By Tehran Times |
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(ADDIS ABABA) – A resolution passed by the UN Security Council to ratify
further sanctions on Iranian assets is likely to delay Ethiopia’s plans to
export electricity to Sudan. It will affect the Iranian firm that is
constructing power substations that would enable Ethiopia to export hydro-power
generated electricity to neighboring Sudan.
Ethiopia state Electric and Power
Corporation (EEPCo) in February announced the completion of a power
transmission line that links its power grid with Sudan, hoping to begin an
initial export of 100 MW of electricity to Sudan, as of May 2012. Djibouti is
currently the main importer, paying USD1.5 million for 35 MW every month.
However, without the completion of the three substation projects near the
Sudanese border it is unlikely that Ethiopia will start power sale to schedule.
The Ethiopian state utility had
delay the remaining payments - amounting some 40 percent of the total contract
- to be made to the Iranian company, Iran Power and Water Export of Equipment
and Services Company (IPWEESC), because of the UN imposed sanctions on Iranian
assets bans member states from making financial transfers from their territory.
“Due to the sanction, we could not effect payments for the outstanding
balance,” a senior official from the state utility (EEPCo) told a local news
paper, Fortune, on condition of anonymity.
Funded by the World Bank, the US$41
million power interconnector is a 230KV and 296KM long transmission line that
stretches between the Ethiopian towns of Bahir-Dar and Metema and connects with
a transmission line in Sudanese border town of Gedaref where it joins Sudan’s
power grid.
Following the difficulty, the World
Bank along EEPCo are considering other options such as making new deals with
the Iranian firm’s four international suppliers - Ariva (French), Erickson
(Italian), Philips (Dutch), and TBEA (Chinese), for payment for and delivery of
the equipment. Sudan Tribune has learnt that the state utility has begun
negotiations with the suppliers.
The Sudanese government has also
decided to import US$300,000 worth of equipment to resolve the problem thereby
avoid the possible delays of power exports. Iran has been the subject of recent
international pressure as there are allegations that it intends to increase its
military capacity; specifically its capacity to strike Isreal. Sudan is also
subject to sanctions, for allegedly harboring terrorists.
The pariah states of Sudan and Iran
have long had close ties, as their isolation deepens these ties have
strengthened.
Ethiopia is investing billions of
dollars to building power plants hoping to be a regional power hub. It is
currently constructing a massive, controversial hydro-power plant in Nile river
near the Sudanese border and plans to increase power exports to Khartoum from
the planned initial 100 MW to 1,200MW when the Nile power project is completed
in the coming 4 to 6 years.
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