19 Countries Form Africa Clean Energy Corridor


19 countries have committed to developing an Africa Clean Energy
Corridor to help the continent leap frog to renewable energy in the face of rising energy demand. 

Led by the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA), stakeholders believe a regional approach can attract the most investment and optimize the renewable energy mix.

The corridor will span eastern Africa, from Cairo to Cape Town, where transmission infrastructure is being built to meet growing energy demand. 

Currently, Ethiopia hosts the continent’s biggest wind farm and has plans for 800 megawatts of wind and 1 gigawatt of geothermal. The Corbetti Project is a new model for developing large scale power projects in Africa and is part of the Power Africa initiative that President Obama announced last summer. 

IRENA
 

IRENA will facilitate the large-scale, transborder initiative by:

  • identifying renewable energy development zones – areas of high potential – where solar, wind, geothermal or biomass projects would be clustered;

  • facilitating government planning so that renewable energy has bigger share of the energy mix;

  • fostering new financing models and investment frameworks that can rapidly get projects on the ground;

  • building the local knowledge base and leading public information campaigns.

Demand for electricity is expected to triple in Southern
Africa, and quadruple in Eastern Africa over the 25 years, making the region’s current dependence on fossil fuels increasingly unsustainable both economically and environmentally, says IRENA. 

80% of Southern Africa’s energy comes from coal, which will need to expand without the growth of renewables because demand is growing at 4% a year. East Africa relies on natural gas for 60% of electricity, with demand rising 6% a year.



“Lifting
the African population out of energy poverty cannot be fulfilled if a
business-as-usual approach is followed,” says Mosad Elmissiry, Head of Energy at the New Partnership for Africa’s Development, an African
Union implementing body. “We need a drastic transformation in our approach to
developing renewable energy, to be sure renewables are fully utilised. The
Clean Energy Corridor can support and further advance the implementation of the
regional and continental initiatives already on the ground for further
utilisation of renewable energy in Africa.”

Environmental ministers and delegates endorsed this action plan this week.  


Established in 2009, IRENA is the global hub for renewable energy cooperation, supported by 123 countries and the European Union. Headquartered in Masdar City, United Arab Emirates, it supports countries in their
transition to sustainable energy, and serves as the principal platform
for international cooperation, a center of excellence, and repository of
policy, technology, resource and financial knowledge on renewable energy. 
The inter-governmental organization promotes widespread adoption of all forms of
renewable energy, including bioenergy, geothermal, hydropower, ocean, solar and
wind.


Last year, South Africa was one of 10 countries that formed the Renewable Energy Club, which is managed by IRENA. The US did not joing the Club! The idea is to break the logjam on confronting climate change by reframing the focus from the negative – cutting emissions – to the positive – rapidly ramping up renewable energy.


Also last year, IRENA unveiled the first world atlas that shows every country’s renewable energy potential. 

Here’s a brief video from IRENA on the Africa Clean Energy Corridor:

Learn more about the Africa Clean Energy Corridor:


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Comments on “19 Countries Form Africa Clean Energy Corridor”

  1. Yusuf Mallie

    It would be in the interest of African Nations to increase clean energy entrepreneurs with African innovation to assist with effective management of decentralised grid. Not a buddy business practise but accreditation by design and innovative approach to enhance sustainable evolution.

    Reply

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