661     0.5%
     Wajir    -      -     -      1,311     -     0.0%    1,311     0.9%     1,311     0.2%
     Moyale    -      -     -      1,173     -     0.0%    1,173     0.8%     1,173     0.1%
     Mandera    -      -     -      1,194     -     0.0%    1,194     0.8%     1,194     0.2%
     Marsabit    -      -     -     926     -     0.0%    926     0.6%    926     0.1%
     Total Nairobi South     111,611     6,058     2,964      12,383      114,575     17.8%     18,441     12.3%     133,016     16.8%
Nairobi West    Nairobi City     98,615      -     -     -      98,615     15.3%     -     0.0%     98,615     12.4%
     Kikuyu     4,407     1,800      1,204      1,696      5,611     0.9%    3,496     2.3%     9,107     1.1%
     Limuru     4,266     5,167      1,140      1,362      5,406     0.8%    6,529     4.4%     11,935     1.5%
     Ngong     6,700     4,018     986      1,953      7,686     1.2%    5,971     4.0%     13,657     1.7%
     Total Nairobi West     113,988     10,984     3,330      5,011      117,318     18.2%     15,995     10.7%     133,313     16.8%
Nairobi North    Nairobi City     122,464      -     -     -      122,464     19.0%     -     0.0%    122,464     15.4%
     Kiambu     3,665     2,799      1,452      1,836      5,117     0.8%    4,635     3.1%     9,752     1.2%
     Ruiru     2,794     1,596     942      3,142      3,736     0.6%    4,738     3.2%     8,474     1.1%
     Total Nairobi North     128,923     4,395     2,394      4,978      131,317     20.4%     9,373     6.3%     140,690     17.7%
     Total Nairobi Region    354,522     21,436     8,688     22,372     363,210     56.5%     43,808     29.3%    407,018     51.3%
South Coast    Mombasa City     33,558     2,130     -     -      33,558     5.2%    2,130     1.4%     35,688     4.5%
     Kwale     1,415     1,176     254     996      1,669     0.3%    2,172     1.5%     3,841     0.5%
     Ukunda     2,991      513     136     924      3,127     0.5%    1,437     1.0%     4,564     0.6%
     Voi     3,260      533     123      1,026      3,383     0.5%    1,559     1.0%     4,942     0.6%
     Loitoktok    -      620     -     462     -     0.0%    1,082     0.7%     1,082     0.1%
     Taveta    -     1,215     117     125      117     0.0%    1,340     0.9%     1,457     0.2%
     Total South Coast    41,224     6,187      630      3,533     41,854     6.5%     9,720     6.5%     51,574     6.5%
North Coast    Malindi     13,948     1,231     720     424      14,668     2.3%    1,655     1.1%     16,323     2.1%
     Lamu     2,556      782     652     296      3,208     0.5%    1,078     0.7%     4,286     0.5%
     Nyali     24,645     2,526     524     845      25,169     3.9%    3,371     2.3%     28,540     3.6%
     Kilifi     6,521      587     496     464      7,017     1.1%    1,051     0.7%     8,068     1.0%
     Total North Coast    47,670     5,125     2,392      2,029     50,062     7.8%     7,154     4.8%     57,216     7.2%
     Total Coast    88,894     11,312     3,022      5,562     91,916     14.3%     16,874     11.3%    108,790     13.7%
Central Rift    Nakuru     33,222     5,116     867      2,678      34,089     5.3%    7,794     5.2%     41,883     5.3%
     Naivasha     5,275     1,325     523      1,532      5,798     0.9%    2,857     1.9%     8,655     1.1%
     Narok     1,032      483     867      1,303      1,899     0.3%    1,786     1.2%     3,685     0.5%
     Nyahururu     4,473      632     939      1,542      5,412     0.8%    2,174     1.5%     7,586     1.0%
     Molo     3,064      615     539      1,685      3,603     0.6%    2,300     1.5%     5,903     0.7%
     Salgaa    -      507     248     352      248     0.0%    859     0.6%     1,107     0.1%
     Eldama Ravine    -      265      42     126      42     0.0%    391     0.3%    433     0.1%
     Maralal    -      -     -     739     -     0.0%    739     0.5%    739     0.1%
     Total Central Rift    47,066     8,942     4,025      9,957     51,091     7.9%     18,899     12.6%     69,990     8.8%
West Kenya    Kisumu     19,861     3,353      1,230      4,864      21,091     3.3%    8,217     5.5%     29,308     3.7%
     Kakamega     5,752     1,226     852      2,652      6,604     1.0%    3,878     2.6%     10,482     1.3%
     Bungoma     4,518      512     557      1,020      5,075     0.8%    1,532     1.0%     6,607     0.8%
     Kisii     7,454      517     632      2,225      8,086     1.3%    2,742     1.8%     10,828     1.4%
     Migori     492      431     746      1,147      1,238     0.2%    1,578     1.1%     2,816     0.4%
     Busia     2,366      825     761      1,564      3,127     0.5%    2,389     1.6%     5,516     0.7%
     Bondo    -      491     320     425      320     0.0%    916     0.6%     1,236     0.2%
     Kericho     2,034      262     243      1,453      2,277     0.4%    1,715     1.1%     3,992     0.5%
     Sotik    -      253     760     820      760     0.1%    1,073     0.7%     1,833     0.2%
     Total West Kenya    42,477     7,870     6,101      16,170     48,578     7.6%     24,040     16.1%     72,618     9.2%
North Rift    Eldoret     9,361     2,150      1,563      5,863      10,924     1.7%    8,013     5.4%     18,937     2.4%
     Kitale     3,409      810     563      1,803      3,972     0.6%    2,613     1.7%     6,585     0.8%
     Kapsabet     1,923      516     900      1,252      2,823     0.4%    1,768     1.2%     4,591     0.6%
     Kabarnet    -      548     235      2,744      235     0.0%    3,292     2.2%     3,527     0.4%
     Iten    -      52     151     254      151     0.0%    306     0.2%    457     0.1%
     Total North Rift    14,693     4,075     3,412      11,916     18,105     2.8%     15,991     10.7%     34,096     4.3%
     Total West Region    104,236     20,887     13,538    38,043     117,774     18.3%     58,930     39.4%    176,704     22.3%
Mount Kenya North    Nyeri     19,764     1,788     708      3,252      20,472     3.2%    5,040     3.4%     25,512     3.2%
     Meru     4,251     2,516     966      2,362      5,217     0.8%    4,878     3.3%     10,095     1.3%
     Nanyuki     2,230      488      1,241      1,562      3,471     0.5%    2,050     1.4%     5,521     0.7%
     Isiolo     809      243     113     215      922     0.1%    458     0.3%     1,380     0.2%
     Embu     9,110     1,032     644      2,496      9,754     1.5%    3,528     2.4%     13,282     1.7%
     Kerugoya     5,698      700     623      2,275      6,321     1.0%    2,975     2.0%     9,296     1.2%
     Total Mount Kenya North    41,862     6,766     4,295      12,162     46,157     7.2%     18,928     12.6%     65,085     8.2%
Mount Kenya South    Thika     14,230      957      2,528      3,369      16,758     2.6%    4,326     2.9%     21,084     2.7%
     Kitui     2,755      531     569      1,254      3,324     0.5%    1,785     1.2%     5,109     0.6%
     Muranga     3,204     2,081     896      2,952      4,100     0.6%    5,033     3.4%     9,133     1.2%
     Total Mount Kenya South    20,189     3,569     3,993      7,575     24,182     3.8%     11,144     7.4%     35,326     4.5%
     Total Mount Kenya Region    62,051     10,335     8,288     19,737     70,339     10.9%     30,072     20.1%    100,411     12.7%
    Totals Country Wide                        643,239     100%     149,683     100.0%    792,922     100%
         KPLC    RES                            
         Urban    Rural    Urban    Rural    Total Urban         Total Rural         Total Gen   
    Totals Country Wide     609,703      63,969      33,536      85,714      643,239          149,683          792,922    
    Grand Total All Customers    673,672      119,250                        




Annex 2 – Projection of Population per District 2000-2006
Source: Analytical Report on Population Projections, Vol VIII Kenya 1999 Population and Housing Census, Central Bureau of Statistics.

District    2000    2001    2002    2003    2004    2005    2006    Evolution
2000-2006
Nairobi    2,290,049    2,379,741    2,470,850    2,563,297    2,656,997    2,751,860    2,845,353    24.25%
Kiambu    775,548    782,823    789,602    795,866    801,601    806,790    810,724    4.54%
Kirinyaga    475,535    478,868    481,877    484,554    486,891    488,880    490,096    3.06%
Murang'a    356,939    352,981    348,667    344,004    339,001    333,664    327,724    -8.18%
Nyandarua    506,171    517,986    529,598    540,984    552,118    562,975    573,038    13.21%
Nyeri    683,490    683,115    682,185    680,698    678,654    676,053    672,321    -1.63%
Thika    667,525    667,159    666,251    664,799    662,802    660,262    656,617    -1.63%
Maragua    400,945    400,570    399,866    398,833    397,471    395,781    393,426    -1.88%
Centrai    3,882,021    3,918,438    3,952,369    3,983,728    4,012,433    4,038,407    4,058,098    4.54%
Kilifi    573,962    587,377    600,763    614,106    627,388    640,593    653,144    13.80%
Kwale    520,960    530,467    539,827    549,027    558,051    566,886    575,026    10.38%
Lamu    76,243    77,536    78,804    80,043    81,253    82,431    83,503    9.52%
Mombasa    704,571    725,046    745,670    766,422    787,280    808,221    828,513    17.59%
Taita Taveta    256,972    259,183    261,208    263,041    264,676    266,108    267,101    3.94%
Tana River    191,318    196,467    201,636    206,822    212,018    217,219    222,228    16.16%
Malindi    297,765    305,778    313,824    321,895    329,983    338,077    345,872    16.16%
Coast    2,622,794    2,684,095    2,745,267    2,806,237    2,866,931    2,927,273    2,984,625    13.80%
Embu    289,965    292,672    295,210    297,574    299,759    301,761    303,313    4.60%
Isiolo    106,719    109,625    112,514    115,381    118,222    121,032    123,699    15.91%
Kitui    539,443    547,138    554,582    561,762    568,663    575,273    581,080    7.72%
Makueni    811,035    826,824    842,338    857,548    872,427    886,947    900,310    11.01%
Machakos    953,049    971,603    989,832    1,007,705    1,025,190    1,042,252    1,057,955    11.01%
Marsabit    127,696    130,182    132,624    135,019    137,362    139,648    141,752    11.01%
Mbeere    179,075    181,814    184,474    187,051    189,539    191,934    194,065    8.37%
Meru Central    522,581    530,575    538,339    545,858    553,119    560,108    566,325    8.37%
Mayale    56,020    56,877    57,709    58,515    59,293    60,042    60,709    8.37%
Mwingi    318,325    323,268    328,073    332,731    337,233    341,571    345,440    8.52%
Meru North    636,040    649,698    663,170    676,433    689,463    702,236    714,115    12.28%
Tharaka    106,340    108,624    110,876    113,094    115,272    117,408    119,394    12.28%
Nithi (Meru S.)    213,012    213,644    214,121    214,439    214,597    214,595    214,247    0.58%
Eastern    4,840,947    4,902,006    4,960,626    5,016,693    5,070,098    5,120,733    5,164,069    6.67%
Garissa    420,025    436,167    451,384    465,590    478,699    490,624    500,850    19.24%
Mandera    267,923    278,220    287,926    296,988    305,350    312,956    319,480    19.24%
Wajir    350,074    374,438    399,481    425,189    451,543    478,523    505,674    44.45%
North Eastern    1,054,665    1,127,638    1,202,603    1,279,509    1,358,301    1,438,916    1,519,985    44.12%
Gucha (Kisii S.)    484,356    493,601    502,704    511,652    520,429    529,022    536,955    10.86%
Noma Bay    303,323    309,261    315,116    320,876    326,534    332,079    337,214    11.17%
Kisii Centrai    513,812    520,087    526,112    531,877    537,372    542,585    547,039    6.47%
Kisumu    526,948    533,383    539,563    545,476    551,110    556,457    561,025    6.47%
Kuria    161,018    165,782    170,546    175,303    180,047    184,771    189,303    17.57%
Migori    542,708    555,042    567,272    579,381    591,350    603,159    614,262    13.18%
Nyamira (Kisii N.)    520,705    527,417    533,887    540,102    546,051    551,725    556,635    6.90%
Rachuonyo    321,063    325,202    329,191    333,023    336,691    340,190    343,217    6.90%
Siaya    496,498    496,326    495,736    494,728    493,298    491,448    488,758    -1.56%
Suba    163,910    167,439    170,933    174,384    177,787    181,138    184,272    12.42%
Bondo    248,980    251,426    253,735    255,901    257,922    259,792    261,283    4.94%
Nyando    316,950    325,128    333,274    341,375    349,419    357,393    364,972    15.15%
Nyanza    4,598,485    4,666,140    4,731,887    4,795,614    4,857,210    4,916,569    4,969,323    8.06%
Baringo    278,517    283,926    289,257    294,501    299,649    304,694    309,361    11.07%
Barnet    402,353    410,167    417,868    425,443    432,880    440,168    446,911    11.07%
Keiyo    151,378    154,516    157,621    160,690    163,717    166,697    169,482    11.96%
Kajiado    433,139    449,279    465,697    482,379    499,314    516,487    533,427    23.15%
Kericho    491,147    499,119    506,873    514,392    521,663    528,669    534,938    8.92%
Koibatek    146,640    151,217    155,842    160,510    165,218    169,961    174,584    19.06%
Laikipia    341,955    352,628    363,413    374,299    385,278    396,338    407,119    19.06%
Marakwet    147,666    150,353    152,989    155,569    158,090    160,546    162,794    10.24%
Nakuru    1,254,551    1,287,281    1,320,089    1,352,940    1,385,794    1,418,614    1,450,116    15.59%
Nandi    609,203    622,108    634,897    647,552    660,054    672,384    683,938    12.27%
Narok    386,496    396,512    406,549    416,595    426,638    436,668    446,289    15.47%
Samburu    150,932    153,926    156,879    159,789    162,651    165,460    168,066    11.35%
Trans-Mara    178,513    181,011    183,409    185,702    187,882    189,947    191,725    7.40%
Trans-Nzoia    610,674    629,359    648,226    667,256    686,430    705,730    724,515    18.64%
Turkana    472,727    480,481    488,029    495,355    502,445    509,286    515,420    9.03%
Uasin Gishu    658,108    675,261    692,454    709,669    726,885    744,083    760,588    15.57%
West Pokot    324,971    332,677    340,363    348,021    355,639    363,208    370,401    13.98%
Buret    332,907    339,169    345,327    351,371    357,290    363,074    368,399    10.66%
Rift Valley    7,386,459    7,581,637    7,777,407    7,973,552    8,169,849    8,366,071    8,554,647    15.82%
Bu ngo ma    932,817    964,910    997,357    1,030,126    1,063,180    1,096,486    1,129,037    21.04%
Busia    391,668    401,859    412,069    422,286    432,498    442,692    452,468    15.52%
Mt.Elgon    141,399    143,509    145,564    147,561    149,496    151,366    153,036    8.23%
Kakamega    641,539    662,824    684,322    706,009    727,863    749,861    771,315    20.23%
Lugari    229,559    237,176    244,868    252,628    260,448    268,320    275,996    20.23%
Teso    191,008    195,023    199,009    202,961    206,874    210,743    214,379    12.24%
Vihiga    527,135    540,735    554,355    567,980    581,594    595,180    608,199    15.38%
Butere/Murrias    500,076    508,347    516,454    524,385    532,128    539,671    546,534    9.29%
Western    3,532,944    3,604,850    3,676,133    3,746,697    3,816,448    3,885,290    3,949,742    11.80%
KENYA    30,208,365    30,864,544    31,517,142    32,165,328    32,808,269    33,445,119    34,045,843    12.70%




Annex 3 - Distribution of households by main type of lighting

Source: Analytical Report on Housing Conditions and Households Amenities, Vol X, Kenya 1999 Population and Housing Census, Central Bureau of Statistics. Table A8




     Electricity    Pressure
Lamp         Lantern         Tin Lamp         Fuel Wood    Solar         Other         Total
    Number    %    Number    %    Number    %    Number    %    Number    %    Number    %    Number    %   
Nairobi    336,299    52.3    12,476    1.9    136,469    21.2    140,334    22    698 `    0.1    341    0.1    16,289    2.5    642,906
Central    143,619    15.6    14,178    1.5    408,077    44.4    324,020    35.3    4,682    0.5    6,072    0.7    17,827    1.9    918,475
Coast    101,713    19.4    6,229    1.2    120,903    23.1    275,260    52.5    6,638    1.3    1,045    0.2    12,092    2.3    523,880
Eastern    55,779    5.8    9,334    1.0    424,473    44.5    388,746    40.7    48,800    5.1    8,733    0.9    18,336    1.9    954,201
North eastern    7,825    5    354    0    42,600    29    23,506    16    58,744    40    247    0    13,806    9    147,082
Nyanza    45,883    5    9,970    1    240,971    25    639,398    66    4,275    0    3,206    0    19,166    2    962,869
Rift Valley    139,381    9    14,614    1    578,618    39    521,094    35    186,393    13    7,520    1    39,439    3    1,487,059
Western    22,492    3.2    5,481    0.8    184,775    26.4    474,173    67.9    1,956    0.3    1,367    0.2    8,579    1.2    698,823
Kenya    852,991    13.5    72,636    1.1    2,136,886    33.7    2,786,531    44.0    312,186    4.9    28,531    0.5    145,534    2.3    6,335,295
share of each technology    13%        1%        34%        44%        5%        0%        2%        100%





Annex 4 – Field Visits : Main Findings

Visits were made to selected trading/market centres - Namanga, Bissil, Fly-over and Njambini - some of which had been connected to the grid and others which had not been connected. During the visits families in the vicinity of and far from the market/ trading centres were met. The visits provided ample evidence of high levels of unmet, and based on expenditures on other energy forms, a clear indication of the willingness and ability of those interviewed to pay for electricity at current prices; the indications are exemplified by the examples given below.

Businesses have installed own generators to supply individual homes or shops with electricity and charge Kshs500 per bulb; and there are many takers. The demand for such services is growing; so is the demand for electricity for entertainment and for productive purposes such as carpentry, welding and machining. Those with stand alone generators showed keen interest in getting connected to the grid in order to benefit from lower cost and more reliable supply. Meanwhile artisans – welders, carpenters, etc – expressed interest in being supplied from the grid as this, they affirmed, would significantly increase their productivity; with the growing demand for the better quality services and products, their businesses and incomes would increase accordingly.




Fig. 1 A carpenter at Namanga; expressed interest in being connected as this would greatly increase the productivity of his business

At the centres that had been connected to the grid (Bissil and Fly-over) there was evidence of business expansion and increased activities e.g. maize milling, welding, general machining, bars and restaurants. Business opportunities and the quality of facilities were greatly enhanced. More artisans were moving in; the artisans interviewed welcomed competition while the customers relished the improved quality of services and products at competitive prices. None of the facilities which had been connected has been disconnected – a clear indication of willingness and ability to pay for the services rendered.








Fig.2: Artisans at work at Bissil – machining motor parts; quality of work improved as a result of electricity connection and customers satisfied

Visits to unconnected rural homes also revealed interest in electricity including those supplied by decentralised systems. A household was, for instance, using PV panels for lighting and entertainment. Another one went some length to install a standby generator for lighting, colour TV and computer at very high cost. Both expressed an interest in being connected to the grid and willingness to pay for the services.

Other observations
At Namanga, plans and arrangements are advanced for connection to the grid; a total of 238 customers are to be connected initially and it is envisaged that about 1,000 will be connected by 2009. The main customers will be hotels, shops, bars, petrol stations, government facilities such as police stations; and social facilities e.g. schools, dispensaries and health centres.

The main stumbling block is the high cost of connection: currently going at Kshs 46,000 for a 3-phase system and Kshs 15,000 for a single phase one. More people expressed interest in participating in the scheme if only the connection fees could be spread out, say for at least three instalments.  Another factor limiting the increase in demand is that households are not included in the current programme; yet there are many that would benefit; indeed some have expressed willingness to pay the connection fees. Their participation would increase the demand considerably. A sure benefit would be the extension of electricity across the boarder to Tanzania to meet the demand; this would be a good example of co-operation in the region

At Bissil the bars have increased in number and quality of facilities as well as customer services enhanced; where before there used to be only two small refrigerators, now there are at least 20 large ones. More customers, households as well as businesses, want to be connected; the demand for electricity is, therefore, likely to rise substantially to a much higher level than is currently the case.

At Flyover still more customers want to be connected; the level of connection could be increased to optimise the use of electricity for expanded business activities; new business are coming in as are more tenants. There is also scope for greater use of solar panels, but given the climatic conditions at the area, there is inadequate sunshine; the solar panels, therefore, need to be augmented by electricity or better still be used as back up to the grid connected supply.

At Njambini a new approach is being implemented:Rather than concentrate on one centre, this time emphasis was on meeting the requirements of several customers simultaneously: Njamini township, four secondary schools, Kanyenyaine trading centre and Munyaka. The new approach will go a long way towards increasing connections. A total of 7 transformers will be installed – two 200kVA, two 100 kVA, two 50kVA and one 25kVA. There will be 18.1 km of 11kV lines and11km of 220V lines.

Our attention was in particular caught by the experience of a rural homestead in Kinangop. The owners of the homestead were willing to overlook the high cost (Kshs300 a day in fuel) of running a small 1,1kVA diesel driven generator for no more than 2 hours a day, for lighting, colour TV and computer; this is over and above that, also uses 5 litres of kerosene a month for lighting; uses gas for cooking. The experience of the household is representative of many in the rural areas in Kenya which point to the huge unmet demand in those areas.

There is also room for more widespread use of decentralised systems to supply electricity to meet household demand for electricity in the rural areas, especially those far removed from the grid. Many households are willing to pay the high cost to be supplied with electricity for lighting and entertainment; for even the alternative source – kerosene - is becoming increasingly expensive in spite of being more inconvenient to use. With better information and guidance even more would opt for the use of decentralised systems to meet their electricity needs, thus increasing the demand substantially.

Within the areas in the immediate vicinity of the grid where many are already enjoying the benefits of being connected, a large number of people patiently are still waiting to be connected to meet household electricity needs or to be upgraded to cater for productive activities such as bakery or irrigation for agriculture; but they have been informed that their needs cannot be met for the time being because of unavailability of suitable facilities and equipment. This, I am sure is, the case for many parts of rural (and urban) Kenya pointing the high levels of unmet or underserved demand for throughout the country.

Fig 3: Area already connected (at Lari); productive activities: compound houses a bakery and dairy cows; customer would like to apply for an up-grade from single to three-phase connection to further expand his business and for irrigation to boost agricultural productivity



What is lacking and must be addressed as a matter of urgency is awareness on the part of the public at large about the programme and the modalities of as well as the benefits of being connected. Adequate information should be provided on (i) connection policy, (ii) connection charges, (iii) whether the connection charges can be paid over a period of time say in three instalments; and (iv) what step to take to apply for an up-grade, from single to three phase connection.



Annex 4 – Map of the Kenya Electricity Grid



Source: Annual Report KPLC, 2004-2005

With the information we provide about   karachuonyo disbursement of loans 2016/2017

, We hope you can be helped and hopefully set a precedent with you . Or also you can
see our other references are also others which are not less good about Kenya Defence Force Recruitment 2016-2017 Advert


, So and we thank you for visiting.


open student loan :   documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/.../702360ESW0P0700n0Access0Study0final

Comments