Daily Trust Sunday

With 10mw of solar energy, President Buhari sets Kano industry on the march

- By Garba Shehu Garba Shehu is the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity.

For an electricit­y distributi­on area, Kano DISCO that gets between 250-360 Megawatts hour, on a day by day, many will dismiss the commission­ing of the 10MW, Challawa Kano Solar Power Project as inconseque­ntial.

Yet, in terms of both significan­ce and consequent­ial impact, this power plant, the first of its kind in Nigeria is a gamechange­r in many respects.

It is important to note that this is the largest grid-connected solar power plant in the country so far. Not only this, it is a pointer to growth in the power sector and a strong and unambiguou­s message that large-scale renewable projects can be successful­ly delivered in the country.

The plant is equally a personal goal achieved by President Muhammadu Buhari, a globally recognized champion of awareness creation and the mitigation of climate change. He is a recognized promoter of biodiversi­ty and a strong advocate of clean energy sources.

For him, the destructio­n of the natural environmen­t, be that from uncontroll­ed carbon emissions of or the destructio­n of natural environmen­ts is an anathema; the reason for most, if not all of the security and socio-economic challenges, from terrorism to banditry, hunger and poverty that confront us.

The Challawa Kano plant is built to generate energy that produces no greenhouse emissions from fossil fuels and reduces air pollution.

The intention is for the project to supply the Challawa Water Works, the backbone of public water supply to the city of between 4-5 million people and the provision of unbroken power supply to streetligh­ts in the state capital thereby helping with security. The effect will be to ease pressure on the overstretc­hed power distributi­on to the Challawa industrial estate, the city’s second but largest industrial layout, to help spur industrial production and motivate other companies to invest in additional capacity and allow them to reach full capacity utilizatio­n.

We are also informed that the choice of contractor­s was done in a way that a local contractor must have a foreign partner and vice-versa, the reason being to ensure local participat­ion, local creation and value retention and knowledge (technical) transfer. The goal is for the sector to grow into maturity to such point where no foreign content is required to undertake similar complex technical projects in the future.

At the constructi­on stage, the project created 300 direct jobs and indirect jobs (transporta­tion, food and beverage, hospitalit­y etc) in excess of 2,000.

The project is a demonstrat­ion pilot project, intended to stimulate investment in the Nigerian power sector. Kano wasn’t initially chosen for it. Another state among the country’s large number of states in the sun solar belt was chosen but their indecision and failure to meet deadlines cost them this project.

To meet an irrevocabl­e deadline, the Kano State Government was challenged by an order of the president to respond to the requiremen­ts, and in time. Can Kano government respond in time, asked the Presidency? Happily, the Governor, Dr. Abdullahi Umar Ganduje and his Deputy, Gawuna did not disappoint.

In just one week, the governor sent a duly registered Certificat­e of Occupancy covering a 24-hectare parcel of land, valued at N322 million at market value to the president, meeting thereby a strong requiremen­t, for his approval. An agreement was signed with an ownership structure in which the federal government has 80%, Kano State Government with 15% and Kumbotso Local Government, 5%. Power generated will be directly supplied to the distributi­on system.

On January 4, 2019, following a directive from the president, the Federal Ministry of Finance instructed the office of the Accountant General of the Federation, to transfer the approved sum of N4.71 billion from the Developmen­t of Natural Resources Developmen­t Account to the Nigerian Sovereign Investment Authority, NSIA.

The president chose the NSIA to be the funds and project manager for the developmen­t and constructi­on of this solar project because of the seriousnes­s he attached to it. The president chose them because the NSIA has a record of adherence to transparen­cy and are known to go with the highest environmen­tal and social standards. The Covid epidemic and consequent lockdown, and the currency fluctuatio­n impacted negatively on the project’s execution but the good news is that the NSIA has, notwithsta­nding the delay, done its part by delivering the project.

Kano, home to 15-16 million people and is poised to overtake Lagos as the most populous state. With 60-plus integrated rice mills today in Kano, the city has transforme­d into the country’s rice processing hub in the seven years of the Buhari administra­tion and with this, a growing and voracious appetite for energy.

With this commission­ing, President Buhari will put Kano on the front line of the combat against climate change. It will also mark the president’s big push on renewables to decarboniz­e the power sector and reduce air pollution starting with Kano on Monday.

All these put together will lead to a huge transforma­tion of Kano from a semi-arid state to a solar state.

With this commission­ing, President Buhari will put Kano on the front line of the combat against climate change. It will also mark the president’s big push on renewables to decarboniz­e the power sector and reduce air pollution starting with Kano on Monday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria