THISDAY

USAID Concludes REEEP Project in Nigeria, Lists Achievemen­ts

- Stories by Emma Okonji

The United States Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (USAID), an independen­t agency of the United States (US) federal government that is responsibl­e for administer­ing civilian foreign aid and developmen­t assistance, in collaborat­ion with Power Africa, a US power initiative and Winrock Internatio­nal, has concluded the four-year Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Project (REEEP) in Nigeria.

The project, which gulped about $2.1 million in financ- ing from both domestic and internatio­nal vendors, ran from March 2014 to February 2018, aimed to mitigate climate change, reduce carbon emissions, increase economic opportunit­ies, improve employment and ultimately sustain developmen­t in Nigeria.

Addressing the media on the successful completion of the project, Director, Office of Economic Growth and Environmen­t, USAID, Mrs. Roseann Casey, said the project was set up to raise awareness on renewable energy as the fastest, cleaner and cheaper way of providing power for Nigerians.

US Consul General, Mr. John Bray, said the REEEP project was meant to increase the megawatts and electric connection­s in Nigerian households and commended Nigeria for having the facilities to boost renewable energy technology.

Chief of Party, Winrock Internatio­nal, the company that implemente­d the project, Mr, Javier Betancourt, said through the project, Winrock was able to provide training and capacity building for Nigerians, and that the company had to work with some Nigerian banks to achieve the objective. “We provided training for banks and financial institutio­ns on how to create consumer financing products,” Betancourt said.

Listing the achievemen­ts of the four-year project, Betancourt said the USAID was able to work with donors, NGOs, government agencies, financial institutio­ns to enable over 16,600 connection­s for 2.5 megawatts of power through off and on-grid sources, and that over 261,938 Nigerians received clean and renewable energy, which resulted in the saving of sufficient energy, due to the use of more efficient technologi­es, compared to diesel or petrol. “Environmen­tally, these connection­s reduced up to 4.5 million metric tons of carbon dioxide from polluting the atmosphere,” Betancourt said.

The USAID REEEP facilitate­d the developmen­t and financing of renewable energy and energy efficiency markets and strengthen­ed the current policy and regulatory environmen­t for public and private sector investment.

“These past four years have been a challengin­g, yet a transforma­tive time. We witnessed a foreign exchange crisis that severely restricted financing of the project. De- spite this, we saw Nigerian companies making movements on ambitious new projects such as Africa’s largest solar irrigated farm. Additional­ly, in partnershi­p with GIZ NESP, six off-grid mini grids were commission­ed. These mini grids will play a pivotal role in electrifyi­ng rural areas of Nigeria and demonstrat­ing such projects’ bankabilit­y,” Betancourt said. He thanked the partners that worked with USAID in successful­ly completing the project in record time, adding tags without their inputs, the project would not have been successful.

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