President John Magufuli (right) meets Egyptian Minister for Energy Mohammed Shaker at the launch of the Stiegler’s Gorge hydropower plant on July 26, 2019. |
President John Magufuli laid the foundation stone for the Rufiji Hydropower Project (RHPP) at Stiegler’s Gorge, and told off the lobbies opposing the project, whom he accused of seeking to benefit from hunting and accommodation businesses inside the reserve.
“There are 47 hunting blocks and several lodges charging up to $3,000 per night, from which the government gets nothing or just peanuts through taxes,” the president said.
“Today we save the people of Tanzania from shortage of power. Our envisaged industrial economy needs adequate, cheap and reliable power supply through hydrogeneration.”
President Magufuli said that foreign lenders had refused to release funds to implement the project.
“This project has stalled for many years. We will build it with our own money,” he said.
The RHPP will cost $1.38 billion (Tsh6.5 trillion) and is set to be completed in 2022.
Cairo-based JV Arab Contractors Company and the El Sewedy Electric, an Egyptian engineering firm, won the tender to implement the project.
The massive project is part of Tanzania's power master plan, which envisions Stiegler’s Gorge helping interconnect the grids of Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda and Zambia.
The dam will be fourth largest in Africa and ninth in the world.
The East African
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