Business Day (Nigeria)

Osinbajo calls for just energy transition as OPTS marks 60th anniversar­y

- By Isaac Anyaogu

YEMI Osinbajo, Nigeria’s vice president has said that a just energy transition will preclude calls to defund gas projects in order to force gas-rich countries like Nigeria to switch to renewables.

Osinbajo in a recent address to mark the 60-anniversar­y celebratio­n of the Oil Producers Trade Section (OPTS), an oil sector advocacy group, said the call to ban the funding of fossil fuel projects makes no distinctio­n between upstream oil and coal exploratio­n; and gas power plants for grid balancing.

“Also no economy in the world has been known to use renewables, solely, to industrial­ise . Solar power simply does not have the base load capacity yet for industry,” he said.

While there are so many adverse impacts of

climate change including floods, desertific­ation, rising water levels, and record high temperatur­es and the obvious solution to the crisis being to stop carbon emissions and use green energy, the issues are more nuanced.

Poor countries like Nigeria which have made

insignific­ant contributi­on to carbon emissions require fossil fuels to develop their economies. Gas is important for clean cooking to replace dirtier sources like firewood. This is why many have balked at the suggestion to stop developing fossil fuels.

“Stopping the use of gas means that we cannot use LPG for clean cooking stoves to replace the use of kerosene, firewood, and charcoal which are dirtier fuels that are widely used for cooking and other domestic purposes, particular­ly in the rural areas. The use of firewood means deforestat­ion, cutting down trees and of course desertific­ation and then the loss of our carbon sinks,” he said.

He condemned the “double standards that wealthier countries have adopted on this issue.” In the wake of the energy crisis, many European nations have made recent announceme­nts to increase or extend their use of coalfired power generation through 2023, and potentiall­y beyond.

“This is in violation of their climate commitment­s, and analysis suggests that this will raise power sector emissions of the EU by 4O degrees - a significan­t amount, given the high base denominato­r of EU emissions,” he said.

Osinbajo said Nigeria has drawn up an energy transition plan that will require $10b per annum above business as usual spending to meet its objectives.

To fund the plan, he said in addition to convention­al capital flows both from public and private sources local and internatio­nal, “we also made the case that we should be on the G7 Climate partners list which should attract significan­t funding,” he said.

Rick Kennedy, managing director of Chevron Nigeria and chairman of the OPTS said the history of OPTS is thus the story of Nigerian oil and gas exploratio­n and production.

“Over the last 60 years, we have evolved as a group and have become partners with Nigeria in the developmen­t of a sector that is key to the nation’s economic growth,” he said.

 ?? ?? / 5 8GXLPR - ,WVXHOL FKDLUPDQ 'XEUL 2LO &RPSDQ\ /WG %DVLO 2PL\L FKDLUPDQ 6HSODW (QHUJ\ <HPL 2VLQEDMR 9LFH 3UHVLGHQW 0LNH 6DQJVWHU 0' 7RWDO (QHUJLHV 2VDJLH 2NXQERU PDQDJLQJ GLUHFWRU 63'& &KDLUPDQ 6KHOO &RPSDQLHV LQ 1LJHULD 9LFH &KDLUPDQ 2376 DQG %XQPL 7R\RER H[HFX WLYH GLUHFWRU 2376 DW WKH WK $QQLYHUVDU\ &HOHEUDWLRQ RI WKH 2LO 3URGXFHUV 7UDGH 6HFWLRQ 2376 LQ /DJRV ODVW 7KXUVGD\
/ 5 8GXLPR - ,WVXHOL FKDLUPDQ 'XEUL 2LO &RPSDQ\ /WG %DVLO 2PL\L FKDLUPDQ 6HSODW (QHUJ\ <HPL 2VLQEDMR 9LFH 3UHVLGHQW 0LNH 6DQJVWHU 0' 7RWDO (QHUJLHV 2VDJLH 2NXQERU PDQDJLQJ GLUHFWRU 63'& &KDLUPDQ 6KHOO &RPSDQLHV LQ 1LJHULD 9LFH &KDLUPDQ 2376 DQG %XQPL 7R\RER H[HFX WLYH GLUHFWRU 2376 DW WKH WK $QQLYHUVDU\ &HOHEUDWLRQ RI WKH 2LO 3URGXFHUV 7UDGH 6HFWLRQ 2376 LQ /DJRV ODVW 7KXUVGD\

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria