Business Day (Nigeria)

Solar investment­s can earn Nigeria’s double digits profits- Report

- By Dipo Oladehnde

A NEW report from London-based financial thinktank Carbon Tracker has urged Nigeria and other African petrostate­s to pay attention to solar investment­s that can bumper profits for petrol-dependent states as Europe’s energy transition­s gain momentum.

According to the report, African petrostate­s betting on fossil fuel exports for wealth creation and energy security are making an imprudent choice, as the “inevitable and irreversib­le” energy transition will slash demand, lower oil prices, and freeze investment­s from internatio­nal oil companies.

But new investment­s in solar developmen­t for Africa can now earn doubledigi­t returnsw, says the report from London-based financial think-tank CARUP bon Tracker, “making it one of the most profitable and least risky energy technologi­es on the planet.”

The report, released during the COP 27 climate summit in Egypt, advises that with the continent receiving 50 percent more sunlight than the Global North, solar—not oil and gas—must be the “backbone to Africa’s new energy system.”

The European Union has doubled its 2030 renewable target from 22 to 45 percent of capacity. So demand for gas will fall in the medium term—by more than 50 percent by 2040— with prices dropping in tandem and investment from global oil companies likely to decline.

If African petrostate­s build costly new infrastruc­ture, the Carbon Tracker report says they risk being stuck with stranded assets, poor returns, and reduced licencing and tax revenues, leading to major impacts on GDP and financial stability.

“The energy transition from fossil fuels to renewables is inevitable and irreversib­le,” said senior cleantech analyst and report author Kofi Mbuk. “Across emerging economies, solar and wind offer the best route for economic developmen­t.”

Findings showed Africa has an abundance of sunlight, with an irradiance (measure of the sun’s intensity on land) 60 percent higher than the global average. Solar infrastruc­ture spanning a mere 0.3percent of the Sahara Desert’s area would be enough to meet the entire continent’s electricit­y needs, the report says.

“Carbon Tracker expects that solar will outcompete operationa­l coal and natural gas plants for electricit­y generation by 2030 across the entire continent,” says the report summary, and it is already cheaper to build new solar in South Africa than to run existing coal plants.

Africa’s deployment of solar infrastruc­ture has been held back by lack of finance, poor electricit­y infrastruc­ture, and political and social instabilit­y, the report says.

It calls on African leaders “to incentiviz­e private investment by creating a stable regulatory environmen­t with supportive revenue models for solar.”

The report advised countries to adopt policies to build robust, efficient grid infrastruc­ture and address instabilit­y challenges.

And time is of the essence: “If no immediate actions are taken by African government­s within the [next] five years to introduce policies to aid a just transition with solar at the helm, we can rule out Africa’s role, as the continent will not be able to meet any of the Internatio­nal Energy Agency’s climate scenarios,” Carbon Tracker warns.

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