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Tuesday, 7 March 2017
Solar Power May Get Boost From Africa's Biggest Oil Exporter
Nigeria, Africa’s biggest oil exporter, may be about to turn sunward to generate more of its power.
Senators in the capital of Abuja are currently
debating whether they’ll allocate $30 million to solar projects in this
year’s budget, according to the Renewable Energy Association of Nigeria.
They’re expected to provide funding for off-grid solar projects,
photovoltaic manufacturing, and transmission upgrades, according to REAN
Executive Secretary Godwin Aigbokhan. Their decision is expected this
month.
"It just gives you an idea of how the government sees solar
as part of the total energy mix," Aigbokhan said in a telephone
interview from Lagos. The country could receive about $2.5 billion of
investments in utility-scale solar projects by 2018, he said.
Just four months after Nigeria announced plans to issue green bonds
for renewable-energy projects, West Africa’s biggest economy is
debating how it could deliver clean power to more of its 180 million
citizens. Officials say they want to generate as much as 1,200 megawatts of off-grid solar.
Nigerian households
and small businesses currently spend about $21.8 billion each year
powering diesel generators to generate electricity, according to a study
by German development agency GIZ.
Nigeria Uses Fossil Fuels for Electricity
Source: Bloomberg New Energy Finance
"The
ubiquity of small diesel generators used to bridge gaps in
grid-supplied power already makes solar panels that cut fuel costs an
economic option," said Itamar Orlandi, head of frontier power research
at Bloomberg New Energy Finance.
Project Activity
Nigeria
has said it wants to increase the contribution of renewables to its
energy mix to 23 percent by 2025, from 13 percent in 2015. Interest in
solar has already increased, with more than $50 million of Chinese
photovoltaic panels imported in the last two years, according to BNEF.
In
January, the Niger Delta Power Company signed an agreement with Azuri
Technologies to provide power systems for 20,000 rural households living
without access to the grid. Nigerian Vice President Yemi Osinbajo said
the deal underscored the government’s commitment to providing access to
electricity.
Nigerian policymakers, who already privatized state power
assets in 2015, are continuing to formulate incentives for utility-scale
solar investors, according to REAN’s Aigbokhan.
"There are
put-call option agreements in place and partial risk guarantees, so what
should stop a foreign investor coming to Nigeria," he said.
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