Cape Times

Kenya starts to enjoy the sweet benefits of economical bioethanol

-

NAIROBI: In Kenya’s capital Nairobi, restaurant owner Miriam Kamau lifts a steaming ladle of food from a stove burning locally produced ethanol – a fuel made from the byproducts of sugar production.

She is one of 200000 customers of three-year-old Kenyan company Koko, that’s replaced fuels such as charcoal, kerosene and liquefied petroleum gas with locally produced ethanol.

Ethanol from agricultur­al waste helps cut down on greenhouse emissions – partly because consumers won’t be using charcoal made from cutting down trees.

The United Nations Environmen­t Programme says sugar cane bioethanol can reduce emissions by 40-62% compared to petroleum-derived fuels.

Customers also like it because it’s cheaper. “We were among the first to use it,” Kamau said as she laid a table. “It has helped very much. Right now I don’t even know how much cooking gas costs.”

Koko sells a litre of its biofuel for 77.83 Kenya shillings (R10.50); the minimum purchase is 30 shillings. A litre of kerosene in Nairobi costs 110.82 shillings; gas can only be bought in more expensive canisters.

Koko distribute­s its fuel using dispensers around Nairobi that allow customers to buy any amount of fuel using mobile money services.

The potential market is huge – around 900 million people in Africa use dirty fuel for cooking, contributi­ng to air pollution that causes an estimated 500 000 premature deaths on the continent each year, the World Health Organizati­on says.

Biofuels can be both economical and environmen­tally friendly, said Mario Loyola, a senior fellow at the Washington D.C. based thinktank Competitiv­e Enterprise Institute.

Michael Wakoli, head of fuel operations at Koko, said their locally produced bioethanol was molasses-based, a waste by-product from the sugar refining process.

Kenya has given ethanol producers using sugar processing waste an exemption from its 16% Value Added Tax to encourage ethanol production to grow in tandem with the sugar industry – one of the nation’s common crops.

 ?? ?? THE winners of the 2021 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine David Julius, left, and Ardem Patapoutia­n. | AFP
THE winners of the 2021 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine David Julius, left, and Ardem Patapoutia­n. | AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa