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- Ksh700 Billion to be Invested to Complete Pending Kenyan Road Projects
- $13.8 Billion Kenya-Ethiopia Railway Construction Plans Resume
- Lake Victoria Basin Project Receives Sh355 Million for Phase II Constructions
- Zanzibar Signs a USD 428 Million Agreement to Expand Pemba Airport
- Tanzania government plans to construct 2000 kilometres of roads in 2023
- Project to Build a Dual Carriageway on Kiambu Road in Kenya
- Kasanga port in Tanzania to expand capacity
- The Old Mombasa Road will be upgraded to meet the requirements of the Nairobi Expressway.
- Tanzania would be one of the top economies in 2023
- Project Timeline and Information for the Tanzania Standard Gauge Railway (SGR)
Congo to delay Inga 3 hydroelectric project

The 4 800 MW project worth $14BN has had quite a struggle to attract financing. Last year it was treated to a big blow when the World Bank announced it had suspended funding after the presidency took control of the project, raising transparency concerns.
Early june this year, Congo asked one consortium, the final bidders – led by China Three Gorges Corporation and another that includes Spain’s Actividades de Construccion y Servicios SA – to submit a joint bid.
Bruno Kapandji, the head of the government agency overseeing development of Inga 3 project, told Reuters that they are working for the timing between 2024 or 2025 now that they have identified the potential developer.
Also read:Construction of Inga 3 hydroelectric project in DRC gets new impetus
The project along the Congo River is expected to expand on two existing Inga hydroelectric dams which is part of an eight-stage Grand Inga project that would produce a record 44 000 MW at an estimated cost of about $50BN to $80BN.
Its proponents say it could power half of Africa in the future. However, critics argue that the money would rather be spent supporting smaller local plants.
The project’s future seems clouded by the insubstantial political situation in Congo; the President Joseph Kabila refused to step down at the end of his constitutional mandate in December 2016.
This has contributed greatly to the growing insecurity in this unstable Central African country, as well an increase in militia violence and an overflow of prison breaks.
Of the 4 800 MW, 2 500 MW are set aside for South Africa, the other 1 300 MW will support Congo’s mining sector and the remaining 1 000 MW will be directed towards meeting the domestic power demand. On average only 15% of Congo’s population has electricity.
Posted on : 07 Jul,2017