THISDAY

Sahara Power Reaffirms Expansion Plans

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Peter Uzoho

Sahara Power Group’s Managing Director, Kola Adesina has said the company will continue to implement expansion plans through investment in diverse energy mix and partnershi­ps to enhance the capacity of the power sector to meet anticipate­d energy demand growth in Sub Sahara Africa (SSA).

Adesina who spoke at the Oil and Gas Council’s Africa Assembly in Paris said the SSA region needs to build “robust capacity” to respond to “disruptors” in the energy sector by way of economic growth, rising demand in Africa, shifting energy mix, changes in the market structure and dynamics, growing share of private investment in Power, and in increased Regional Power Pooling.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) World Economic Outlook had predicted that SSA growth was set to pick up from three percent in 2018, to 3.5 per cent in 2019, before stabilisin­g at per cent over the medium term. About half of the region’s countries are expected to grow at 5% or more, which would see per capita incomes rise faster than the rest of the world on average over the medium term.

“As a foremost energy provider in Sub-Saharan Africa, Sahara Power Group is committed to its target of increasing the Group’s generation capacity to 5,000MW via different energy mix. This, in addition to other innovative interventi­ons across the value chain in the region, is being driven by ongoing investment­s and partnershi­ps,” a statement quoted him to have said.

Sahara Power Group is one of the largest privately owned vertically integrated power companies in Sub-Saharan Africa. The Group comprises including Egbin Power Plc (largest private thermal power plant in SSA), Ikeja Electric (one of the largest privately run power distributi­on companies in SSA) and First Independen­t Limited. Sahara Power has five power plants across several locations with capacity totaling 2040MW, with potential for generation into the sub region through the West Africa Power Pool.

Adesina, whose presentati­on focused on: “In his presentati­on “Power Sector - Shifting Patterns and Rising Challenges – An Operator’s Perspectiv­e”, said amid the expected energy demand growth in the SSA, the sector needs to tackle low electricit­y access and consumptio­n, low Creditwort­hiness due to current tariffs, Inadequate Power Infrastruc­ture and Insufficie­nt Regulatory, Policy and Institutio­nal frameworks.

“Half of Africa’s population lives without access to electricit­y. The industrial sector is responsibl­e for more than two-thirds of SSA’s total energy use. Average Electricit­y consumptio­n is about 150kWh per capita. Coal is still the largest fuel source for generation in SSA”, he stated.

In Africa, there are changes in the market structure and dynamics in the power sector because of a shift from a centralize­d, government owned, to private sector participat­ion.

Already, vertical unbundling – the process of ‘ unpacking’ integrated utilities into separate generation, transmissi­on and distributi­on companies, have been the preferred option for countries including Nigeria, Ghana, Africa, Uganda and Zimbabwe. Also, there is the emergence of management contracts, commercial­isation, IPPs, and electricit­y regulatory and legislativ­e amendments.

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