The Guardian (Nigeria)

Petrol products storage, distributi­on infrastruc­ture may worsen energy crisis in Africa

. ARDA decries port congestion, seeks pan- African petroleum products infrastruc­ture

- From Kingsley Jeremiah, Abuja

INADEQUATE storage and distributi­on infrastruc­ture may worsen prevailing energy crisis infrastruc­ture in the face of growing population and energy demand.

Experts at the African Refiners and Distributo­rs Associatio­n ( ARDA) are particular­ly worried about the growing concerns of port congestion, limited depots to store petroleum products and weak pipelines across the continent, stressing that the countries may face persistent crises of high cost and product shortage.

Speaking at the 2022 ARDA virtual Storage and Distributi­on workshop with the theme, ‘ Reducing Carbon Footprint of Africa’s Storage and Distributi­on Supply Chain,’ Executive Secretary, ARDA, Anibor Kragha noted that fossil fuels demand and products imports would grow over the next two decades in Africa alongside major urban population growth, which could result in increased pollution.

Stressing the need for sustainabl­e transition to cleaner fuels as imperative to addressing public health issues, Kragha said coordinate­d storage and distributi­on in vestments were required to deliver Africa’s Energy Transition plan.

With growing demand for products, Kragha noted that African countries must urgently prioritise storage and distributi­on infrastruc­ture, adding that the continent’s existing capacity and hinterland supply routes are grossly limited.

Coming at a time when the Organisati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries is investing in the Nigeria – Morocco gas pipeline, Kragha stated that there was a need for the continent to invest in regional and panAfrican oil and product pipelines.

He decried that Africa has only six countries with crude oil pipelines, eight with products pipelines and just six countries have both crude oil and product pipelines.

Kragha also said “Deepwater ports in Africa will reduce congestion and shipping costs,” noting that imitations in port infrastruc­ture increase congestion; fuel costs as a minimum port draft of 14 metres could save $ 15 per metric tonne of imported product.

Speaking on the projected exponentia­l growth in population, Executive Director , CITAC, Elitsa Georgieva, noted that the inability of Africa to meet half of its demand for Liquified Petroleum Gas, gasoline jet A1 fuel, kerosene, gasoil, fuel oil and others locally amidst growing population, remained worrisome.

She noted that while technologi­es like electricit­y, biofuels like ethanol, compressed biomass pellets, bio gas digesters are yet to be developed and proven at scale for cooking, LPG remained an existing viable solution in the transition to fully renewable and emissions- free energy solutions.

According to her, renewable biolpg, when combined with innovative efficient technologi­es such as Micro CHP, fuel cells, hybrid heat pumps or when used to support hybrid renewable energy systems will result in near zero emissions.

Georgieva said storage and distributi­on players on the continent must find access to investment and financing that target cleaner transport and cooking fuels and associated distributi­on

infrastruc­ture.

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