The Borneo Post

Building West Africa’s capacity to access climate funding

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JOHANNESBU­RG: When Senegalese president Macky Sall opened the 30MW Santhiou Mekhe solar plant last June, the country gained the title of having West Africa’s largest such plant. But the distinctio­n was short lived.

Less than six months later, that November, the mantle was passed over to Burkina Faso as a 33MW solar power plant on the outskirts of the country’s capital, Ouagadougo­u, went online. But as in the case of Senegal, it is a title that Burkina Faso won’t hold for long as another West African nation, Mali, plans to open a 50MW solar plant by the end of this year.

“It’s like a healthy competitio­n… In Senegal in 2017 there have a been a number of solar plants that have quite a sizeable volume of production feeding into the electricit­y network. And this is turning out to be a common trend I think. Because it is one of the ways to actually fi ll the gap in terms of electricit­y, affordabil­ity and access,” says Mahamadou Tounkara, the country representa­tive for the Global Green Growth Institute (GGGI) in Senegal and Burkina Faso. The institute has a mandate to support emerging and developing countries develop rigorous green growth economic developmen­t strategies and works with both the public and private sector.

What may seem like increasing rising investment in renewables in West Africa is a combinatio­n of public-private partnershi­ps and strong political will by countries to keep the commitment­s made in the Paris Agreement, a global agreement to tackle climate change. In the agreement countries declared their nationally determined contributi­ons ( NDCs), which are outlines of the actions they propose to undertake in order to limit the rise in average global temperatur­es to well below 2°C. According to an 2017 Internatio­nal Renewable Energy Agency ( IRENA) report, 45 African countries have quantifi able renewable energy targets in their NDCs. However, many African countries still rely heavily on fossil fuels as a main energy source.

And while the countries are showing good progress with the implementa­tion of renewables, Dereje Senshaw, the principal energy specialist at GGGI, tells IPS that it is still not enough. He acknowledg­es though that the limitation for many countries “is the difficulty in how to attract internatio­nal climate fi nance.”

In a 2017 interview with IPS, IRENA Policy and Finance expert, Henning Wuester, said that there was less than US$ 10 billion investment in renewables in Africa and that it needed to triple to fully exploit the continent’s potential.

Representa­tives from Burkina Faso, Cote d’Ivoire, Gambia, Guinea and Senegal will meet in Ouagadougo­u from Jun 26 to 28 at a fi rst ever regional capacity developmen­t workshop on fi nancing NDC implementa­tion in the energy sector. One of the expected outcomes of the workshop, organised by GGGI, IRENA and the Green Climate Fund, is that these countries will increase their renewable energy target pledges and develop concrete action plans for prioritisi­ng their energy sectors in order to access climate funding. — IPS

 ??  ?? Solar panels in Dakar, Senegal. — Photo by Fratelli dell’Uomo Onlus
Solar panels in Dakar, Senegal. — Photo by Fratelli dell’Uomo Onlus

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