Bangkok Post

Ivory Coast looks to solar vehicles to replace dirty bush taxis

- CHRISTOPHE KOFFI

JACQUEVILL­E: High-tech, cheap — and quiet. The Ivorian resort of Jacquevill­e just outside Abidjan is betting on solar-powered three-wheelers as it looks to replace traditiona­l but noisy and dirty bush taxis.

“It’s cheaper and relaxing!” says local trader Sandrine Tetelo, of the Chinesemad­e “Saloni” or “Antara” tricycles, which could eventually spell the end for oldschool “woro-woro” four-wheelers as Jacquevill­e looks to make itself Ivory Coast’s premier eco city.

The mini-cars, 2.7 metres long and two metres high, are covered in solar panels each fitted out with six 12-volt batteries, giving the vehicles a range of 140 kilometres.

Returning from a visit to China, the solar cars’ promotor Marc Togbe pitched his plan to Mayor Joachim Beugre, who was immediatel­y sold.

“We are used to seeing (typically old and beaten up) bush taxis pollute the atmosphere and the environmen­t. We said to ourselves, if we could only replace them by solar trikes,” Beugre said.

“The adventure started in January with two little cars,” added Togbe, who has

created a partnershi­p with local businessma­n Balla Konate.

“Today, a dozen cars are up and running. We are right in the test phase. More and more people are asking for them,” said Beugre, seeing a chance to kill several birds with one solar stone.

Long isolated, his town, nestled between a laguna and the sea, has flourished in terms of real estate and tourism since the 2015 inaugurati­on of a bridge linking Jacquevill­e to the mainland and cutting transit time to Abidjan to less than an hour.

For the start of the school year in October, Jacquevill­e plans to bring on stream a 22-seater “solar coach” designed to help deal with “the thorny issue of pupils’ transport”.

Many schoolchil­dren typically have to travel tens of kilometres from their home village to urban schools.

So far, the trikes have also provided work for around 20 people including drivers and mechanics.

“We’re on the go from six in the morning and finish around 10 or even midnight, weekends too,” said Philippe Aka Koffi, a 24-year-old who has been working as a driver for five months.

“It’s pleasant for doing your shopping more quickly,” said an impressed passenger, Aholia Guy Landry, after riding in a vehicle which can carry four people, driver included.

A big plus is the 100 CFA francs ($0.18) price of a trip — half a typical downtown “woro-woro” fare — helping to attract between 500 and 1,000 people a day, according to the town hall and promoter.

A switch to solar and durables may appear paradoxica­l in Jacquevill­e, however, as the area produces the lion’s share of the country’s gas and oil.

The wells outside the town produce 235 million cubic feet of gas per day, while several foreign firms run pipelines taking oil and gas across the town to feed the refineries at Abidjan.

But the municipali­ty sees none of the profits, an issue which has drawn public ire in the past.

The 50-million-CFA trike project is just one piece in a much larger jigsaw which includes the constructi­on of a new eco-city on a 240-hectare (600-acre) site among coconut trees.

“It will not be a city for the rich,” insisted Beugre, showing off a blueprint replete with cycle paths and a university. “All social strata who respect the environmen­t will be able to live there.”

Yet at national level, such plans are conspicuou­s by their absence.

Ivory Coast, west African leader in electricit­y production — 75% of which comes from thermal energy and the remainder from hydroelect­ric dams — is targeting an 11% share of national consumptio­n for renewables by 2020.

Even though by September the country had burned through barely one single megawatt of solar energy for this year, Beugre is undaunted.

“Our ecological project will go all the way and stand up to the power of oil and gas,” said the cowboy-hatted local politician. “In years to come, we want to ensure that these solar-power machines become the main means of travel in the area.”

 ??  ?? A tricycle taxi with solar panels on the roof circulates in the streets of Jacquevill­e.
A tricycle taxi with solar panels on the roof circulates in the streets of Jacquevill­e.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand