Kagunuzi River
The Kagunuzi River is a river in northwestern Burundi.
Course
The Gitenge River forms above the Lake Rwegura in the Parc national de la Kibira.It flows west-southwest between Cibitoke Province to the north and Bubanza Province to the south, and joins the Kagunuzi, which continues along the provincial border.
The combined river enters the Ruzizi River to the sought of Ndava, Cibitoke.
Watershed
The Kagunuzi watershed covers about.Elevations range from.
Monthly average rainfall varies by region from.
As of 2020 the Kagunuzi basin had of irrigated land.
Environment
The surroundings of Kagunizi are a mosaic of agricultural land and natural vegetation.The area is densely populated, with 319 inhabitants per square kilometer as of 2016.
Savannah climate prevails in the area.
The average annual temperature in the area is.
The warmest month is August, when the average temperature is, and the coldest is January, with.
Average annual rainfall is.
The wettest month is December, with an average of of precipitation, and the driest is July, with of precipitation.
Hydroelectricity
The Gitenge–Kagunuzi River and the Kaburantwa River are important tributaries on the east side of the Ruzizi river, with an estimated total hydroelectric potential of about 100 MW.The Rwegura Hydroelectric Power Station in the Kagunuzi basin has a capacity of 19 MW.
A site downstream on the Kagunuzi has potential of 26 MW.
In May 2015 it was announced that construction of the Kagu 006 hydroelectric plant would soon start.
The 12 MW plant would product 45-50 GWh of energy per year.
Funding of US$60 million would be provided by the European Union, World Bank, African Development Bank, the Republic of China, the Netherlands, the United Nations Development Program, and the European Investment Bank.
After a pause in foreign investment due to political issues, by 2022 the 6 MW Kagu 006 hydropower project in Cibitoke Province was in the Preliminary Study stage.
Issues
Gold miners use the Nyamagana, Muhira, Kaburantwa and Kagunuzi rivers in the provinces of Cibitoke, Bubanza and Kayanza to wash their products; builders extract rubble, gravel and sand for construction from the rivers; and farmers weaken their banks by failing to leave a strip of uncultivated land along the banks.All this contributes to pollution of the river water and to collapse of the banks, damaging bridges, roads, buildings and other infrastructure near the rivers.