THE Zimbabwe Energy Regulatory Authority (Zera) has prosecuted and withdrawn licences to errant petroleum dealers while some service stations were fined for mixing fuel with water, the regulator’s 2021 annual report shows.
Zera said it conducted nationwide fuel quality monitoring
activities in 2021 covering 592 sites from which 860 fuel samples were
collected and tested, with 12 failing to meet standards.
Four blend samples and 8 diesel samples failed to meet
specifications resulting in the prosecution of the retail sites in the year.
The offending sites paid fines ranging from $20 000 to $200 000 and one of the
retail sites had their licence cancelled,” Zera said.
Zera said there was a 34% increase in fuel sites visited
for quality monitoring in 2021 compared to 2020.
Twelve retail sites were caught with fuel contaminated with
water compared to three cases in 2020.
Of the 12 cases recorded in 2021, seven retail sites had
low flash point diesel while three retail sites had low density petrol and two
sites had water contamination.
“The authority received complaints from motorists
concerning suspected fuel quality from 10 service stations. Investigations
confirmed that one customer had received water-contaminated blend from a retail
site, which has since been prosecuted,” Zera said.
“Three of the complaints were received out of time for Zera
to take relevant samples for testing. Zera is stepping up consumer awareness of
the authority’s quality testing services and is emphasizing the need for
consumers to make prompt reports to enable timeous sampling of fuel batches in
the investigations,” Zera said.
On the electricity side, Zera said distribution code
compliance audits conducted in the year
under review found that power utility Zesa was unable to connect customers
within 21 business days largely due to lack of operational vehicles. Newsday
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