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Politics : Proof that John Kerry is Unfit for Command -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Peter Dierks who wrote (13973)9/30/2004 8:57:03 PM
From: cirrus  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 27181
 
Perhaps you're right.. the numbers vary somewhat. But take a look at this:

U N I T E D N A T I O N S
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)
Integrated Regional Information Network (IRIN)
2 March 2004

IRAQ: Electricity supplies almost back to pre-war levels, says minister

BAGHDAD, 2 March (IRIN) - Since the US-led military coalition toppled
Saddam Hussein's regime last April, power outages have been a regular
feature of the post-war environment in the capital Baghdad.

But the Ministry of Electricity and the US-led coalition have now brought
electricity generation nearly back to its pre-war level after 11 months of
slow reconstruction efforts and broken promises.

"We are producing right now around 4,200 megawatts," the minister of
electricity, Aihman al-Sammarae, told IRIN in Baghdad. "We have broadly
reached pre-war levels." Prior to the war, power generation was roughly
4,500 megawatts.

Al-Sammarae explained that the ministry, the San Francisco-based Bechtel
Corporation and the US Army Corps of Engineers have finally managed to
stabilise production. "Now it looks like it is moving in the right
direction," al-Sammarae said. "We have fewer and fewer so called forced
outages."

But getting to this point has been difficult, which has fuelled public
frustration and anger as official electricity generation goals were
missed. Back in July, the US civil administrator, Paul Bremer, told a
group of journalists, and the Iraqi public, that electricity production
would return to near pre-war level of 4,200-4,500 megawatts by the end of
the month.

The US coalition then said that it would be the end of August and then the
end of September. Finally, coalition predictions were stopped as the
reality of the situation became clear.

Poor pre-war maintenance, intense post-war looting, attacks on the
infrastructure and slow reconstruction efforts stymied efforts to restore
power supplies to their pre-war levels.

Saddam Hussein's regime siphoned off electricity for Baghdad, leaving much
of the south and north without 24-hour supplies. Al-Sammarae stressed that
electricity distribution in the pre-war period was inequitable.

"Under Saddam all provinces in Iraq suffered," al-Sammarae said. "If there
was 4,000 megawatts of generation, Baghdad would receive 3,500 megawatts.
We are responsible for providing electricity to all provinces," he
maintained.

Al-Sammarae predicted in his Baghdad office that electricity generation
would hit 7,500 megawatts by July and 12,000 megawatts by the end of the
year, climbing to 18,000 megawatts by the end of 2005.

But he cautioned that these goals rely on international donations and
capital investment. He added that the total cost to restore full power
generation to Iraq is roughly US $32-35 billion. "It depends on the
confirmation of the donations from everybody," al-Sammarae said. "We have
received no funds from donor states," he added.

According to a United Nations and World Bank needs assessment last year,
the electricity sector will need $12.11 billion over the next four years,
well below the estimate provided by the ministry.

Under the US government Project Management Office's supplemental $18.6
billion, the ministry will receive $5.6 million billion in assistance,
with $2.8 billion going to generation development, $1.8 billion to
transmission and sub-stations, and $1.0 billion to power distribution.

But up to now, the ministry has been working on a shoestring budget,
al-Sammarae argued. "The capital budget is not really matching the demands
and needs," he said. "I killed myself to get $600 million to bring some
power from outside and to fix some transmission lines."

The shortage forced Iraq to look for electricity from neighbouring states
and it is currently receiving 70 megawatts from Turkey and 50 megawatts
from Syria. Al-Sammarae aims to increase supplies to 250 megawatts from
Turkey and 150 megawatts from Syria.

Iraq has also reached memorandums of understanding with Iran, Jordan and
Kuwait for electricity supplies.

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