(Reuters) -
President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi prepared Egyptians on Saturday for more
blackouts after lights went out across much of the country this week,
saying it would take time and cost the cash-strapped state $12 billion
to upgrade the decrepit power grid. Daily power cuts have become commonplace even in the capital Cairo but on Thursday extensive outages hit about half of Egypt, causing blackouts, halting factories and shutting part of the Cairo metro system. The disruption sparked an uproar in the Arab world's most populous country, where energy is a politically explosive issue. Energy
shortages and outages were a key factor in deepening discontent with
Islamist President Mohamed Mursi, who faced mass protests before Sisi,
then army chief, ousted him last year. In
a candid television address on Saturday, Sisi said the dilapidated
state of Egypt's power grid was the result of years of underinvestment
and admitted there was no instant solution. "Have
we developed our electricity production to meet our needs? Made
stations to meet our needs? This did not happen because the financing
required is large," Sisi said. "We must understand that matter cannot at all be resolved and remedied overnight." Egypt needed to add 12,000 megawatts to its grid over the next five years at a capital cost of about $12 billion, the president said. Each
new power station would need fuel worth $700 million a year, Sisi
added, saying that Egypt would struggle to find that cash while keeping
its deficit under control. Egypt's economy
has been hit by more than three years of political and economic turmoil
following the 2011 uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak after 30 years
in power. It is targeting
economic growth of up to 5.8 percent in the next three years with the
deficit staying at around 10 percent of gross domestic product (GDP),
but the government is walking a fine line in its attempt to boost
revenues and cut its deficit while luring investors and keeping services
running. The government
raised fuel prices by up to 78 percent in July in a long-awaited step to
cut energy subsidies and ease the burden on the government's swelling
budget deficit. Oil-producing Gulf countries have also come to Egypt's aid since Sisi took power, but major economic challenges remain. Sisi
said that electricity was not the only sector in need of investment;
thousands of villages lack proper sewage systems and the government is
struggling to recruit new teachers. "If
we work together on this, if we accept this challenge, if we are
patient, we will succeed in putting Egypt in the place where it deserves
to be," he said. Sisi
has repeatedly called on Egyptians to make sacrifices as the government
tries to shore up its finances. But his message that it was up to
ordinary citizens to step up has proven tough to swallow for poorer
Egyptians who struggle to remain above the poverty line.
Egypt president says no magic bullet for power problems after major blackout
Reuters
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