Iraq’s Electricity Ministry recently said that it would
solve Iraq’s power problems later this year. This was not the first time that
it had much such a bold announcement. That was also the reason why the remarks
were met with widespread skepticism within the country. Questioning the
Ministry’s statement is justified, because it has failed to reach its
benchmarks before, and lacks the institutional capacity and support to deal
with the daunting task it faces.
In April 2013, the Electricity Ministry promised that Iraq’s electricity shortages would be ended by October. The Ministry was quoted as
saying that private generator operators would have to sell their equipment,
because they would no longer be needed in just a few months. The Ministry made
similar statements back in January, when it said that the country would reach self-sufficiency in power by the end of the year. The next month, Deputy
Premier Hussein Shahristani who is in charge of Iraq’s energy policy announced
that three new power stations would be opened per month until the electricity
problems were solved. These assertions were immediately criticized. A
parliamentarian from the oil and energy committee for example, told the press that the Ministry was exaggerating, and that the government continuously
claimed that it would solve the electricity crisis soon, but never did. The
lawmaker had grounds to be skeptical. The Electricity Ministry was actually
misrepresenting its goals. According to its 5-year plan, the government is not supposed to meet demand for power until 2015. Not only that, but
Shahristani has openly come out against the Ministry in the past claiming that
its predictions should not be listened to, and that its numbers were only
theoretical. Iraq is in fact facing large structural and institutional
problems that inhibit it from solving its power problems any time soon.
This picture of convoluted power cables in an Iraqi neighborhood
is symbolic of the problems that the country faces in resolving its electricity
issues (AIN)
There are a number of interconnected issues, which have
stalled Baghdad’s plans for resolving its energy needs. First, the country’s
power grid needs everything from power stations to generators to transmission
lines and more. It is also poorly designed, which leads to up to one-third of
the power to be lost before it reaches consumers, the highest rate in the
Middle East. That means that simply installing generators or building new
stations as the government continuously announces will not end the country’s
dilemma. In fact, if the entire system is not repaired and renovated, the
Ministry cannot achieve its goal. Second, the authorities have not budgeted
enough money for the Ministry. Its 5-year plan calls for $31.8 billion, but in
2011, it only got $3.2 billion for its capital budget. The government has also
failed to attract private money for its effort, which means that the federal
funds are all that it has available. Third, the Electricity Ministry lacks the
capacity to plan, manage, and maintain the infrastructure that it has and wants
in the future. That means it can’t handle the large contracts that it is
signing. Finally, demand for power has continuously increased since 2003 due to
the release of pent up demand after over ten years of sanctions. On top of
that, few Iraqis pay their bills, and many that do have subsidized prices. That
means there is little real control over consumption. In fact, after the
Ministry’s recent remarks, Azzaman reported a run on prices for consumer goods like refrigerators and air conditions. Altogether that means there is
little likelihood that Baghdad can solve the country’s power outages this
October, or anytime soon. Until it builds up its personnel, emphasizes
developing the entire network, gets the necessary funding, and puts a clamp on
usage all of its remarks are hollow promises.
Every year the Iraqi government claims that it is close to
solving the country’s continuous black outs and electricity problems. Every
year it comes up short. The April 2013 announcement that private generators
would no longer be necessary by October is part of this long list of promises
that will ultimately be broken. Baghdad simply lacks the capacity to adequately
plan for such a monumental task, not to mention fund, implement, and then
manage and maintain all of the work that needs to be done on the national grid.
Until the government addresses its institutional problems it will never be able
to resolve this pressing issue, which continues to rank as one of the most
important to the public.
SOURCES
AIN, “MP describes promises to resolve electric power crisis
in Iraq as “exaggerated,” 4/11/13
Aswat al-Iraq, “Iraq achieves electricity self-sufficiency
end of 2013,” 1/20/13
Azzaman, “Iraq to hit “final nail in coffin of darkness” in
October,” 4/8/13
Iraq Business News, “Electricity Ministry “Stops Dealings
with Siemens,” 4/10/13
Saeed, Samer, “Stability in power
supplies leads to surge in prices of cooling gadgets,” Azzaman, 4/15/13
Shafaq News, “Shahristani: Iraq will open three power
stations every month,” 2/20/13
Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction,
“Quarterly report to the United States Congress,” 10/30/12
2 comments:
Thanks for an accurate analysis of the power problem in Iraq. Of course as we head deeper into the summer the ministry's words will be tested.
My 2 cents. In trying to solve the problem(s) the ministry focussed first on production. They waited till 2008 to actually place the orders with GE and Siemens for the turbines. As of 2010 these turbines were arriving in Iraq and just left stored in the open desert in Basra. I guess it was lack of budgets or negligence that stopped the ministry from contracting with companies to build the power plants. These contracts started to flow in mid 2011. Hence what we are seeing this year are those contracts nearing completion with the plants coming online. But transportation and distribution are equally important elements of the power problem. Again nothing much has been done about this until late 2012 and in the past few months. So you are right, we will need another couple of years before the whole infrastructure is overhauled.
Having said all this I can confirm that here in Baghdad we have noticed an improvement of supply. We passed the least demand period in March where the ministry boasted they went through 24 hours one day with continuous supply. We are only a few weeks away from the real summer time when all the announcements will be tested.
Finally it should be mentioned that power installations such as high tension towers have been subject to sabotage in the past. Also some governates where large plants are located have been known to deliberately opt out of the national grid. Hence affecting other areas in Iraq. This is not to mention the problem of supplying the new power plants with fuel. Every year the ministry of electricity blames lack of fuel on ministry of oil.
Our street generator owner has just bought a second generator. Obviously he is betting the government has worked it out wrong once more.
Aziz,
Thank you for your insight. I was going to mention that the Electricity Ministry didn't start working on power lines, etc. until recently, but I couldn't find any articles on it last night when I was writing the piece.
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