Tag Archives: Alfonso Chikuni

SPC Zamba, Chikuni caught influencing Nigerian Chief Amucheinwa’s ESCOM PPA contract

………ACB orders ESCOM not to proceed

LILONGWE-(MaraviPost)-It never rains for corrupt Secretary to The President and Cabinet (SPC) Collen Zamba and Energy Ministry Principal Secretary (PS) Alfonso Chikuni for being caught red-handed in influencing to award the contract to Nigerian businessman “Chief” Obinna Amucheinwa in state-owned Electricity Supply Corporation of Malawi (ESCOM)’s Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) with Westland Construction and ACSG Consortium.

This has prompted the Anti-Corruption Bureau (ACB) to issue a restriction notice, stopping ESCOM from dealing with the “Chief” contract.

Investigator Magazine has extensively revealed the battle between SPC Zambia and her ally PS Chikuni on hand and ESCOM led by its Board Chairperson Morgan Tembo and Chief Executive Officer Kamkwamba Kumwenda.

The Anti-Corruption Bureau on Monday stopped any dealing on the Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) that involved “Chiefs” Westland Construction and ACSG Consortium.

Chikuni, Kumwenda, and Malawi Energy Regulatory Authority (MERA) boss Henry Kachaje in early July flew to the USA courtesy of “Chief” and the Ministry of Energy signed a provisional agreement (not provided for the laws) without ESCOM.

On return, ESCOM Board threw out the PPA agreement, questioning preferences being granted to the “Chief” and the CEO is said to have met President Lazarus Chakwera who agreed with his decision.

Attorney General Thabo Chakaka Nyirenda advised ESCOM to postpone the issuance of any new PPAs in a move largely interpreted as a snub on Zambia and Chikuni to block them from proceeding with the PPA for the “Chief.”

Chikuni wrote to Chakaka Nyirenda pleading for a waiver on the deal. ESCOM Board members reported they were being threatened to approve the deal or be fired.

“Whereas the Anti-Corruption Bureau has instituted an investigation in respect of suspected offense under the Corrupt Practices Act. Take Notice that you shall not without my written consent deal with or proceed with any transaction, agreement, or other arrangement about the 300MW Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) with Westland Construction and ACSG Consortium,” Martha Chizuma, Director General of the ACB wrote on 21st of August, 2023.

Chief of ACB Martha Chizuma has instituted an investigation in respect of suspected offenses under the Corrupt Practices Act.

This means officially Zamba, Chikuni, Kachaje, Kumwenda and others involved in dealing with “Chief” matters are under official investigation, placing the country’s energy sector in another leadership crisis after former Energy Minister Newton Kambala and others were arrested about fuel procurement at National Oil Company of Malawi (NOCMA).

The PPA

On Monday, 12th June, Alfonso Chikuni, sent an email to Kumwenda, Maxwell Muli Makwenda (ESCOM), and Henry Kachaje giving the three a draft copy of the PPA which indicated that had already been signed at the behest of the Chief’s delegation.

“You will recall that we had meetings with US-based investors on 300MW solar thermal at the MERA officer (office). – The attachments will remind you. The Ministry signed an MoU during their mission,” wrote Chikuni with the subject “Review of the Conditional PPA.”

This confirms that the Chief’, who is the main signatory of the company was in Malawi either in April or May and made (if not demanded) with the influence of high-level government officials to have a PPA agreement signed before due diligence and other protocols were followed.

Chikuni, having already signed the PPA, flew into the USA apparently to do due diligence, which is a cover-up of another botched public finance commitment in which President Chakwera’s administration seems to specialize.

“However, you will also recall that they requested a conditional PPA to be signed which should enable them to start a dialogue with their financiers to which we granted consent. We shared our duly approved template. They have now made input,” said Chikuni in the email copied to Solicitor General Allison Mbang’ombe, whom he asks to assist “with framing the Conditions Precedent.”

The PPA signed with reference WAPC/ESC/MW/MOE/2023O6.01 dated June 1st, has a different company name than what Chikuni and the company visited in Utah, USA whose address was traced to a charity farm.

The company that signed the agreement was listed as Westland-ACSG Power Company Limited but the letterheads for the invitation now reads ACSG-POWER PROJECT CONSORTIUM raising questions as to which legal entity Chikuni and the company married ESCOM with.

Chief to install 1000mw plant

Chief, a man whose company only updated its energy sector role in late 2022 is expected to raise at least K500 billion for 300MW during its first phase and later accumulate to 1000MW which will see Malawi join the league of major electricity producers in Africa.

The PPA agreement stipulates that it is valid for “20 years from start” meaning it could well run into 2043 or 2070 when Chakwera and the majority of his “deal makers” are likely going to be very far from the seat of power.

“You need 1200 hectares for a 300MW solar power plant. You will need over 4,000 hectares for such a project to reach 1000MW. Chief’s home Nigeria has the lowest intake of solar energy and has power shortages, he opts to invest in Malawi when he can make a killing in Nigeria. It does not need a primary school chap to see that this is another scam,” analyzed a solar expert, who said only Egypt has developed a 2500MW solar farm in Africa.

The 1000MW plant would cost over US$1 billion for a country with local export products that cannot access finance for such a mega project, which shows the paperwork is proposed just to raise finances and dump the project.

The government has failed to bring the investor “Chief” into the public as they fear he could be revealed his true nature of character and business across the world.

Chief whose main address is Abuja, Nigeria seems to have shifted the energy consortium to the USA where individuals related to his “Consortium” cannot be readily traced again.

There is no land designated for the project.

PML winding up had no “Chiefs” company.

The Investigator Magazine sought to establish how long the “Chiefs” company has been in the energy sector in Malawi and could not find any application at the folded state-owned Power Markets Limited, which means the Ministry of Energy had the PPA ready as they wind up of the PML.

The final list of PPAs for PML shows 37 PPAs were signed with some projects being rolled while others feasibility studies were being done. None of the PPAs belong to the ACSG group of the Chief.

All PPAs indicate the location of the projects.

Among the PPAs is Quantel which intends to produce 50MW Solar Power at Bwengu in Mzimba, Atlas (40MW-solar) at Balaka and already 20MW approved, Serengeti Nkhotakota (21MW-solar), Votalia (40MW-solar) at Dwangwa in Nkhotakota and JCM with a total of 60MW solar at Golomoti and Salima which is already operational. EGENCO also has a PPA for a solar farm with 20MW in Salima.

Green Cells in Zomba is expected to produce 34MW from solar but did not sign the PPA, Elsewedy Electric with 50MW solar at Phombeya but has not concluded negotiations, and Larsen and Turbo with 100mw solar at Phombeya now undertaking a full feasibility study.

AMEA in Lilongwe is targeting 50mw, while a partnership of Press Corporation and Ashtron wants to produce 50MW at Nkhoma in Lilongwe.

YM Power has suggested 151.5MW Kindwe Wind Farm in Dedza districts. A firm identified as Droege proposed a floating 20M solar farm at Monkeybay and 50mw at Mzimba from Windmills.

Other companies with major projects include Jindal with a 350MW coal plant at Liwonde, Rukuru with a 100MW coal plant, and Rudevit/Greenstone Energy with a 100MW hydropower plant on North Rukuru. JF Investments is exploring a 300 LNG Gas power project in Mchinji.

Illovo Sugar Company is exploring the Bagesse Power project for its Dwangwa and Nchalo factories while the Mpatamanga hydro plant is expected to generate up to 350MW.

According to Chikuni and Kumwenda, people who got most of the PPAs have sold them or disappeared. He could not however say which capacity “Chief” has to deliver 1000MW and ESCOM Board later said it could not proceed due to the public questions surrounding “Chief.”

Chikuni: people who got most of the PPAs have sold them or disappeared

Other companies with major projects include Jindal with a 350MW coal plant at Liwonde, Rukuru with a 100MW coal plant, and Rudevit/Greenstone Energy with a 100MW hydropower plant on North Rukuru.

JF Investments is exploring a 300 LNG Gas power project in Mchinji.

Helen Buluma be key state witness against corrupt SPC Zamba and her accomplices before court

Helen Buluma dressed down SPC Zamba

It never rains but it pours for Reverend Lazarus Chakwera’s Tonse Alliance government in as far as incidences of corruption are concerned.

A day does not pass without hearing about Chakwera’s appointees being implicated in corrupt deals. One wonders if it is the problem of the appointees or the one who appoints them.

We all know that Ms. Helen Buluma, the Acting Chief Executive Officer of National Oil Company of Malawi (NOCMA), decided to resign after immense pressure from the Secretary to the President and Cabinet, Ms. Colleen Zamba, the Principal Secretary responsible for Energy, Mr. Alfonso Chikuni, and others who colluded to bring new fuel suppliers through dubious means and in some cases expensive financers.

It appears that Ms Zamba later retaliated by firing Ms. Buluma, a move that sounded very unprofessional. We don’t care which came first, resignation or the firing.

What we are certain is that the NOCMA board acted unprofessional, inappropriate and unprocedural by defying the decision of the office of the ombudsman which directed that Ms Buluma be immediately relieved of her duties.

One wonders why the whole Secretary to the Office of the President and Cabinet did not seek legal opinion from the Attorney General before showing her open defiance to the office of ombudsman.
Recently, more information is coming out after Buluma appeared before the Parliamentary committee to explain her side of the story.

Contrary to the Attorney General’s view, Parliament has the mandate to interrogate any public officer suspected of being involved in corrupt deals.

For your information, the post of the Chief Executive Officer of the National Oil Company of Malawi is a public office not a private one. Acting on behalf of the government, Parliament can interrogate any public officer to unearth any corrupt dealings.

Did you know that the government has control even over the Private sector by forcing appropriate policies?
Now that Ms Buluma has spilled the beans, Buluma wabudula mphika wa nyama, we can reasonably conclude that Ms. Zamba and her accomplices were reluctant to fire Ms. Buluma as a cover up to perpetrate their dubious and diabolical activities.

For sure, this is the tip of an iceberg. As you are reading this, a network of government officials in various ministries, departments and agencies is conspiring to defraud government coffers further.

Have you wondered why some government officials have become millionaires all of a sudden? Others are constructing lodges in Salima, Blantyre, and Lilongwe.

Unfortunately, our sleeping and biased Director of Anti Corruption Bureau (ACB), Ms. Martha Chizuma, cannot invoke a clause in Corrupt Practices Act which empowers her to interrogate any individual suspected of amassing wealth dubiously.

Nonetheless, we implore Ms. Helen Buluma to work with ACB as a state witness to unearth the dirt that is being conspired in NOCMA. Let everyone be a whistleblower now.

Send feedback to: rdzida@gmx.com

Disclaimer: The views expressed in the article are those of the author not necessarily of The Maravi Post or Editor

Newly constructed Lilongwe’s Area 49 shopping mall risk demolition

By Thandie Chadzandiyani

LILONGWE-(MaraviPost)-Lilongwe City Council has asked contractors for the construction of a shopping mall along the Kaunda road in Area 49, to submit a new design for the project or risk demolition due to what it calls substandard works.

The City Mayor, Richard Banda claims that the contractors, Guoji diverted from an initial design that was submitted to the council and demanded the company to explain why the design approved by the council are not being used.

Poor mall structure along Kaunda road- Area 49

According to Banda, the council will demolish the building if the company does not cooperate.

Alfonso Chikuni Engineers Institute of Malawi President, has told the local media that the council’s intervention is a welcome development.

However there have been concerns over the type of buildings being constructed in Lilongwe with some residents saying that many newly constructed buildings are not adding to the beauty of the city and some are inferior to buildings constructed over 20 years ago.

LWB Shortlisted for African Utility Week Industry Awards

Lilongwe Water Board (LWB) and its Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Engineer Alfonso Chikuni h

 Lilongwe, May 7, 2019. Lilongwe Water Board (LWB) and its Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Engineer Alfonso Chikuni have been nominated for the sixth edition of African Utility Week Industry Awards to take place on May 15, 2019 in Cape Town, South Africa.

LWB has been nominated and shortlisted for the Water Service Provider of the Year category while Eng. Chikuni is in for an individual award, Outstanding Contribution: Water.

LWB CEO, Eng. Chikuni on Tuesday in Lilongwe described the nominations and shortlisting as a motivation for the Board to keep on improving its services to the satisfaction of its customers.

“It’s exciting that as LWB, we are one of the finalists for this prestigious award. Being nominated and shortlisted for such award clear demonstrates the efforts we have made over the years in improving water supply services in Lilongwe City,” he explained.

CEO Eng. Chikuni added, “I owe my individual nomination to all members of staff. To be where we are, requires teamwork and we have proven that we are a team driven by the desire to a difference in our city. I hope our customers will be as more excited as we are.”

LWB is one of the finalists for Water Service Provider of the Yearcategory alongside Umgeni waterHessequa municipality and Ontec Systems (Pty) Ltd.

LWB has been shortlisted for the award following innovative strides the Board has made in the past two years in improving delivery of water services in Lilongwe City.

Between 2017 and 2019, LWB has, among others, developed a hydraulic model; introduced prepaid metering system; launched a new billing system with customer interface; adopted Enterprise Resource planning (ERP) and SCADA systems; launched state-the-of-art 24/7 Customer Call-Centre and various pieces of equipment for modernizing service delivery.

The Customer Call-Centre has transformed service delivery at LWB and improved communication and interaction with customers; now the Board is a darling to its customers as it has created a powerful interface by being available for its customers 24/7.

For the first time the Board has launched an asset management programme in which World Bank Group funded Lilongwe Water and Sanitation Project (LWSP) which aims at reducing water losses, improving water supply and eliminating bottlenecks in the supply system through replacement, rehabilitation and installation of pipes, pumping mains and booster stations.

On the other hand, Eng. Chikuni is one of the finalists for the Outstanding Contribution in Water category.

Eng. Chikuni has been shortlisted for the award due to his tremendous and enormous contributions to improved Water Services delivery in Lilongwe City since he took over as CEO in 2014.

The sixth edition of the African Utility Week Industry Awards takes place on May 15, 2019 during the 19th annual African Utility Week and POWERGEN Africa, in Cape Town, South Africa.

The Industry Awards brings together 800 of Africa’s most renowned power, energy and water industry professionals, many of them long standing attendees of African Utility Week and POWERGEN Africa.

All entries are judged by a panel of recognized Industry Experts and verified by an independent auditing firm, Mazars.

Other categories at the Awards include outstanding contribution: power, lifetime achievement, young leader award, power service provider of the year.

LWB once won the award in 2017.

World Bank approves US $100 Million for Lilongwe-Water project

WASHINGTON-(MaraviPost)-Half a million residents of Malawi’s capital city, Lilongwe, are set to benefit from improved water services and safely managed sanitation through a US$100 million project financed by the World Bank.

The World Bank this week approved financing for the six-year Lilongwe Water and Sanitation Project (LWSP) composed of a US$75 million credit and a $25 million grant from the International Development Association (IDA)

According to the Bank, the two thirds of the project funds will help rehabilitate and expand the water distribution network. This will include construction of 27km of transmission mains and associated pumping stations and storage reservoirs.

It will also upgrade 142km of existing distribution network and expand the distribution network by about 186 km to areas of the city not currently served by piped water.

Greg Toulmin, World Bank Country Manager for Malawi said that Lilongwe’s water demand will reach almost three times the current supply by 2035

“Lilongwe City faces considerable water security challenges that must be addressed urgently to serve the growing population and enhance economic activities in the capital.
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“The supply system is already under strain. However, through this project the World Bank will ease that pressure through priority investments in water distribution network rehabilitation, as well as sanitation improvements to keep up with city requirements,” Toulmin said.

Alfonso Chikuni, Chief Executive Officer of the Lilongwe Water Board (LWB) which will implement the project jointly with the Lilongwe City Council (LCC) lauded the bank for timely support

“We are determined to provide our Lilongwe city customers with more efficient services first by fixing the distribution network through this project. This project will help improve the systems hydraulic capacity and reduce losses by ten percentage points,” said Chikuni.

While improving the distribution network, the water board is simultaneously increasing the capacity of Kamuzu Dam I to assure supply in view of increasing demand. All these investments are under the broader Lilongwe Water Program which runs till 2021.

In the LWSP, sanitation improvements will take about one fifth of the project funds. Just about 5 percent of the population of Lilongwe city is served by a sewer system, while the majority relies on onsite sanitation systems such as pit latrines and septic tanks.

“We have not invested in the city’s ailing sanitation system for a long time. This project is therefore a good starting point to fix the city’s sanitation system,” added Charles Makanga, Acting Chief Executive Officer for LCC.

The project will therefore rehabilitate and expand the sewerage network (107 km) and the Kauma sewage treatment plant.

Five thousand new sewer connections will be installed to benefit about 90,000 people. There will be further support to construct 8,000 improved sanitation facilities benefiting about 160,000 people from poor and vulnerable households. Sanitation improvements will also cover some markets and schools.

The LWSP will enhance the capacity of LWB and LCC to deliver improved water services and safely managed sanitation services respectively.

The project will also build LWB’s capacity to manage its investment program. With support from the International Finance Corporation – the private sector arm of the World Bank Group – LWB will also explore options for public-private partnership for water production expansion investments.

Corruption, political interference delaying Malawi Water boards projects—WES Network

Corruption, political interference delaying Malawi Water boards projects—WES NetworkLILONGWE (Maravi Post)—National Coordinator for Water and Environmental Sanitation Network (WES network) Chrispin Bokho has said that prevalent corruption and political interference among civil servants is delaying water related projects, a situation which is leading to water shortages in most urban areas. Continue reading Corruption, political interference delaying Malawi Water boards projects—WES Network