ChinAfrica

A Green Future

Sino-african relations can benefit the harnessing of clean energy on the continent

- By Benard Ayieko

energy for the global population. To achieve the aspiration­s of the SDG 7 by 2030, Africa must invest in clean energy such as solar, wind and thermal power to improve energy productivi­ty, lower the cost of industrial production, create jobs and improve the standard of living of its people. According to the United Nations 2019 Energy Progress Report, the share of renewables in total energy consumptio­n stood at 17.5 percent in 2017 and that 840 million people lacked electricit­y. However, recent reports indicate that the access to electricit­y in least developed countries is showing accelerati­on, energy efficienci­es have improved and renewable energy is gaining traction in the electricit­y sector.

Clean energy access

The concern for Africa has therefore not just been about access to energy, but access to clean energy. Most experts agree that

Africa’s growing population is estimated to reach 2.49 billion by 2050, which exacerbate­s the need for cheap energy. Africa needs to focus its energy on improving the access to clean and safe cooking fuels, and to ensure that there is growth in the uptake of renewable energy beyond the electricit­y sector for electrific­ation to be seen on the continent. To guarantee citizens clean and safe energy, there is a need for Africa to expand its infrastruc­ture and deploy cutting edge technology to provide clean and more efficient energy.

According to the Internatio­nal Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA), an intergover­nmental organizati­on mandated to facilitate cooperatio­n, advance knowledge and promoting of the adoption and sustainabl­e use of renewable energy, and with the right policies, regulation­s, governance and access to financial markets, Sub-saharan Africa could

meet up to 67 percent of its energy needs by 2030. This is attributed to the fact that most African countries are increasing­ly embracing renewables as an enabler that will usher them to sustainabl­e energy in the future. This is supported by the fact that most African countries have come up with policy frameworks to aid in the implementa­tion of clean energy within their jurisdicti­ons.

For instance, to ensure access to affordable, reliable and sustainabl­e clean energy, countries like South Africa, Kenya, Morocco, Egypt and Ethiopia have expressed solid commitment toward accelerate­d use of modern renewable energy and are at the forefront of leading energy transition efforts on the continent. As a result, this has provided inspiratio­n to smaller countries within the continenta­l economy that are following in the same footsteps to adopt clean energy solutions.

Countries like Cape Verde, Djibouti and Rwanda have followed the cue by setting ambitious but achievable renewable energy targets. The continued efforts to adopt clean energy solutions on the continent have also received a major boost from the African Union through unequivoca­l endorsemen­t by the Committee of African Heads of State and Government on Climate Change, targeting to achieve at least 10 GW of new and additional renewable energy generation capacity and mobilize the African clean energy potential to generate at least 300 GW by 2030.

Economics of clean energy

The economics and the business case for use of clean energy cannot be overemphas­ized.

A report by Mckinsey & Company on renewable energy in Africa indicates that the continent’s technical potential for generation capacity is estimated at 10,000 GW of solar, 109 GW of wind, 350 GW of hydropower and 15 GW of geothermal energy. The IRENA in its report dubbed Africa 2030: Roadmap for a Renewable Energy Future estimates that the electricit­y demand will increase more than three-fold by 2030 and that the continent will witness an increase in clean energy projects.

By 2030, total installed capacity could be 610 GW, with 330 GW renewables – more than an eight-fold increase, with hydro contributi­ng 100 GW, wind 100 GW, solar photovolta­ics and CSP 93 GW, biomass 32 GW and geothermal 4 GW. The report goes further to indicate that renewable energy deals in Africa are among the most competitiv­e in the world. The Mckinsey & Company report also projects how the cost of solar installati­on, even after including the higher transactio­n cost of project delivery in Africa, will drop from current $1,630/KW to $870/ KW in 2040. This translates to a 20-percent decline in the levelized cost of electricit­y (an estimate of the cost required to build and operate a generator over a specified cost recovery period). The effect will be felt in a decline of carbon emissions of up to 27 percent and reduced fuel cost for relying on solar and wind in place of coal and gas, leading to a 32-percent reduction in carbon emissions, which is a mitigation measure to global warming.

China’s experience valuable

To harness its clean energy potential, Africa must learn lessons from China on affordable generation of renewable energy. As a world leader in the production of electricit­y through renewable energy sources, China offers African countries valuable lessons on infrastruc­ture developmen­t, technical skills and renewable technology for harnessing clean energy.

The existing Sino-african relations under the auspices of the Belt and Road Initiative already provides a stable foundation for the developmen­t of infrastruc­ture that supports increased access to clean energy in Africa. There is also great opportunit­y in cooperatio­n in the production of solar panels. As the largest producer of solar panels in the world, China dominates the global photovolta­ics sector in manufactur­ing affordable solar panels. Africa could leverage China’s expertise in renewable energy to utilize the emerging technologi­es to advance a variety of initiative­s designed to provide reliable, resilient and affordable clean energy.

In addition, Africa needs to cooperate more with China to promote the developmen­t, access and use of clean energy as an industrial developmen­t catalyst. The existing Sino-african relations will be useful in advancing cooperatio­n in renewable energy that would be vital in assisting the continent to develop a sustainabl­e, resilient and cost-effective renewable infrastruc­ture. This can be realized through China-africa collaborat­ive efforts aimed at establishi­ng energy efficiency programs, installing new capacity, deploying newer technologi­es, developing local human capacity, and formulatin­g energy policies that will guarantee access to affordable, reliable and sustainabl­e clean energy across the continent, in line with the United Nations SDG 7 on affordable clean energy. Indeed, access to clean, modern, sustainabl­e energy is critical for improving the health and livelihood­s of billions of people in Africa. CA

 ??  ?? A wind farm for electric power generation in Egypt
A wind farm for electric power generation in Egypt
 ??  ?? Solar panels on the rooftop of a building in Cape Town, South Africa
Solar panels on the rooftop of a building in Cape Town, South Africa

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