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Power: Government’s Great Expectations

The second concession contract between the State of Cameroon and Eneo Cameroon S.A is expected to usher in new changes.

The government of Cameroon, represented by the Minister of Water and Energy, Basile Atangana Kouna and the General Manager of Energy of Cameroon, Eneo Cameroon S.A, Joel Nana Kontchou, have reached a second deal in conformity with the December 14, 2011 law on the electricity sector. Both parties signed the Concession Contract Framework two on August 7, 2015 in a ceremony attended amongst others by the Minister of Finance, Alamine Ousmane Mey and the British High Commissioner to Cameroon, Brian Olley. The agreement spells out 14 key elements, prominent amongst which is the rehabilitation of the Song-Loulou Dam, the transfer of reservoir dams to EDC, the transfer of transmission system operations, the improvement of service quality and the review of the tariff formula.

Rehabilitating Song-Loulou Dam

The two parties agreed to undertake emergency works worth FCFA 11 billion at the Song-Loulou Dam, at Edea in the Littoral Region. Both parties agreed on the putting in place of a Joint Technical Committee to oversee work at the dam that is expected to last three years as well to approve additional works including proposals on technical and financial arrangements for the project execution. According to Joel Nana Kontchou, engineering works are at 5 per cent and works to secure the evacuation water systems at 20 per cent.

Upgrading Service Quality

Everything said and done, what interests Cameroonians is improvement in the quality of services, with emphasis on access to electricity by all. Speakers at the August 7 ceremony stressed on the need to review elements related to the quality of services. Both parties agreed to establish new service quality standards, new service quality measuring indicators, and a suitable tool for determining and tracking the link between the level of investment and maintenance as well as service quality standards. It emerged that work to define the new standards, indicators and tools that is expected to conform to international standards is already underway. The new approach will be submitted to the Electricity Regulatory Agency, ARSEL for approval.

Transfer of Dams

Government and Eneo Cameroon S.A have agreed to transfer dams to the Electricity Development Corporation, EDC, as was already provided for in the first concession agreement. The Monitoring Committee to this effect is already in place with work ongoing. The concern of Eneo is however, to respect rules of the game with focus on ensuring that the transfer does not play down on consumers.  

Coming after the first Concession Agreement Framework I, signed on July 18, 2001, Basile Atangana Kouna promised government’s commitment to continue to invest in energy infrastructure to lessen the burden of Eneo. He however challenged the company to get down to serious work. National demand for power produce, authorities say, has moved from an average 6 per cent in 2001 to 7.5 per cent since 2010.

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