Leadership

Nigeria Seeks G7 Backing To Accelerate Energy Transition

- BY CHIKA IZUORA, Lagos

Minister of the Environmen­t, Mohammed Abdullahi has made a passionate appeal to the G7 countries to include Nigeria in a climate partnershi­p list for the cocreation of a just energy transition partnershi­p (JETP), as the country seeks to financing to hit its net zero by 2060 target.

Speaking at the COP-27 UN climate conference in Sharm elSheikh, Abdullahi reiterated that, to meet its emissions reductions targets, Nigeria needed significan­t resources to implement its energy transition plan (ETP) unveiled last year.

The plan intends to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the power, cooking, oil and gas as well as transport and industry sectors, accounting for 65 per cent of the country’s total emissions.

According to its own calculatio­ns, Nigeria would need an additional total of $410 billion, or around $10billion in annual spending, in order to meet the 2060 net zero target, funds the country seeks to secure at the COP27 summit.

Most of the funds will be needed to transform the power sector, driven by costs to reach about 220GW of solar, biomass and hydro generation capacity, 90GW of storage capacity and 34GW of hydrogen systems.

At the same time, the country’s ETP puts an important transition­al role on gas use in domestic sectors such as power generation, grid stabilisat­ion for the integratio­n of renewables and for cooking purposes. The plan predicts gas production expansion costs between 2020-2030s to reach around $4bn, when it also expects domestic demand to rise by 25pc above 2019 levels.

Domestic demand will decline after 2030 but further estimates show that export demand will remain significan­t until 2050, which has made the “commercial­isation” of gas a priority for the government, according to its ETP.

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