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 Tanzania shuts down five power stations to reduce excess supply

Kassim Majaliwa
Kassim Majaliwa
Issa Michuzi / issamichuzi.blogspot.co.uk, CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Tanzanian Prime Minister, Kassim Majaliwa, has announced the shutdown of five hydroelectric stations in the country, to manage the over-production of power and supply of excess electricity to the national grid.

Mr Majaliwa said the main plant, Mwalimu Nyerere Hydroelectric Station, generates enough electricity to power major cities, including the country’s main commercial hub, Dar es Salaam.

The BBC quoted an official of Tanesco, the power company run by the country as saying, “We have turned off all these stations because the demand is low and the electricity production is too much, we have no allocation now.”

Following heavy rains that began earlier in the year, the 2,115MW Julius Nyerere hydropower dam is said to be filled up with water.

The shutdown makes it the first time the country, which suffers chronic power shortages, will be shutting its hydroelectric stations over excess production.

The development comes just two months after the first turbine, with a capacity of 235 MW of a new hydroelectric plant, was switched on, in order to increase the power generation capacity and help reduce months of power rationing.

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