Mozambique’s Minister of Mineral Resources and
Energy, Pedro Couto, on Thursday declared that increasing access to electricity
is a fundamental priority for the government – but the electricity must still
be paid for.Speaking in the Mozambican parliament, the Assembly of the
Republic, in reply to a question from the opposition Mozambique Democratic
Movement (MDM) about what it termed “a general crisis in the supply of
electricity”, Couto stressed that the companies which generate and transmit
electricity must act in an economically rational fashion.An electricity company
“operates as an economic unit, and there is no alternative to this”, he
insisted. “To say otherwise would be pure demagogy, and the companies would be
unsustainable”.Opposition speakers the previous day had denied the government
slogan that “Cahora Bassa is ours”, apparently because the largest slice of the
power produced at the Cahora Bassa dam on the Zambezi is exported to South
Africa. But Couto thought it absurd to argue that electricity companies “must
not be involved in foreign trade”.On the contrary, involvement in the southern
African energy market was essential. Mozambique was a member of the Southern
African Power Pool (SAPP) “and we’re not going to leave it”.Couto pointed out
that Mozambique could not build a new dam based solely on its own electricity
needs. It would make sense to build a dam that could generate 1,500 megawatts,
but there must be buyers for this power, and they could not be found in
Mozambique alone.He insisted that “Cahora Bassa is indeed ours”. The company
operating the dam, HCB, “belongs to us, but it must be sustainable, and it must
respect the contracts it has signed” (the largest of these contracts, and the
one which guarantees HCB’s financial health, is with the South African power
utility, Eskom).Couto rejected the claim made by MDM deputy Venancio Mondlane
that there has been no rural electrification, because the district capitals
electrified over the past decade are all supposedly urban. Couto pointed out
that, on the way to the district capitals, the power lines also supply smaller
places, such as administrative post headquarters, localities and even villages.So
far the public electricity company, EDM, had electrified the capitals of 125 of
the 128 districts that existed when the plans were drawn up (subsequently some
districts have been split in two, so there are some new district capitals that
need electrification). Couto pointed out that during this work, 295
administrative posts, localities and villages had received electricity. This
year the remaining three district capitals, seven other small towns and 20
administrative osts would be connected to the national grid.But the power was not free of charge. “The
consumers sign contracts as clients of EDM”, said Couto.
“That’s how things
work”.Couto also told the Assembly that a wildcat strike against redundancies
at the dredge mine in Moma, on the coast of the northern province of Nampula,
operated by the Irish company Kenmare Resources, ended on Wednesday, and the strikers
have returned to work.Couto said the problem for Kenmare was that the prices
for the minerals it mines at Moma (ilmenite, rutile and zircon) have fallen
sharply, and the Chinese market for these minerals has shrunk by 12.5 per cent.
Cost cutting measures, such as redundancies, were thus inevitable. At first
Kenmare wanted to sack 375 of its workforces, but after tripartite discussions
between the company, the workers’ trade union and the Labour Ministry, the
number of redundancies was scaled back to 160.“The workers received their
redundancy pay and an extra bonus of between 15 and 60 per cent”, said Couto.This
was not enough to avoid the unofficial strike which broke out on 24 June. Couto
said the police only intervened to clear the entrance to the mine and none of
the strikers were injured or killed. “Companies working in mining and energy
must be sustainable”, said the Minister. “When they run into labour problems,
these are solved in tripartite negotiations”.
0 comentários:
Post a Comment