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    Mutirikwi Dam hydro-power nears completion

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    THE US$14 million Great Zimbabwe Hydropower project at the country’s second
    largest inland dam will reduce the country’s energy imports bill and even turn
    Zimbabwe into a net exporter in the region.
    The project at Mutirikwi Dam is being undertaken by Frontier Energy of Denmark,
    Old Mutual Life Assurance Company, Public Services Pension Fund, ZB Holdings
    Pension Fund and Mitsui OSK Lines (MOL) Power.
    It is 60 percent complete and will transform Lake Mutirikwi from just being an
    irrigation, fishing, tourist water body to an electricity producer.
    Last week the Minister of State for Presidential Affairs and Monitoring
    Implementation of Government Programmes, Dr Jorum Gumbo, said after
    completion, the project will augment power from Kariba and Hwange.
    “The implementation of the mini-hydro power station project resonates with the
    National Development Strategy 1, which identifies the availability of reliable power
    supply as a basic requirement for all citizens. Under the National Development
    Strategy 1 period, the Government is therefore placing priority on the development of
    reliable and reasonably priced power,” he said.
    “I have observed commendable progress has been made in the implementation of
    the project which is estimated to be 60 percent complete. The successful completion
    of the project will significantly augment power from Kariba and Hwange hence
    reduce the power supply deficit that the country has experienced in the recent
    months. It will also reduce the country’s energy import bill with the ultimate goal of
    becoming a net exporter of power into the region.”
    He said the project is evidence that the Government is committed to providing
    energy to the people in line of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 7,
    which enjoins member states to aspire to ensure affordable, reliable and sustainable
    energy.
    “The challenges to the smooth implementation of the project has been brought to my
    attention, including the renewal of National Project Status, access to bankable land
    rights, high NSSA costs and registration of shareholder loans for foreign investors.
    My office will be engaging the relevant authorities to ensure these challenges do not
    affect implementation of the project.”
    Masvingo Minister of State for Provincial Affairs and Devolution, Ezra Chadzamira,
    said a contractor for the 15 megawatts mini-hydro power plant at Tugwi Mukosi is
    now awaiting authorisation.

    “A number of mini-hydro-power projects will come on stream in the near future.
    Using this same water from Mutirikwi Dam, we can produce a maximum of 15
    megawatts at different points. The advance in mini-hydro power generation
    technology will help grow our economy and create a steady stream of well-paying
    jobs,” he said.
    “The mini-hydro power plants will help us to reduce the dangerous emissions that
    contribute to climate change. Very soon construction works on the 15Mw Tugwi
    Mukosi mini hydro power project is commencing. The contractor has been procured
    and is awaiting authorisation from ZINWA.”
    Lake Mutirikwi, built in 1960 is originally known as Lake Kyle or Kyle Dam and lies in
    south eastern Zimbabwe, south east of Masvingo.
    Its original name is thought to have been after Kyle Farm, which occupied most of
    the land required for the lake, which in turn was named after the Kyle district in
    Scotland from which the pioneer of the Lowveld, Tom Murray MacDougall originally
    came from.
    At independence in 1980 the lake covering about 90 km² was renamed Mutirikwi
    after the river on which it was built.
    The dam was built by Concor to provide water to the sugar farming estates on the
    Lowveld, to the southwest, around the town of Triangle.
    Lake Mutirikwi also provides access to a recreational park on the reservoir's northern
    shore and another on the southern shore close to the internationally acclaimed Great
    Zimbabwe national monument from which the country is named after.
    Before the construction of the giant Tokwe Mukosi Lake Mutirikwi was the largest
    inland Dam in Zimbabwe.

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