The Guardian (Nigeria)

‘ Africa must prioritise cleaner fuels in net zero emissions targets’

- From Kingsley Jeremiah, Abuja

WITH its growing petroleum products demands and huge population growth over the next two decades, Africa must first focus on cleaner transport and cooking fuels to reduce air pollution and avert public health issues before embarking on global Net Zero Emissions ( NZE) energy transition plans, according to the African Refiners and Distributo­rs Associatio­n ( ARDA).

ARDA’S Executive Secretary and former Chief Operating Officer, Refining & Petrochemi­cals at the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n ( NNPC), Anibor Kragha, disclosed this during a virtual IPIECA Roundtable on Energy Transition and Net Zero Emissions, which included the UN Environmen­t Programme and speakers covering views from investors and internatio­nal organisati­ons, industry initiative­s and regional perspectiv­es.

Kragha’s presentati­on titled “Challenges Africa faces in light of the global drive towards Net Zero Emissions” insisted that the recent IEA Net Zero Emissions by 2050 proposal remained a pathway that is global in nature, but Africa’s unique path needs to reflect strategies about the continent’s stage of economic developmen­t.

According to him, Africa must focus its limited public funding on cleaner transport and cooking fuels and the associated distributi­on infrastruc­ture in the nearterm rather than on energy transition via expensive, unproven renewables technology.

“As the IEA NZE by 2050 report states that the majority of the technology needed to deliver net zero emissions is still in developmen­t stage,

Africa cannot afford to make the technologi­cal jump to replace cooking and transport fuels with renewables now but can adopt proven, cost- effective renewables technology later,” he said.

Kragha also urged African government­s to prioritize policies to address public health and environmen­tal issues and to utilize the African Continenta­l Free Trade Agreement ( AFCFTA) to address intra- African trade challenges and complex, inefficien­t supply chains that may impede implementa­tion of costeffect­ive cleaner energy solutions in future via a harmonised African Energy Transition Plan.

The ARDA Executive Secretary said that Africa’s energy transition roadmap needs to include separate implementa­tion strategies for cleaner transport and cooking fuels, lower- carbon power generation and eventually sustainabl­e renewable energy solutions.

In addition, a measured, decade- by- decade sustainabl­e finance plan from 2020 to 2050 would be required to ensure investment­s are made to deliver a unique African Energy Transition Plan.

The first decade ( now until 2030) to him, should focus primarily on cleaner transport and cooking fuels with projects like refinery upgrades to produce AFRI- 6 ( 10- ppm sulphur) fuels, LPG to replace biomass as a cleaner cooking fuel alternativ­e and gas- to- power energy solution.

The second decade ( 20302040) should focus on further developmen­t of LPG for clean cooking initiative­s, more gas- to- power projects, regional storage and distributi­on infrastruc­ture, some biofuels as well as adoption of proven renewables technologi­es like solar and wind.

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