Timor-Leste Capital Receives Limited Power
*Media Release*
Dili, 29 October
2009
Timor-Leste's capital city of Dili continues to receive only sporadic electricity supply, one year after the de facto Gusmao government boasted that all 13 of the nation's districts would have 24-hour power within one year.
Dili is hit by daily power cuts of up to four
hours affecting a quarter of the city at a time. Baucau town
was given 24 hours electricity by the previous FRETILIN
government in 2006. But no other district capital or
township has anywhere near 24 hours of electricity a day,
said FRETILIN MP Inacio Moreira, a Minister for Transport
and Telecommunications in the former FRETILIN government.
"They are lucky if they have 4 hours a day," he
said.
On 24 October, 2008, de facto Prime Minister
Gusmao issued a media release titled "East Timor to
Electrify the Nation". It read: "Today marked the official
signing of the Government contract to build the Nation Wide
Electrical Grid and Power Plant. Construction is anticipated
to be a two year multiphase process, with 13 districts
having 24-hour power by the end of year one and by the end
of year two, all sub districts in Timor-Leste will have
access to 24-hour power."
The national media in recent
weeks has carried many reports on the lack of progress with
the controversial heavy fuel power station. Mr Moreira said
rumours persist that the project has been cancelled, but it
has been difficult to obtain a clear statement from the
government.
"Everyone can see that other than land
clearing and some minor building works, the land allocated
for the Hera heavy oil plant is virtually vacant and the
project at a standstill. The Prime Minister and his
Secretary of State, Agio Pereira have both made ambiguous
and contradictory statements, from the project fully going
ahead, to there being a revision of the project size and
capacity. Both have said that the proposed power station in
Manatuto has been cancelled and only Hera near Dili and
Betano on the south coast will now go ahead. But we have
information that the contract is in the process of being
cancelled, if not already cancelled.
"We all know that
the proposed plant and equipment is mostly second hand from
China, de-commissioned many years ago. The government has
not come clean on this very dirty project. Dirty because it
was selected without a tender, or expressions of interest
called but no actual tender. Sound and viable proposals
involving cleaner energy were ignored altogether. Dirty
because there has not been an environmental impact
assessment as required by law," Moreira added.
Moreira
said the de facto government had treated opposition parties
and civil society groups with contempt over the issue.
Despite repeated requests, the government had failed to
provide copies of the agreement for MPs to
analyse.
"Budget money allocated for the project has
been illegally diverted without the knowledge of parliament
to other rushed and ill-conceived projects in the
'Referendum Package'. A CNRT MP, Mr Arao Noe , who is the
secretary of the parliamentary infrastructure committee G,
this week said the projects' ‘quality could not be
guaranteed’ because of the short time period for
completion put on the contracts. Parliament has requested
details of these projects, but has not been provided with
them by the government. The de facto Finance Minister
dodged all questions on it and deflected them to the Prime
Minister.
"Many other concerns have been expressed
from diverse quarters regarding the totally non-transparent
manner in which the contractors for the Referendum Package
have been selected. There have been no tenders, with the
winners hand-picked by the de facto Prime Minister himself.
Mr Gusmao has simply thrown our procurement laws out the
window.
"Initially our main concern with the Heavy Oil
Project was the dark cloud of environmental degradation on
an unprecedented scale for our people. Now there is a dark
cloud not only over the future of electricity in our
country, but also over the tens of millions of dollars that
will be wasted in this ill-conceived and illegal Referendum
Package.
"Over a billion dollars of budget expenditure
in two and a bit years and this is all they have to show for
it - no expanded power sector, and an illegal and hurried
bunch of public works projects doomed to fail," said
Moreira.
ENDS