United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), a United Nation (UN)’s agency mandated to aid and protect refugees, forcibly displaced communities, and stateless people, and to assist in their voluntary repatriation, local integration or resettlement to a third country, is set to construct 10 ground-mounted solar PV systems in three East African countries particularly in Kenya, Uganda and Ethiopia.
The agency revealed the report and said that it has through its Green Fund launched a call for tenders for the implementation of the project. The planned PV systems will each be installed in combination with batteries and residual diesel generation.
The sites for the project will also have a back-up diesel system. Upon completion, the power plants are expected to deliver capacities ranging from 60 kWp to 500 kWp and expandable to a capacity of 1.8 MW.
The UNHCR is backed up by the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA) and the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ), the German cooperation agency in the development of the envisaged project. To this point, the UN agency has already conducted a feasibility analysis on potential sites and has commenced legal and technical work to prepare for the tender’s next phases.
Read:Portable solar PV plant commissioned in Madagascar
Application for the tender
According to the UNHCR, interested Independent Power Producers (IPPs) have until November 30th, 2020 to express their interest. The criteria for expression of interest will focus on the experience, expertise, capacity, and financial resources required to implement the proposed projects.
Following the expression of interest will be a call for tenders from the short-listed bidders, which is expected to begin early next year. The United Nations (UN) agency stated that consortia bids will be allowed, subject to specific qualification criteria.
The selected companies will then be required to sign Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs) or comparable lease agreements with the UNHCR, where they are better adapted to local regulatory frameworks.