Kenya Power may report Stima Loan defaulters
News
By
Otiato Guguyu
| May 11, 2017
Kenya Power is considering listing defaulters of its Stima Loan project with Credit Reference Bureaus (CRBs).
The Finance Act 2016 amended the Banking Act to allow power, water and telecommunications firms to refer defaulters to CRBs.
Kenya Power has signed up for a pilot of the programme, which is meant to connect poor households to the national grid, that will include passing information from stima loan client records to CRBs that could either be positive or negative, depending on the payment history of the customer.
“The one we are thinking about is stima loan because it is a credit facility although we have not started yet,” said Kenya Power Corporate Communications Manager Johnstone Ole Turana.
READ MORE
Co-op Bank secures Sh233M boost for Kenya's digital enterprises
While local businesses struggle, foreigners are finding fortune
Court okays auction of Chase Bank property over Sh1.3 billion debt
Training institute, tech: How matatus industry seeks to sanitise sector
NSE hit as Iran-Israel war threatens economy
How robotics is aiding critical thinking, innovation in rural areas
Old Mutual profit hits Sh856m despite Tanzania unit exit
Africa needs 150,000 more construction managers by 2035, PMI report warns
Kenya farm exports to gain duty free access to Chinese market
Turf wars at anti-counterfeit agency as legal chief interdicted
The power distributor however said uptake of the loans had been low and defaulters were even fewer.
“The cases are not many. Stima loan uptake was about 70,000 and most of them are paying,” said Mr Turana.
No extension
The loan initiative was launched in partnership with the French Development Agency (AFD) to help connect low-income families who cannot afford the connection fees upfront.
Poor customers were given loans at a five per cent administration fee (one-off payment), 20 per cent upfront with the balance payment spread out over a period of 24 months.
Kenya Power clarified listing would not be extended to defaulting customers who were connected under the Last Mile Project.
This is despite the fact that the project requires clients who cannot pay to sign up to the Stima Loan.
Reports indicate close to a million metres have not vended for more than three months, meaning those who had them installed are defaulting on the Stima Loan.