REGIDESO Burundi (, Burundi Water and Electricity Production and Distribution Authority) is a state-owned water and power distribution company in Burundi.
Mandate
REGIDESO has the mission of capture, treatment and distribution of water; of production and distribution of electricity; and of marketing these products in urban centers and other locations specified by the board of directors.
REGIDESO undertakes, or subcontracts, studies and works needed to achieve this mission.
REGIDESO is supervised by the Ministry responsible for Energy and Mines, which reviews and approves decisions taken by the board of directors.
Power generation and supply
As of 2008 REGIDESO supplied most of the country's electricity from seven hydroelectric power plants, with a total installed capacity of 30.6 MW.
Rwegura (18MW) and
Mugere (8 MW) between them provided 85% of the domestic power supply.
REGIDESO operated and controlled all the thermal power stations in Burundi, and also ran various small hydroelectric units in rural areas.
It was responsible for supplying water and distributing power in urban areas, mostly in and around Bujumbura.
The ''Direction Generale de l'Hydraulique et del Electrifacation Rurales'' (
DGHYER) buys electricity from REGIDESO and distributes it to rural customers.
It used to operate its own power plants, but now only has a few, unreliable micro plants.
REGIDESO has a leased 10 MW diesel generator.
It imports 3 MW from the
National Electricity Company of the Democratic Republic of Congo (SNEL) from the joint hydroelectric power station of
Ruzizi I, and imports 13.3 MW from the
International Electricity Company of the Great Lakes Countries
The International Electricity Company of the Great Lakes Countries (, SINELAC) supplies electricity to Burundi, Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Purpose
SINELAC is an organization of the Economic Community of the Great Lakes Cou ...
(SINELAC).
Burundi is integrated into the
Eastern Africa Power Pool (EAPP), which aims to establish connections through which power can be traded between member countries. There may be potential for Burundi to export low-cost hydroelectric power.
As of 2024 it had a staff of 1272.
History
Colonial era (1939–1962)
The ''Régie de Production et de Distribution d’Eau et d’Electricité'' (REGIDESO) ''du Congo-Belge et du Ruanda-Urundi'' (Water and Electricity Production and Distribution Authority (REGIDESO) of the Belgian Congo and Ruanda-Urundi) was created by decree on 30 December 1939.
Before Burundi became independent, the International Agency for Rural Development (AIDR) supplied water to centers in the interior of the country, and the REGIDESO of the Belgian Congo and Ruanda-Urundi produced and distributed water and electricity in urban areas.
Early years (1962–1975)
The ''Régie de Distribution d’Eau et d’Electricité du Burundi'' (Burundi Water and Electricity Distribution Authority: REGIDESO Burundi) was created on 22 June 1962 by the High Representative of Belgium in Burundi.
It was an administration with a distinct legal personality and administrative and financial autonomy.
When it was created, REGIDESO did not have any hydroelectric capacity.
Power was supplied through a small number of generators in the interior, and through the
Bujumbura
Bujumbura (; ), formerly Usumbura, is the economic capital, largest city and main port of Burundi. It ships most of the country's chief export, coffee, as well as cotton and tin ore. Bujumbura was formerly the country's political capital. In la ...
and Gitega thermal power stations.
Electrical energy was also provided by the
Ruzizi I Hydroelectric Power Station on the
Ruzizi River
The Ruzizi (also sometimes spelled Rusizi, French language, French: ''Rivière Ruzizi''; Dutch language, Dutch: ''Ruzizi Rivier'') is a river, long, that flows from Lake Kivu to Lake Tanganyika in Central Africa, descending from about to about ...
via the SNEL Substation.
The city of
Bujumbura
Bujumbura (; ), formerly Usumbura, is the economic capital, largest city and main port of Burundi. It ships most of the country's chief export, coffee, as well as cotton and tin ore. Bujumbura was formerly the country's political capital. In la ...
received water from the
Ntahangwa, Gatunguru and Kinuke sources.
Between 1962 and 1975 REGIDESO was mainly involved in organizing itself, looking for partners and identifying projects.
On 2 October 1968 REGIDESO was placed under the authority of the Ministry of Public Works, Energy and Mines.
Expansion (1975–1992)
From 1975 to 1992 REGIDESO expanded to supply drinking water and electricity to all the urban centers with the help of Germany, France, China and the World Bank.
Hydroelectric power plants were built at
Gikonge,
Kayenzi,
Buhiga, Sanzu,
Marangara,
Rwegura and
Nyemanga (in 1988), as well as the Rusizi community hydroelectric power plant.
Electricity transmission and distribution lines were built during this period.
On 11 March 1986 a presidential decree made REGIDESO a public legal establishment of a commercial and industrial nature with legal personality and financial and organic autonomy.
Civil war (1992–2004)
Between 1992 and 2004 administration, accounting and commercial servies were split between Electricity and Water Directorates.
This was a period of civil unrest in which much of the REGIDESO infrastructure was destroyed.
In 1995 REGIDESO acquired a 5.5 MW thermal power station in Bujumbura, but up to 2008 it was generally idle, available as an emergency back-up.
Low prices for electricity and high costs for diesel made it uneconomical.
On 5 September 1997 decree No. 100/164 made REGIDESO-S.P. an "Authority" within the Code of Private and Public Companies.
The headquarters were established in the Urban Commune of Rohero, in Bujumbura.
REGIDESO was a company with public participation supervised by the Ministry of Energy and Mines.
The company struggled to rebuild and maintain infrastructure due to withdrawal of donors and lack of sales revenue.
On 20 August 2000 REGIDESO lost its monopoly on electricy production.
Port-war reconstruction (2004–present)
Under the terms of the
World Bank
The World Bank is an international financial institution that provides loans and Grant (money), grants to the governments of Least developed countries, low- and Developing country, middle-income countries for the purposes of economic development ...
's Economic Reform Support Grant, REDIDESO was one of 14 public enterprises targeted in the 2006-2008 privatization program. The others were
OCIBU,
BRB
BRB may refer to:
* Banco de Brasília, a state-owned Brazilian bank
* Bank of the Republic of Burundi or ''Banque de la République du Burundi'', the official name in French of the central bank of Burundi
* Barbados, ISO country code BRB, country ...
, (APB),
OPHAVET,
ONATEL,
SOSUMO
SOSUMO () is a company that grows and refines sugar in Burundi.
Location
The company operates in the Rutana Province in the southeast of Burundi.
This is in the Moso natural region of Burundi.
The area is fed by the Muyovozi River, Mutsindozi Riv ...
,
COTEBU,
UCAR,
OTB,
SOCABU and
SIP.
Between 2005 and 2016 REGIDESO rebuilt and developed infrastructure, and extended the supply of water and electricity to new locations.
It also increased consumer prices to make it more attractive to future investors.
In June 2016 several districts of
Bujumbura Mairie
Bujumbura Mairie Province is one of the eighteen provinces of Burundi. It consists entirely of the city of Bujumbura, Burundi's economic capital.
Location
Bujumbura Mairie Province is in the west of Burundi.
It borders Lake Tanganyika to the wes ...
experienced severe water shortages, with some receiving no water for days.
Regideso explained that many distribution pipes were broken or clogged, and promised to solve the problem within a week.
As of 2020 Redideso was in poor financial condition.
It had large unpaid debts, and was having difficulty paying its creditors, including the thermal power plants operator
Interpetrol.
A report in January 2024 quoted the general director of Regideso, Jean-Albert Manigomba, in saying that despite repeated power cuts in Bujumbura Mairie, the electricity supply was improving fast.
The
Rusumo Hydroelectric Power Station
The Rusumo Hydroelectric Power Station (, ), also known as the Rusumo Power Station, is an operational hydropower plant, with initial capacity installation of . The project involved the construction of a dam, with run of river design. A more expe ...
had been completed, and the
Kabu 16 Hydroelectric Power Station was under construction.
Both should be delivering energy that year.
The
Jiji-Murembwe Hydroelectric Power Station should also be completed in 2024.
The power cuts were due to a network of underground wires in Bujumbura that dated to the 1960s.
Work was underway, with funding from the World Bank and other partners, to rehabilitate this network and improve the network in the rest of the country.
In the longer term, a line via Rwanda, Uganda and Kenya, would lead to the
Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam
The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD or TaIHiGe; , , ), formerly known as the Millennium Dam and sometimes referred to as the Hidase Dam (, ), is a gravity dam on the Blue Nile River in Ethiopia. The dam is in the Benishangul-Gumuz Region ...
, which should supply 200 MW.
Also, a line from the
Ruzizi III Hydroelectric Power Station could provide 26 MW to Burundi in 2028.
Another project would obtain 200 MW from a dam being built in Tanzania.
See also
*
List of power stations in Burundi
*
List of companies of Burundi
The Republic of Burundi is a landlocked country in the African Great Lakes region of Southeast Africa.
During the colonial period most large companies were owned and run by Europeans, and operated under concessions from the colonial government.
A ...
References
Sources
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Further reading
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{{refend
Government of Burundi
Water in Burundi
Energy in Burundi