US Senators Oppose Setting Up of Coal Plant in Lamu County

US Senators Oppose Setting Up of Coal Plant in Lamu County

Four United States Senators have protested against plans by Kenyan government to set up a coal plant in Lamu County.

In a protest letter to African Development Bank (AfDB), the four Senators namely; Jeffrey Merkley, Brian Schatz, Bernie Sanders and Edward Markey argued that the establishment of the plant will damage Kenya's reputation as a leader in clean energy.

The US lawmakers further noted that the plant would emit millions of tonnes of carbon dioxide annually. In the letter to the Banks' Executive Director Tarik Al-Tashani dated May 28th, the senators advised the lender against financing the establishment of the Chinese-backed plant, arguing that the project in financially unsound.

"Kenya has emerged as an undisputed leader in clean and renewable energy in Africa, with the overwhelming majority of the country's electricity currently coming from renewable resources,'" read part of the letter.

"In fact Kenya is home to Africa's largest geothermal and wind power plants and it will be home to the continents largest solar power plant," added the letter.

"The development of the Lamu Coal plant would be counterproductive to Kenya's climate goals and would set back the progress in building a sustainable energy system," they said.

The four said the 1,050MW plant will release about 8.8 mega tonnes of Carbon Dioxide equivalent per year. This will lead to negative
health impacts caused by high levels of local air, water and soil pollution, they said.

"The plant will increase African indebtedness to China and potentially undermine African partners long-term economic health. Kenyan experts indicate that by the time the project becomes operation operational, the $2billion project will create unnecessary capacity yet the government will be obligated to pay $360million per year in fixed annual capacity payments whether or not the electricity is ever dispatched," the protest letter said.

"We understand the need for Kenya to increase electricity supply and access for its citizens. However instead of financing projects that would produce profoundly negative environmental impacts, the bank should consider projects that tap into Kenya's tremendous renewable and low-cost resources," the letter quoted.

Their protest comes even as locals residents held demonstrations this week, seeking to have the government stop the project. In April, however, the government defended the project, maintaining that its construction would begin this month.

“We are happy to say that groundbreaking of the plant should be expected in the next two months,” said Infrastructure Cabinet Secretary James Macharia during the launch of the Lamu Port City Investment Framework at the KICC in Nairobi.
 

Comments

Sankara Maingi (not verified)     Wed, 06/06/2018 @ 08:33am

here we go, hypocrisy at its best, wait a minute can the so called senators sponsor a law that will close all coal power plants in America first, have them shut-down and stop production of coal in their land. renewable energies are not cheap unless they mean Africa should be in darkness forever. this who idea is to keep our cost of production high because they know if we get cheaper power, with the vast land, plenty of resources and abundant young human capital then we might start making headways. I call BS coal os bad when its in Africa.

maxiley (not verified)     Wed, 06/06/2018 @ 03:40pm

In reply to by Sankara Maingi (not verified)

Good point maingi.First of all in 100 year Kenya will never come close to poluting the environment as America does...
Yes in totality we should be concerned wirh environment polution,but that our of pollution is skewed against africans.We polite less than the so called first world.We will know if pollution is a concern in our neighborhood.For now let's build and build...

Anonymous UI (not verified)     Wed, 06/06/2018 @ 08:37am

It's good to consider the pros and cons of the project, however Kenya has to be very careful with colonial masters trying to dictate what Kenya as a sovereign country wants or needs to do. Let not Kenya get dragged into trade wars between China and America. No one needs to tell Kenya when and how much debt Kenya should incur and with whom. It's called free market, anyone country can incur how much debt they want and with whichever country they want. When considering what projects Kenya needs to proceed with, Kenya need to put its interest first and those of its citizens.

Mugikuyu (not verified)     Wed, 06/06/2018 @ 12:28pm

The American liberals are all for renewable energy and don't want the Chinese to benefit from it either.Who cares about their trade wars. The gova should listen to Lamu residents and what they have to say.After all they will be inhaling emitted gases. At the same time, Kenya needs to get lit and that has to come from somewhere, hopefully this project will be for the greater good.

JustMe (not verified)     Thu, 06/07/2018 @ 12:26am

As much as I agree with the viewpoint that this is an economic war between China and US played on our grounds, I know coal mining has dire outcomes on the health of the locals. Knowing pretty well how our healthcare is, doubled by our almost non-existent OSHA standard enforcement, I can only say the US Senators are RIGHT. Listen up Lamu residents!

Add new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
CAPTCHA
3 + 7 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.