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Tanzania starts rationing power because of drought
by AFP Staff Writers
Dar Es Salaam (AFP) Nov 23, 2022

Tanzanian authorities have started rationing electricity because of a drop in hydropower generation due to drought, the national provider said Wednesday, with some areas set to suffer nine-hour outages.

The East African nation has the capacity to generate nearly 1,695 megawatts through hydropower, natural gas and other means.

But it is currently facing a shortage of between 300 and 350 megawatts, Tanzania Electric Supply Company Limited (Tanesco) managing director Maharage Chande said.

"There are two major reasons which have caused the shortages in generation: prolonged drought and ongoing maintenance in some of our plants," Chande told reporters in the commercial capital Dar es Salaam on Wednesday.

The affected plants include Kihansi in southeast Morogoro region, whose capacity has fallen from 180 megawatts to just 17 megawatts, he said.

"Water levels have decreased in most sources, forcing our plants to generate below their capacity," Chande said.

The country is trying to increase its hydropower capacity, including through the ongoing construction of the controversial Julius Nyerere dam project in the Selous Game Reserve, which is expected to produce 2,100 megawatts once operational.

Tanzania, like its East African neighbours, has been experiencing poor rainfall and delayed monsoons, leading the authorities to impose water rationing in Dar es Salaam last month due to a drought-induced fall in water levels.

Kenya, Somalia and Ethiopia are in the grip of the worst drought in four decades after four failed rainy seasons wiped out livestock and crops.


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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Iraq drought impacts potable water supply, crop yields: aid group
Baghdad (AFP) Oct 24, 2022
In drought-hit Iraq, six out of 10 households have had their access to drinking water disrupted and a quarter of farmers have seen crop yields drastically fall this year, said a survey published Monday. Iraq has been battered by three years of drought, low rainfall and reduced river flows, and the United Nations has ranked it the fifth most vulnerable country to some key effects of climate change. The Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC), an aid group active in the oil-rich but war-scarred country, s ... read more

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