In Tanzania’s southeastern coastal region of Mtwara, recent developments in electricity generation illustrate how adaptable infrastructure solutions are being used to respond to evolving energy demands across parts of the African continent. Through the relocation of mobile gas turbine units, Tanzania’s state owned electricity utility has sought to stabilise power supply in a region that has experienced persistent electricity shortages despite possessing significant natural gas resources.
Mtwara lies near the border with Mozambique and has become strategically significant to Tanzania’s long term economic plans. The region contains substantial onshore and offshore natural gas reserves and hosts expanding industrial and port infrastructure. However, electricity supply in the area has historically been constrained because the local power system operates independently of the country’s national grid. According to the Tanzania Electric Supply Company Limited, the Mtwara network has traditionally relied on smaller reciprocating engine generators, many of which were ageing and increasingly unable to meet rising electricity demand.
In response, the utility redeployed two mobile aeroderivative gas turbines manufactured by GE Vernova. These units, known as TM2500 turbines, are derived from aircraft engine technology and are designed to operate as modular power plants that can be transported and installed relatively quickly compared with conventional generation infrastructure. Each unit can produce roughly 20 megawatts of electricity, bringing the combined installed capacity at the Mtwara II facility to around 40 megawatts.
The concept of mobile gas turbine generation has gained attention within the global energy sector as a way to deliver power rapidly to areas where grid infrastructure is limited or where demand has outpaced available capacity. Research into distributed and aeroderivative turbine technologies suggests that such systems can be deployed as flexible solutions to strengthen electricity reliability and improve grid resilience in regions with developing energy infrastructure.
For Tanzania, the decision to relocate existing turbines from the commercial capital Dar es Salaam reflected a balancing of national electricity demand. Dar es Salaam is connected to the country’s integrated national grid, which has an installed generation capacity exceeding 4000 megawatts according to data published by the Energy and Water Utilities Regulatory Authority. The relocation of a limited portion of generation capacity therefore posed relatively little risk to the stability of the wider system while offering substantial benefits to the more isolated Mtwara network.
Because the turbines are mounted on modular platforms, the units can be dismantled, transported and reassembled more quickly than traditional power plants. These mobile systems are specifically designed for rapid deployment, enabling utilities to move generation capacity in response to shifting demand patterns or infrastructure constraints.
The first turbine relocation to Mtwara was completed several years ago and demonstrated improvements in supply stability. A second unit was subsequently transferred to the region, enabling redundancy within the local power system. With two generators operating in parallel, electricity supply can continue even when one unit undergoes maintenance. For communities and industries in southern Tanzania, the additional reliability has helped reduce the frequency of outages that had previously affected households, businesses and industrial operations.
Energy demand in the region has been increasing steadily. Mtwara hosts one of Tanzania’s largest cement manufacturing plants and its deepwater port plays an important role in trade flows linking the country’s southern regions to international markets. The area is also associated with plans for a major liquefied natural gas development estimated to involve tens of billions of dollars in investment, although timelines for the project remain under discussion among government authorities and industry partners.
Alongside improvements in electricity supply, the relocation project has contributed to local technical capacity building. Tanzanian engineering and contracting firms participated in the dismantling, transportation and installation of the turbines in collaboration with international specialists. Such partnerships are increasingly emphasised within African energy development strategies, which seek to combine technology transfer with domestic skill development.
The use of newer gas turbine technology may also bring efficiency advantages compared with older reciprocating engines previously used in the region. Aeroderivative turbines are generally capable of higher efficiency and faster start up times, attributes that make them suitable for balancing fluctuating demand in smaller or isolated power systems. Many of these systems can operate on both natural gas and liquid fuels, providing operational flexibility where fuel supply conditions vary.
Across Africa, electricity systems frequently combine large centralised generation with smaller regional networks that are still developing grid connectivity. Analysts have observed that distributed generation technologies, including mobile gas turbines, can help bridge infrastructure gaps while longer term transmission and generation investments are developed.
In this context, the experience in Mtwara reflects broader conversations about how African countries are shaping energy strategies that align with local economic priorities, resource availability and technological options. Rather than relying solely on long construction timelines associated with large scale infrastructure, utilities are increasingly exploring flexible approaches that allow power supply to respond more directly to regional demand.
For communities in southern Tanzania, the stabilisation of electricity supply has practical implications that extend beyond technical infrastructure. Reliable power is closely linked to industrial activity, public services and local enterprise development. While challenges remain in expanding electricity access across many parts of the continent, incremental improvements in reliability and capacity continue to play a central role in enabling economic participation and social development.
As African governments and utilities navigate complex energy transitions, projects such as the Mtwara turbine relocation highlight how adaptable infrastructure solutions may contribute to more resilient and locally responsive power systems across the region.







