China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Energy integratio­n key to East Africa

- By DAVID BLAIR davidblair@chinadaily.com.cn

East Africa shows signs of starting the same kind of structural economic transforma­tion that Northeast Asia accomplish­ed over the past 50 years, as countries in the region begin to develop the low-skilled manufactur­ing that many see as the key first step in the process. But Africa still has less than a 2 percent share of global manufactur­ing.

The African Developmen­t Bank reports that East Africa led the continent by far with 5.3 percent growth in 2016, and it predicts that high growth will continue. The bank sees regional integratio­n as a key priority if Africa is to transform in the coming decade. The African Regional Integratio­n Index found East Africa to be the most integrated region on the continent, with Kenya and Uganda leading integratio­n. But Ethiopia and Tanzania lagged in regional links.

At a Sept 21 meeting at the United Nations, Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemaria­m Desalegn said: “With an integrated industrial strategy, African states will hopefully mobilize funds, build the capacity of local employment and promote small (and) medium enterprise­s with domestic developmen­t projects.”

The World Bank is funding the East African Power Pool to link the electrical grids of the region. A larger grid is especially important for green energy sources such as solar or wind power and also allows trade in hydropower throughout the region.

Ethiopia generates excess electricit­y, so in 2015 the country contracted with China Electric Power Equipment and Technology, along with Germany’s Siemens, to build highvoltag­e transmissi­on lines to Kenya. Similar power lines to Djibouti and Sudan are already complete.

Wondimu Tekle Sigo, former state minister at the Ethiopian Ministry of Water, Irrigation and Electricit­y, and now a graduate student at Peking University, says that Ethiopia is the “water tower” of East Africa — able to export hydropower throughout the region.

“We are promoting a green economy,” he says. “We are integratin­g the region in terms of green developmen­t.” He notes that the country was able to use internal savings to fund the $4.5 billion Renaissanc­e Dam on the Blue Nile River.

Tanzania recently discovered huge natural gas deposits. However, current world energy prices are low, so the difficult process of exporting natural gas by liquefying it at very cold temperatur­es may not be economical. Furthermor­e, the “natural resource curse” shows that some nations that rely on petroleum exports are vulnerable to corruption and few have succeeded in industrial­izing.

So Tanzania plans to use its natural gas to power domestic industry. Also, in 2016, the developmen­t of a pipeline to Uganda that will allow efficient distributi­on throughout the region was announced. Cheaper electrical power and natural gas can help the region to develop manufactur­ing capability.

According to a study by researcher­s at the London School of Economics, cheap natural gas from fracking has boosted US manufactur­ing exports by around 10 percent.

Yao Yang, dean of the Institute for South-South Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t at Peking University, says: “Some of the East African countries have the real potential to be extraordin­ary — Ethiopia, Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania. One of the lessons they have learned from the 1990s is that they have had enough fighting. This time, Kenya just had an election, and the Supreme Court (annulled) the election, and both sides said, OK, let’s do it again. They know they have to coexist peacefully. They have to focus on economic growth.

“Some countries have more discipline, like Uganda,” says Yao. “Ethiopia is an ancient country that has been there for 2,000 years. I think the region has the potential to do really well in the next 10 to 20 years.”

 ?? ZHANG PING / XINHUA ?? Workers at a natural gas project constructi­on site in Tanzania.
ZHANG PING / XINHUA Workers at a natural gas project constructi­on site in Tanzania.

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