Energy ministry to complete Juba power grid by March

File photo: Minister of Energy Dhieu Mathok Diing

Ministry of Energy and Dams said it is working on the rollout of partnerships to bring power to regional cities, based on the success of its partnership with Ezra Power in Juba.

Ministry of Energy and Dams said it is working on the rollout of partnerships to bring power to regional cities, based on the success of its partnership with Ezra Power in Juba.

Minister Dhieu Mathok Diing Wol on Thursday said all homes and businesses in the capital Juba will have access to power by March 2020.

Ezra has invested $289 million in a thermal and solar power plant that will add 100 megawatts to the grid when fully completed. A new city grid has been constructed alongside the power generation plant.

“Electricity is a basic need and electricity is the engine of development. If you look into the criteria used to start a development, you will see that electricity is at the top. If we aspire to be like other developing countries, we need to help generate electricity,” said the Minister of Energy and Dams at the swearing in ceremony of new Undersecretary Macham Mecham Angui on Thursday.

The ministry has acknowledged the high tariff price of the new power system and working on reducing it as a priority to help low income residents.

Former Undersecretary and new Technical Advisor Lawrence Loku Moyu noted that the government had plans to expand the country’s grid networks, “but these network expansions need human resources to develop; we need new engineers, technicians, to bring these expansions to South Sudan.”

Moyu further highlighted that after gaining independence in 2011, South Sudan had not yet obtained feasibility studies done by the Khartoum government on the power sector.

He added that purchasing these studies and implementing their recommendations is a strategic objective for the ministry.

“The new engineers that we are recruiting will have to study this program from the beginning. Getting these studies and implementing their recommendations is now a priority for us,” he concluded.