Protecting power–Kamata prevents electricity theft

Ugandan Electrical Engineer Edmand Aijuka has developed Kamata, a device which detects and prevents electricity theft.

A recent pilot project of 20 Kamata installations was so successful that Uganda’s biggest power utility has placed a big order for roll out.

Eng Aijuka hopes that his innovation can benefit other power utilities across sub-Saharan Africa (including Zambia) in preventing revenue loss as a result of electricity theft.

Eng Aijuka’s innovation saw him named a runner up in the prestigious Africa Prize for Engineering Innovation in 2016.

He said the App which is an online Protection System notifies power utilities when meters are manipulated or tampered with.

“It cuts the power supply to the affected area only, and sends the location, meter number and type of interference to a control centre. It also allows the control centre to restore power remotely after incidents are resolved. A pilot of 20 Kamata units recently saved Uganda’s biggest power utility 2.6 million UGX (703 USD) within the first month of their installation.

“The pilot project at Umeme Limited – was such a success that in 2019, Umeme has since ordered more Kamata units for roll out. Kamata is designed to protect any type of meter including post-paid, pre-paid and smart meters. It plugs into whichever system the utility is using, without the need to overhaul existing infrastructure. It detects any meter tampering, including unauthorised meter box access, illegal passes, and when foreign objects are inserted into the meter to slow it down or show incorrect readings,” he said.

He said customers can remotely disconnect power if an electricity bill is unpaid and validate meter readings.

Eng Aijuka said Kamata integrates with existing billing systems and provides a detailed analysis of power loss.

“Originally designed to protect single phase systems used individual customers, Kamata is now predominantly used large power consumers on three phase systems, such as factories and apartment buildings. Before installing Kamata, customers are trained to operate and manage the system.

“Kamata was named a runner up in the prestigious Africa Prize for Engineering Innovation in 2016,” he said.“The flexible nature of Kamata means that it can easily be installed other power utilities to prevent revenue loss as a result of electricity theft,” says Aijuka.The company plans to expand in 2020 to countries including Cameroon, Liberia and Zambia.

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