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Solar
power: cheap energy source for Africa
Itai Madamombe,
Africa Renewal
Extracted from Vol.20 #3 (October 2006)
November 23, 2006
http://www.un.org/ecosocdev/geninfo/afrec/vol20no3/203-solar-power.html
NEPAD seeks to boost electricity
supply in remote rural areas
Kerosene lamps and sore eyes were once
routine elements of grading student homework. Solar electricity
has changed that. Caroline Hombe, a 35-year-old teacher in rural
Mhondoro, Zimbabwe, can go through the pile of books stacked on
her table without worrying that the onset of darkness will put an
end to her work. African countries, blessed with sunlight all year
round, are tapping this free and clean energy source to light up
remote and isolated homes that have no immediate hope of linking
to their national electricity grid.
"My eyes were always painful and
my head ached from the fumes," Ms. Hombe told Africa Renewal.
"Imagine trying to go through a hundred exercise books in poor
lighting and smoke. The alternative was marking assignments before
sunset, but that meant I could not spend time with my two young
children before their bedtime, or prepare dinner early enough. Thankfully,
this is now a headache of the past."
Electrifying rural areas poses
unique challenges for African governments. Remote and scattered,
rural homes, unlike homes in urban areas, are costly and often impractical
to connect to the grid. Under the New Partnership for Africa’s Development
(NEPAD), countries are seeking innovative alternatives to give rural
families efficient means to cook their food and light their homes.
Stand-alone sources of energy, such as solar, wind and mini-hydro
generators, can help fill the gap.
NEPAD, Africa’s development blueprint,
recognizes that to achieve the desired social and economic prosperity,
countries must boost access to cheaper and reliable energy. Excluding
South Africa and Egypt, no more than 20 per cent (and in some countries
as few as 5 per cent) of Africans have electricity. This figure
falls to an average of 2 per cent in rural areas where the majority
of Africans live — a far cry from the 35 per cent consumption level,
or more, African leaders wish to achieve.
‘The sun is free’
The target is quite feasible,
says Mr. Garai Makokoro, director of the Energy Technology Institute
in Zimbabwe. Africa, after all, possesses some of the world’s largest
watercourses (hydro-potential), as well as some of the world’s largest
oil, coal and gas reserves. The way to move the NEPAD vision ahead,
he adds, is for countries to find cheaper power sources while minimizing
environmental hazards and ensuring sustainability. The energy expert
believes that solar power, clean and renewable, fits the bill.
"African countries must think
outside the box. The sun is free and inexhaustible. Solar technology
— photovoltaic panels — converts the sun’s radiation directly into
electricity with no pollution or damage to the environment. The
panels can generate enough power to run stoves, pump water, light
clinics and power televisions. Africa has one of the best climates
for this type of energy," Mr. Makokoro told Africa Renewal.
But even with the compelling advantages
solar power offers, the Human Development Report, published by the
UN Development Programme (UNDP), shows that the majority of Africans
still rely on less efficient traditional energy sources. Wood, or
other biomass such as crop waste, is the dominant fuel for cooking.
This comes at a huge cost to the environment as families continue
to cut down trees for much-needed fuel.
In the early 1990s, numerous villages
turned to solar power in parts of Africa where one might least expect
to stumble upon an oasis of lights shimmering in the pitch-black
night. Perhaps the most ambitious project of this nature, and one
that is often cited, is a Zimbabwean project supported by UNDP through
the Global Environment Facility (GEF). The initiative, jointly funded
by GEF ($7 mn) and Zimbabwe ($400,000), installed some 9,000 solar
power systems throughout the country in a bid to improve living
standards, but also to curtail land degradation and pollution.
The River Estate near Shamva, 70 kilometres
from Zimbabwe’s capital, Harare, boasts one of the best solar-village
models in the country. Fifty-two commercial farming families share
systems; there is one system for every two houses. Each family has
two lamps and a connection for a radio or small television set.
The new lighting systems have improved the quality of life for the
community. They have extended study hours for schoolchildren, reduced
rural-to-urban migration in the area and upgraded health standards
by electrifying a local health center.
Innovative financing
"With all their advantages,
solar systems are not cheap to install," says Mr. Jem Porcaro,
an analyst for the Energy and Environment Group at UNDP. "A
typical home system in sub-Saharan Africa costs anywhere between
$500 and $1,000 and such systems typically provide enough power
to light three to six rooms and power a black-and-white TV each
night. But the cost is well beyond the means of most African households."
The use of innovative financing schemes,
like fee-for-service arrangements, is one way to overcome these
high up-front costs, notes Mr. Porcaro. Installing solar panels
to power multiple houses at once can also cut down on costs. More
households could afford solar power, argues the World Bank, if governments
were to remove barriers, such as high import duties, that increase
the cost of the panels. Regional cooperation to facilitate trade
is another major NEPAD goal.
African leaders are demonstrating commitment
to bring solar power to rural homes. For example, a UNDP-GEF report
on solar financing and delivery models notes that private sales,
through dealers, initially dominated the market in South Africa,
but that the government, a leading NEPAD proponent, later initiated
a massive off-grid effort that is now fully active. Botswana, Namibia,
Swaziland, Zambia and most countries in the region have developed
solar markets, in many cases with special funds to support consumer
credit.
Boost to businesses
Besides domestic use, people
are harnessing solar power to run small businesses. Entrepreneur
Abina Lungu operates a maize-grinding mill in Nyimba, eastern Zambia.
With reliable solar energy, he can work well into the night to meet
all his customers’ orders. His house, close to the mill, is also
lit by solar power. Mr. Lungu is one of the many villagers serviced
by the Nyimba Energy Service Company (NESCO), an enterprise funded
by the Swedish International Development Agency. To get power into
a home or shop, NESCO installs a system that includes a panel, battery,
charge controller and power points. The cost is $33.33, including
the contract fee. Thereafter, consumers pay a monthly rental fee.
"I pay 30,000 kwacha [about $6.25]
as a rental charge every month to NESCO," Mr. Lungu told the
Integrated Regional Information Networks (IRIN), a humanitarian
news agency. "For me, it works out cheaper to use solar because
paraffin is more expensive, and even if electricity comes to Nyimba,
not all the people will get connected."
No major marketing is needed to convince
African citizens to turn to solar. The demand is high. NESCO says
it has about 360 people on its waiting list. "We are struggling
to satisfy demand," confesses Mr. Stanislas Sankhani, the company’s
project manager.
With a concerted NEPAD effort Africans
will, hopefully, not languish in line for much longer. Solar electricity,
states the World Bank, is as good as an electricity grid for rural
households since they do not consume much power. In a modest Nyimba
office, 320 kilometres away from the Zambian capital’s grid, a sign
confidently announces that the office is up to date: "Solar
is good ... even in thatched houses; it will reach you wherever
you are."
New Partnership for Africa’s Development
The New Partnership for Africa’s
Development (NEPAD) was adopted as the continent’s main development
framework at a July 2001 summit meeting of African heads of state.
According to NEPAD, attainment of Africa’s long-term development
goals is anchored in the determination of African peoples "to
extricate themselves and the continent from the malaise of underdevelopment
and exclusion in a globalizing world." It calls for a new relationship
between Africa and the international community, in which the non-African
partners seek to complement Africa’s own efforts. The United Nations,
Group of Eight industrialized nations and various donor countries
have pledged to do so.
For Africa to develop, argues NEPAD,
three conditions must prevail:
- peace, security, democracy and good
political governance
- improved economic and corporate
governance
- regional cooperation and integration.
- NEPAD further identifies several
priority sectors requiring special attention and action:
- physical infrastructure, especially
roads, railways and power systems linking neighbouring countries
- information and communications
technology
- human development, focusing on
health, education and skills development
- agriculture
- promoting the diversification of
production and exports.
Many of the required resources will
initially need to come from outside the continent, although African
governments are redoubling efforts to mobilize more domestic resources.
"Africa," states NEPAD, "recognizes that it holds
the key to its own development."
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