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UK court to hear Uganda’s electricity dispute

Publish date: 04 August 2025
Issue Number: 1137
Diary: IBA Legalbrief Africa
Category: Arbitration

Umeme, an electricity distribution company, is to take its quarrel with the Ugandan Government to an arbitration court in London, after weeks of unsuccessful negotiations, reports African Business. Umeme ran Uganda’s distribution network for 20 years until its contract expired in March. The company says that it is owed $292m for the unrecovered costs of its investments. The government has already paid out $118m and says it owes nothing more, unless additional costs are revealed by an ongoing audit. The dispute follows the government’s decision to take control of electricity distribution, the latest twist in a long-running debate about who should pay, and who should profit in the quest to power Africa. Since the 1990s the World Bank, in particular, has been urging African governments to break up state utilities and bring in private capital. Uganda became the first country in Anglophone Africa to turn over electricity distribution to a private operator when it granted a concession to Umeme in 2005. But the government now thinks that the best way to bring down electricity prices and widen access is to return responsibility to the Uganda Electricity Distribution Company Limited, a state-run firm, at least for a few years until another private investor is found. The decision will be watched by other countries, including Ghana, which is preparing to invite private participation in its own distribution network.

Full African Business report

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