Local firm to build $12m power plant

Rwanda Mountain Tea, a local tea processing company, is set to construct a mini hydro-power plant, worth US$12 million that will produce 4MW of electricity, which will be fed into the national grid. The Nyabihu-based firm becomes the first local company to invest in hydro power generation.

Friday, December 16, 2011
Egide Gatera (L), Chairman Rwanda Mountain Tea, exchanging documents with Eugene Haguma, the CEO of Horizon Group. The New Times / Timothy Kisambira.

Rwanda Mountain Tea, a local tea processing company, is set to construct a mini hydro-power plant, worth US$12 million that will produce 4MW of electricity, which will be fed into the national grid.

The Nyabihu-based firm becomes the first local company to invest in hydro power generation.

The power generated from the plant to be built on River Giciye in Nyabihu, will be used to power the tea factories, while the surplus will be sold to national energy and water utility, EWSA.

The company, yesterday, signed a contract with Horizon Group, whose construction arm will partner with Tanzania-based electricity production firm, Aquifer to construct the plant.

It is expected to be completed in the next 18 months.

The Chairman of Rwanda Mountain, Tea Egide Gatera, signed on behalf of the company, while the CEO of Horizon Group, Eugene Haguma represented the firm.

The Country Director of Aquifer, Andrew Kazimoto, represented the Tanzanian company.

Speaking to The New Times, Ephraim Turahirwa, the Managing Director of Rwanda Mountain Tea, said the plant is part of efforts to support the government to increase access to electricity.

"The whole project will cost $12 million. The electricity will be used in our factories but a bigger part of it will be channeled into the national grid to power the communities around, and if there is any surplus, it can be exported to Uganda,”

"We expect the plant to be complete in 18 months if everything goes according to plan,” Turahirwa said.

According to Haguma, Horizon will break the ground in February, assuring that the firm has the capacity to undertake such or even bigger projects.

"This will be the first of its kind but I can confirm that we have the equipment and engineers to undertake projects of such a magnitude or even bigger.”

"We will work with our Tanzanian partners who have prior experience in building micro-hydro projects and we are sure that we can deliver in 18 months,” Haguma said after the signing ceremony.

Kazimoto said that Aquifer has undertaken several mini-hydro projects in Tanzania.

edmund.kagire@newtimes.co.rw