• AfricaBrief
  • Posts
  • Marep procurement process should be streamlined-Msukwa

Marep procurement process should be streamlined-Msukwa

Msukwa stated that the procurement processes that take place around MAREP take much longer, which interferes with the timelines that they have in order to implement projects.

Malawi: As the Parliament continued Thursday for Private Members Day with Questions on Notice to Ministers for Oral Replies, Chitipa East legislator Kezzie Msukwa raised a Point of Order to ask the Minister of Energy to consider shortening the Malawi Rural Electrification Programme (MAREP) procurement processes so that projects can be implemented in their constituencies as soon as possible.

Msukwa stated that the procurement processes that take place around MAREP take much longer, which interferes with the timelines that they have in order to implement projects.

He went on to say that he would be delighted if other parts of his constituency were electrified.

In his response, Minister of Energy Ibrahim Matola stated that the evaluation and other processes will not take as long as they think because the MAREP issue is in the hearts and voices of many voiceless people.

He went on to say that the intended goal is not only to reach out to the many Malawians who live in rural areas, but also to fulfil Sustainable Goal number 7, which is to provide people with access to affordable, reliable, and efficient electricity.

Matola went on to say that the suppliers had already submitted their equipment, indicating that the project would be completed as soon as possible.

MAREP began in 1980, with the Electricity Supply Corporation of Malawi (ESCOM) serving as the implementing agency, with donor and government funding.

Later, in 1995, the Malawian government took over programme implementation, and the Department of Energy was designated as the implementing agency.

The goal of MAREP is to improve access to electricity in peri-urban and rural areas as part of the government's effort to reduce poverty, transform rural economies, increase productivity, and improve the quality of social services.