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Uganda’s prisons to benefit from pilot Charcoal to Power Project

The Electricity Regulatory Authority (ERA) has signed an Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Uganda Prisons Service (UPS) to phase out the use of biomass through their Charcoal to Power Project.

Uganda Prisons Service’s facilities will transit from using biomass for cooking to using electricity for cooking. This initiative is under a project named The Charcoal to Power Project.

The pilot project for which the MoU has been signed is the second pilot project to be implemented under ERA’s Charcoal to Power Initiative. The first one was a similar pilot project implemented at the Mwanamugimu Children’s Clinic at Mulago Hospital, the teaching facility of Makerere University College of Health Sciences.

The Charcoal to Power project aims to introduce efficient and clean cooking technologies for the facilities of the Uganda Prisons Service, namely the women’s prison known as Luzira Upper Prison, and the maximum prison. It will be rolled out to other prisons facilities across the country.

Under this project, the prisons facilities and other institutions will pay Ush 451.4 ($0.13) per unit of electricity consumed, compared to the normal tariff (currently at Ush 747.5 ($0.21) per unit – subject to change every quarter in line with movements of the macro-economic parameters.

The project presents notable benefits, including a reduction in pollution associated with cooking using bioSmass, improved health by eliminating inhalation of smoke during the cooking process that is dangerous to lives and a reduction in deforestation.

The project is in tandem with achieving Sustainable Development Goal Number 7, which aims to ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all.

The Charcoal to Power Project is an initiative of the Electricity Regulatory Authority aimed at improving the health status of Ugandans by reducing CO2 emissions through increased per capita consumption of electricity. It is also aimed at growing demand for electricity through increased usability of electricity for cooking in households, institutions and commercial establishments.

Under the project, ERA wants to convert 50,000 households, 500 institutions (including hospitals, prisons, institutions of learning) and commercial enterprises from use of biomass as the primary source of energy for cooking or heating to use of electricity.

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