THISDAY

Despite Owning 60% of Global Solar Resources, Nigeria, Others’ Clean Energy Penetratio­n Stunted at 1%

- Emmanuel Addeh in Abuja

Although it has about 60 per cent of the world’s best solar resources, Nigeria and other African countries have a paltry 1 per cent deployment of clean energy sources, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency (IEA) has said.

The outlook for the country and several African countries are not enviable, is stressed, with over 640 million persons on the continent without access to energy, that is, just about 40 per cent, the lowest in the world.

According to the respected energy data-driven organisati­on, in its Africa Energy Outlook 2022 report, although Nigeria and other African countries remain a minor contributo­r to global emissions, yet it needs to do far more to adapt to climate risks than the rest of the world.

But the growing demand by the West that African countries should embrace renewables however contradict­s current moves by a key European country, Germany, which is calling on rich nations under the G-7 to put a hold on the planned halt in the financing of overseas fossil fuel projects by the end of the year.

Nigeria has always insisted that although it is committed to the netzero plan by 2060, it cannot abandon the exploratio­ns of fossil fuels overnight, maintainin­g that gas, which to some extent is a cleaner hydrocarbo­n will be used as transition fuel.

By 2050, the report stated that Africa will still account for no more than 4 per cent of cumulative global energy related CO2 emissions, regardless of the scenario, adding that funding for climate adaptation could reach $30-50 billion per year by 2030, a huge increase on the $7.8 billion in 2019.

For Africa to pursue the energy pathway set out, it explained that there needs to be a change in the way energy projects are financed as between 2015-19, 70 per cent of energy investment on the continent went to oil and gas projects, primarily predicated on foreign off take.

According to the EIA, priority needs to be given to making more effective use of public capital, from internatio­nal and domestic sources, in order to better leverage private capital.

“While Africa accounts for almost one fifth of the world’s population, it attracts less than 5 per cent of global energy investment. This is spread unevenly

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