The Scotsman

Advances in African climate justice made

◆ Dr Richard Dixon applauds renewables knowledge sharing between Scotland, Malawi, Rwanda and Zambia

- Dr Richard Dixon is an environmen­tal campaigner and consultant

Scotland is working with key partners in Africa to share expertise on renewable energy.

In the early 2000s, I was invited by the director in charge of the Scottish Government’s energy policy to take part in a video meeting with government officials in Malawi. The main focus at the time was how to keep the existing big hydropower schemes running.

This relationsh­ip has continued with a formal renewable energy programme, which helped build institutio­nal knowledge of renewables, share case studies, and build wind power capacity.

Recent work with local Malawian NGO Community Energy Malawi aims to help roll out decentrali­sed renewable energy projects to rural areas which might otherwise wait many years to be connected to the national electricit­y grid.

Last week, representa­tives from Malawi, Rwanda, and Zambia visited the SG Global Renewables Centre, based at Strathclyd­e University, to cement a new four-nation partnershi­p on renewables.

Funded by the Scottish

Government, the centre was formed in 2022 with the aim of linking up renewable energy experience in Scotland and our three internatio­nal developmen­t partner countries.

In Scotland, we may worry about electricit­y and gas prices, but in Africa the concerns are usually more fundamenta­l. In Malawi, for instance, 85 per cent of people are not connected to any kind of electricit­y grid. The health of many of its citizens suffer because of indoor air pollution caused by the use of wood for cooking.

Providing affordable clean energy is one of the UN’S Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, and there is already a lot of interest in Africa in renewables as the future of energy developmen­t across the continent.

The African Union has endorsed a target of over 300GW of new renewable energy to be added by 2030 – almost as much as all the existing renewable energy capacity in the European Union in 2022. The African Renewable Energy Initiative aims to deliver this objective and is supported by 54 countries.

The Scottish Government has been funding projects in the three partner countries since 2012 through the Climate Justice Fund, and these projects often rely on existing or new technologi­es.

The SG Global Renewables Centre now aims for the developmen­t of further project ideas to be led by the African partners, with opportunit­ies to amplify the voices of those from Africa, and equal exchange of knowledge between all four partners, rather than a flavour of Scotland leading the others in what to do – as might have been the case in similar past projects.

The first steps for the centre’s work have involved identifyin­g the key players, legal frameworks and key sources of funding. In January, the new partners were appointed: the Renewable Energy Associatio­ns of Malawi, Rwanda and Zambia. Their visit to Scotland last week was the first in-person meeting of all four partners.

Africa is feeling the impacts of climate change more strongly than most other places in the world, and renewable energy is the only way to escape from the climate-wrecking dependence on fossil fuels.

Following a renewable energy path also has benefits for rural electrific­ation, energy security, job creation and even health.

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 ?? ?? The black in the Malawi flag represents its people, the red the blood of their struggle, and the green symbolises nature
The black in the Malawi flag represents its people, the red the blood of their struggle, and the green symbolises nature

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