Tag: renewable

  • Renewable energy records $200m investments

    Nigeria’s renewable energy segment has recorded $200million worth of equity investments, Stanbic IBTC Bank’s Head, Power & Infrastructure, Mr Abiodun Oni, has said.

    He said the capital is small in view of the investment gap in the off-grid sub-sector of the electricity industry.

    According to him, more private investments are coming to the sector to make more Nigerians access electricity for growth.

    He said bonds of between five and 10 years’tenure were issued by operators to raise liquidity that will be enough for the implementation of key infrastructure in the energy sector.

    Speaking on the sideline of a workshop with the theme ‘Nigeria energy mix: Nigeria off-grid  investment infrastructure opportunities,’ held in Lagos, Oni said there were opportunities calling for investments in solar, wind, biomass, coal and other sources of generating electricity off-grid for Nigeria’s over 190 million population.

    He said investors were sure of getting returns on investments, if they invest with the right price mechanism provided for operators in the industry.

    He said an in-depth understanding of kilowatts of electricity generated by either solar energy or wind energy was required from the operators, if they wanted to perform well, adding that operators in the off-grid segment of the industry were expected to complement whatever that is produced by the traditional means of generating electricity, such as the turbines and hydro system.

    Also, the Chief Executive officer, Energy Mix Limited, Mr. Noma Olushola Garrick, said investment in infrastructure was required by operators in the public and private sector, if Nigeria is interested in combining on-grid and off-grid methods of generating electricity for growth.

    Garrick, whose firm organised the workshop, said support from the financial institutions was needed to improve the contributions of off-grid players to the sector.

    Similarly, Renewable Energy Association of Nigeria (REAN) President, Mr. Segun Adaju, urged the Federal and the state governments to invest in renewable energies to engender growth of the economy.

    He said South Africa generates  over 40,000megawatts (Mw) of electricity from various sources, such as gas, hydro, solar and coal, stressing that the idea has contributed to the development of the former apartheid nation.

    He advised individuals and companies to invest in solar energy to aid the growth of the economy.

    “When operators invest in solar energy equipment, such as panel, batteries, increase in access to electricity would increase and the better for the country This, directly or indirectly, would reduce the burden of providing electricity to the consumers from the government,’’ he added.

  • Fed Govt’s renewable energy projects: An overview

    President Muhammadu Buhari told the National Assembly that the Federal Government would launch the first African Sovereign Green Bond in December 2017 to finance renewable energy projects.

    The President, while presenting the 2018 Budget proposal, said: “I am pleased to inform this distinguished assembly that the Federal Government will be launching the first African Sovereign Green Bond in December 2017.

    “The bond will be used to finance renewable energy projects. We are very excited about this development, as it will go a long way in solving many of our energy challenges, especially in the hinterland.’’

    As a follow-up, the Debt Management Office (DMO) and the Federal Ministry of Environment, in collaboration with Green Bond Advisory Group, on December 14, organised the Nigeria Green Bond Investors Forum in Abuja and Lagos.

    Stakeholders at the forum include: Pension Funds Administrators (PFAs), the Federal Ministry of Finance, the Inter-ministerial Committee on Climate Change and the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE).

    Others are: DMO, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the World Bank and Chapel Hill Denham Group as well as representatives of private sector organisations.

    The DMO Director-General, Ms. Patience Oniha, said  the forum was organised to educate prospective investors in the Green Bond programme to know the benefits of investing in green bond projects.

    Ms. Oniha said that the Federal Government would soon issue N10.6 billion green bonds to finance renewable energy projects in efforts to protect the environment.

    The director-general said the Federal Government acted to borrow the N10.6 billion, in line with its borrowing agenda contained in the 2017 budget.

    According to her, more funds will be allocated to finance green bond projects in the subsequent budgets.

    Oniha said that the bonds would be used to finance three renewable energy projects, which were Renewable Energy Micro-Utilities Programme, Re-energising Education Programme and Afforestation Programme.

    Also speaking, Mrs. Halimat Bwari, the Deputy Director, Department of Climate Change, Federal Ministry of the Environment, said that N142 billion was required to finance renewable energy projects in the country.

    She said that the ministry decided to issue the green bonds as an alternative source of funding because of the huge capital outlay which was required to finance the nation’s renewable energy projects.

    According to her, the Green Bond programme would boost the nation’s economy and protect the environment.

    Besides, Mrs. Bwari said that the ministry had inaugurated five low-carbon growth projects.

    She listed the projects as the Rural Energy Access, the Great Green Wall Programme, the National Clean Stoves Scheme, the Clean Energy Transportation Scheme and the Nigerian Erosion and Watershed Management Project.

    Mrs. said that the projects would go a long way to reduce carbon emissions in Nigeria, while facilitating the country’s efforts to meet its commitments in the Paris Agreement on Climate Change.

    As part of efforts to promote renewable projects in the country, the Federal Government has called for public-private sector collaboration in efforts to promote the use of clean cook stoves.

    The Minister of State for the Environment, Ibrahim Jibril, while speaking at the 2017 Nigeria Clean Cooking Forum in Abuja, solicited the partnership to develop domestic market for made-in-Nigeria clean cook stoves.

    The minister, who underscored the need to develop and expand the market, emphasised that the government and the private sector ought to work together in growing the market for made-in-Nigeria clean cook stoves.

    According to him, clean cooking techniques constitute a priority area in efforts to achieve the goals of Nigeria’s Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), which aims at reducing carbon emissions in the country.

    “It also aims to reduce the emission of greenhouse gases; clean cooking energy for all is not only possible but a right for our citizens,’’ he said.

    Senate President Bukola Saraki stressed the need to step up activities and actions  aimed at increasing the use of clean energy by households in the country.

    He said that the citizens’ consumption of over 500 million kilogrammes of firewood every day was an enormous strain on the nation’s forest resources.

    Besides, Saraki said that nearly 65,000 people died every year in Nigeria due to household air pollution, while more than four million people died because of household air pollution globally annually.

    According to him, more than 50 per cent of these fatalities are children and women.

    The senate president, who underscored the need to increase the usage of clean cooking stoves by households, said that the stoves would save lives and help to create additional jobs for people in the country.

    A stove manufacturer, Mr Biodun Olaore, who is the Country Director, Envirofit Nigeria, urged the government to create public awareness on the menace of indoor air pollution and deforestation to enable Nigerians to embrace the clean cooking technology.

  • Germany’s €32.9m renewable energy projects fund coming

    The German Development Bank, and the African Trade Insurance Agency (ATI ) has announced a new instrument to support renewable energy projects that targets small- and mid-scale (up to 50 Mw) green power renewable energy projects in sub-Saharan Africa.

    The facility  according to reports, is designed to provide a viable solution to one of the biggest challenges facing independent power producers (IPPs) operating in Africa, specifically the requirement to provide project lenders with a liquidity guarantee.

    The German Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) through KfW will provide funding of up to 32.9 million Euro to the facility, which aims to enable small-and mid-scale renewable energy projects in Africa to reach financial close by addressing liquidity requirements that lenders frequently require in order to fund such projects.

    The report further stated that the launch of the new facility is happening at an opportune moment when emerging markets are seeing record investments in the renewable energy sector.  It stated that the International Energy Agency (IEA) expects sub-Saharan Africa’s renewables capacity to grow by 73 per cent (24.4GW) over the period 2017-22.

  • Govt blamed for low investments in renewable energies

    The Federal Government should be blamed for the low investment in renewable energies and the lack of improvement in electricity supply in the country, Manager, Business Development and Strategies, Green Power Oversees Limited, Mr. Olumide Aina, has said.

    He said had the Federal Government developed and maximised potential in the renewable energies that are at its disposal by increasing their investment, power supply would have improved in the country.

    He spoke on the sidelines of a seminar organised by Green Power in Ikeja. He added that the failure of the government to provide a conducive  environment for it is affecting investments in renewable energies, such as solar and biomass.

    He said efforts of the government to improve activities in solar and other renewable energies had been frustrated by the political climate.

    Aina said: “The political terrain in the country is bad such that investors are afraid of coming out to invest in solar or any other type of renewable energy. Nobody wants to come out and invest renewable energy in Nigeria for fear of not recording success.  The moment there is political and economic instability in a society, it is difficult for investment to take place. In the energy sector,  investment is more difficult because the area is sensitive and any negative reaction in one unit of production usually has spiral effects on the other units.’’

    According to him, it is obvious that the government is not interested in improving investment in that sub-sector of the power sector in view of its non-challant attitudes.

    He, however, said the Private-Public Partnership (PPP) model  would help in increasing investment in renewables if it’s well-packaged and implemented, noting that investments in that area in the past tilted towards private-to-public institutions.

    He said the cost of deploying solar solution was high, stressing that huge capital was required to get the value in solar energy. Though the price of solar power materials, such as panel and battery, is coming down, it is still very expensive.

    He said his firm is one of the institutions that pioneered investment in solar power, adding that was what informed the decision of the firm to improve development in that area of the power industry.

    He said the seminar was organised  to train the firm’s partners and engineers in the sector.

    The idea, Aina said, was part of efforts to show more commitment to the development of Gamatronic Solution in the country.

    Gamatronic is an Isreali-based company that provides uninterrupted power globally.

    He said through the seminar, Nigerians from the low-end to the high-end strata of the society were trained on the use, sales and deployment of Utility Power System(UPS) and other solutions for increased socio-economic activities.

    He said there are various sizes of UPS, adding that there are UPS with 60KVA, which is for domestic use and 1000KVA UPS for industrial use, adding that individuals and companies determine the solution that is suitable for them.

    He said UPS and generators serve as backups, adding that if there is a power failure from the grid, the two apparatus fill the gap for the users immediately.

    Participants at the seminar include Mr. OyinloyeTosin of Master Integrity Energy; Mr. Mohammed Qumber of Gamatronic Electronic; Mr.Kayode Oginni ofGinnisSuntech; and Bukola Ayeni of Greenpower.

  • Renewable energy employs 15,000 in Nigeria, others, says agency

    The International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) has said no fewer than 15,000 people were employed in the renewable energy sub-sector of the power industry in Nigeria, Ghana, Zimbabwe, Namibia and other countries in West Africa and Southern Africa (excluding South Africa) in 2016.

    The Agency, a renewable energy research group, in an online report on the rate of employment in renewable energy sub-sector in countries across the world, said 9.8million employment was recorded globally in 2016.

    The Agency further stated that considering the enormity of renewable energy potentials in West and Southern Africa countries such as Nigeria, Ghana, Zimbabwe and Namibia, among others, the sub-sector supposed to create much more employment than the 15,000.

    According to IRENA, the employment figure in the renewable sub-sector is expected to increase to 30million in 2030 from the current 9.8million as more countries are taking steps to combat climate change while investing in renewable energy sources such as solar, wind, bio-mass and others, in order to improve electricity supply.

    In an online report on the rate of employment in renewable energy across the world, the firm said 9.8million employment was recorded in last year. Out of this, West and Southern Africa countries employed 15,000 workers; North Africa 16,000; South Africa 30,000; Germany 334,000; France 162,000; rest of European Union (EU) 667,000; United States (US) 777,000; Brazil 876,000; India 385,000; Japan 333,000; China 3.6million; Bangladesh 162,000 and others.

    The Agency said last year’s employed 9.8million marked an increase of 1.1 per cent from that of 2015. It further said global renewables employment has been increasing since 2012, adding that jobs creation in the sub-sector would increase in the years to come.

    The firm’s Director-General, Abu Dhabi, said employment in renewables excluding large hydro power, increased by 2.8 per cent to 8.3million people, with China, Brazil, US, India, Japan and Germany leading the job markets. Global renewables employment, he said,  has been increasing since 2012.

    Nigeria’s renewable energy subsector is also growing as organisations from Germany, France and others have indicated interest in providing technical assistance, among rendering other services. One of such institutions is Green Elec, which is helping to generate solar energy in the country. Green Elec has offices in France and Lagos and plans to build mini-solar grids in five states in the country.

  • ‘Nigeria has large market for renewable energy’

    Nigeria offers a large market for renewable energy and has greater opportunity than most of other African countries for investment in the renewable energy sector because of its population, the Country Director, Power for All Nigerians, Ify Malo, has said.

    Malo urged investors to take advantage of the huge renewable energy sources and market in Nigeria by investing in the sector. She noted that Power for All Nigerians is a globally decentralised renewable energy advocacy and campaign organisation, adding that the group came to Nigeria to drive the awareness and behavioural changes around renewable energy and to encourage more investments in the sector.

    She noted that renewable energy would help entrepreneurs and business owners who are actually to move their businesses to market and also allow new people who want to come into the sector to understand how they can do so.

    According to her, Nigeria being the largest country in the African continent represents a greater number of people that do not have access to electricity, adding that about 60 per cent of the Nigerian population representing over 95 million people does not have access to electricity supply.

    She told The Nation in Lagos that Power for all Nigerians was committed to increasing renewable energy access in the country through the centralised renewable wind and mini-hydro. “We want to see everybody including the least community completely electrified, they don’t have to wait for the grid to get to them,” she stated, adding that 2025 has been set aside as target period to achieve power for every single Nigerian.

    “Our goal is to see that everybody has electricity by the year 2025, and we believe that can be achieved with renewable energy,” she added.

    Malo said a number of programmes had already been initiated to drive the project including capacity building and training programmes. It would be working with the women for awareness building, and supporting industry stakeholders and entrepreneurs, adding that the group is also supporting end-users and creating a platform where people can actually learn more about renewable energy technology.

    Grassroots advocacy campaign, she said, had been scheduled between 2017 and 2019, and the group would be working with the youths, students on campuses as well as the rural women.

    Malo confirmed that renewable energy had been working in the country but noted that in the past contracts were given to people who were not certified in renewable energy installation or energy business , and months after those installations, the projects park up and it was mainly prevalent for solar street light system.

    “Renewable energy could be a way to having 24 hours sustainable electricity and that is why we are seeing more people getting into renewable energy business.

  • Fed Govt to raise N20b for renewable energy projects in Q1

    The Federal Government is planning to raise N20 billion ($63 million) by March to help fund renewable energy projects, the first issuance of green bonds in the country.

    “We are on track to sell the bond in the first quarter, a sovereign, and could have another by the end of the year,” Environment Minister Amina Mohammed said told Bloomberg.

    The sale will also help fund an electric-vehicle commuter project in the city and plug infrastructure deficit, according to information from the Budget and National Planning Ministry.

    The government increased its 2016 budget by 20 per cent, allocating one-third to projects including roads, rail, ports and bridges, to stimulate an economy battered by a drop in oil production and that’s projected by the International Monetary Fund to contract by 1.7 per cent this year.

    “The exchequer can’t get all the money we need,” Mohammed said. “That’s why we must leverage these innovative ways to get funds from the international community.”

    Mohammed said her ministry is targeting off-grid solar-power projects producing as much as 1,200 megawatts in the country’s north. Nigeria’s electricity generation capacity is about 6,000 megawatts, according to the power ministry. South Africa, whose population is a third of Nigeria’s, has a capacity of more than 40,000 megawatts.

    Proceeds from the green bonds will also support environment-friendly projects in the oil-producing Niger River delta, where the government aims to eliminate gas flaring by 2019, Mohammed said.

    There are also plans to continue the cleanup of the Ogoniland oil spills, she said. Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Shell’s Nigerian Unit, SPDC, Exxon Mobil Corp., and Eni SpA’s Agip Oil Co. have paid $1 billion, of which $200 million will be disbursed annually, to help with cleaning up oil spills as old as 50 years in the Ogoni district in the southern Niger River delta.

  • Experts highlight challenges in renewable energy sector

    International key players in renewable energy, at a seminar tagged, ‘Financing Renewable Energy’ in Lagos State have identified adequate financing as a major factor militating against technological advancement in the sector.

    Speaking at the forum, Bearbel Freyer and Micheal Neulinger, heads, Energy Desks, Delegations of German Industry and Commerce in Nigeria and Ghana respectively, observed that project financing still constitutes the highest hurdle in realising Renewable Energy projects-Favour is given mostly to large size projects.

    At a joint presentation at the seminar, Freyer and Neulinger stressed that lack of know-how remains a stumbling block in financing renewable energy projects in Africa.

    In his own assertion, Segun Adaju, Chief Executive Officer, Consistent Energy, said: “Any new technology comes at higher price or initial cost of pricing challenges, over time the price comes down.”

    According to him,” the price of solar energy devices had been dropping every day, except for the present foreign exchange issues in Nigeria.”

    While making a case for new technology, Adaju said it is cost-effective to the end users unlike combustion energy.

    He cited the example of Pay as You Go Business Model designed for a group of barbers to prove that the technology is now more affordable and more people are now accessing it.

    He said, in the plan, each of them was made to pay N45,000 initial deposit and N5,000 installment for a period of 18 to 24 months.

  • ‘Why Nigeria cannot use renewable energy’

    The Director-General, National Power Training  Institute of Nigeria(NAPTIN), Engineer Rueben Okeke and the Managing Director, Ikeja Electric, Mr. Abiodun Ajifowobaje, have said Nigeria cannot get the required volume of  electricity from renewable energy sources such as solar, coal, biomass and wind.

    They said solar, coal, and biomass cannot generate megawatts of electricity that can meet the power demands of the 170 million Nigerians. They spoke to The Nation at different fora. Okeke said the three renewable energy sources put together cannot generate one third of electricity that either hydro or thermal would provide.

    He said the money, which the government would spend in providing 10 or 20 megawatts (Mw) of electricity from solar, biomass, wind or coal can generate an appreciable number of megawatts when hydro or thermal form of generation is used.

    He said the country is not ripe for renewable energy, urging the government and other investors to concentrate on hydro and gas powered plants for growth. He said it is impossible to grow the economy with  renewable energy, arguing that conventional sources of energy is the best and widely acceptable means of generating electricity globally.

    Okeke said the country boasts of 70 per cent gas power, and 30 per cent hydro electricity, advising that the two should be developed to meet the growing energy needs of the populace.

    Ajifowobaje also said solar, biomass and coal provide insignificant quantum of electricity megawatts, and as such, cannot meet the needs of the masses.

  • Hope for all as BoI, UNDP partner on renewable energy

    Hope for all as BoI, UNDP partner on renewable energy

    Despite its huge energy needs, Nigeria has not made much progress in diversifying sources of power supply through renewable energy. However, the ongoing collaboration between the Bank of Industry (BoI) and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) to invest in and utilise renewable energy resources may renew the hopes of electricity consumers, particularly the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs). Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA reports.

    Succour may soon come the way of industrialists, particularly operators of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs). The operators, most of who are weighed down by the rising cost of operation due the perennial unreliable electricity supply from the national grid, may soon heave a sigh of relief, courtesy of the ongoing partnership between the Bank of Industry (BOI) and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).

    The partnership is on providing alternative source of power supply through renewable energy.

    Specifically, the collaboration is focused on increasing the national capacity to invest in and utilise renewable energy resources to improve access to modern energy services for MSMEs and households. This is in the hope of catalysing, promoting and supporting an expansion of off-the-grid renewable energy services for MSMEs to support private sector-led economic development.

    To achieve this, BoI as implementation agency for the project tagged: “BOI/UNDP Access to Renewable Energy Programme”, has already disbursed about N75.8 million to two alternative power firms. They are GVE Projects Ltd and Arnergy Solar Ltd. The firms would provide solar home systems to off-grid communities in six states, which come under the pilot phase for the take off of the project. The states include Anambra, Delta, Niger, Osun, Kaduna and Gombe.

    The intervention, according to BoI Managing Director, Mr. Rasheed Olaoluwa, would involve the National Agency for Science and Engineering Infrastructure (NASENI) and local meter manufacturers. Olaoluwa, who spoke recently in Lagos while presenting cheques to the indigenous alternative power firms, explained that UNDP, which has 50 per cent stake in the project, contributed $1.6 billion. He said the project was divided into the Stand alone, which costs N31.6 million, and the Micro-Grid, which costs N44.2 million, making it a total of N75.8 million.

    The medium term vision is to have 100, 000 homes installed with solar systems in the next five years through a combination of micro-grid and stand-alone solar home systems. The overall objective of the project, The Nation learnt, was to build the capacity of MSMEs to incorporate renewable energy options either as a business in, itself, or as service for business development and encourage financial institutions to increase investment in renewable energy through better understanding and assessing of credit and financing risks of renewable energy investments and services.

    BoI and UNDP also hoped to encourage government to develop and implement renewable energy policies and regulatory frameworks that will facilitate renewable energy options for MSME development in Nigeria. This would ultimately open up the nation’s industrial space for more entrepreneurs most of who have, for long, been hard hit by poor supply of electricity from the national grid.

    Indeed, as Olaoluwa observed, the less than 4,000 Megawatts (MW) electricity supply from the national grid relative to the conservatively estimated 40, 000MW electricity demand for a leading African economy such as Nigeria, with a population of 170 million people, is grossly inadequate. He noted that most of the country’s old central power plants had lost their economies of scale and could no longer deliver competitive, cheap and reliable electricity to more remote customers through the national grid.

    The BoI boss pointed out that renewable energy sources such as hydro (16 per cent), wind (three per cent) and solar (one per cent) are growing in relevance and commercial adoption on a global scale and that the recent Group of Seven (G7) meeting in June had agreed to de-carbonise the global economy by phasing out the use of fossil fuel by the end of this century, over the next 85 years, hence the need to embrace other source of energy.

    In opting for renewable energy, BoI also believes that the absence of reliable power and energy supply is an established challenge for MSME operations in Nigeria. The development financing institution observed that most private sector institutions rely on backup generators with high environmental and economic cost hence, improving MSME and household access to hydro, wind, solar power, biomass and geothermal energy supply to power enterprise operations is critical.

    If BoI succeeds in its latest move to provide succour to MSMEs through renewable energy, it would break Nigeria’s inertia in joining the league of other countries that have made significant progress in diversifying their energy sources. A number of African countries have embraced renewable energy, leaving Nigeria, which ironically has more energy needs given her population and economy size.

    For instance, about five per cent of South Africa’s energy supply is said to come from renewable energy. The Rainbow nation in April named preferred bidders for the fourth round of a series of renewable energy projects that will add about 1,000 MW to its power grid. Similarly, Kenya plans to triple its electricity generation by about 6,000 MW in the next five years, with more than 90 per cent of the planned output coming from renewable sources. Ghana is also said to be exploring renewable energy options including solar, wind, hydro and geothermal.

     

    Why BoI’s intervention is timely

    The rethink in favour of diversifying sources of power supply to guarantee improved electricity supply to Nigerians and operators in the industrial sector, especially MSMEs, is coming at an auspicious time. For one, the intervention is coming at a time the excitement and optimism that greeted the unbundling of the sector appears to have given way to frustration.

    The handover of the power assets to private investors has brought agony and frustration to consumers as there has not been any visible improvement in electricity supply almost two years after privatisation. Rather than improve, electricity supply has worsened and tariff gone up as high as 100 per cent in some parts of the country.

    However, BoI’s latest intervention appears to have renewed the hopes of electricity consumers, particularly MSMEs. As Divisional Head, Large Enterprises, BOI, Mr. Joseph Babatunde pointed out, there is a golden opportunity for rural communities to be empowered with affordable off-grid solar home systems that are operated on a Pay-As-You-Go (PAYG) basis rather than wait in vain for the national electricity grid.

    Head of Arnergy Solar limited, one of the partners, Mr. Femi Adeyemo, said the project would run for 25 years and would be effectively done so that Nigerians can benefit from it. His optimism stems from the involvement of several stakeholders in the project including renewable energy service providers, financial institutions, MSMEs, government and policy makers, multilateral donor agencies, investors (including venture capitals and private equity firms), and relevant professional associations.

     

    Govt’s efforts in renewable energy 

    The need to explore renewable energy is not lost on the Federal Government considering the fact that getting gas to fire the power plants has been a Herculean task. Unreliable supply infrastructure and pipeline vandals have continued to compromise its distribution to various plants. “Vandalism is taking a toll on us,” former Minister of Power Prof. Chinedu Nebo, said.

    Prof. Nebo, who spoke to journalists in Lagos, added that: “A situation where our own compatriots vandalise the oil and gas pipelines, especially the gas pipelines that supply gas to the power stations, since 70 per cent of our power generation is from gas-fired turbines and 30 per cent is from hydro is regrettable. We have not been doing coal, we have not been doing renewable; we have not been doing biomass, so we really are hamstrung. So, the government is now working on diversifying to ensure that we have a good and robust fuel mix.”

    He said Nigeria now boasts a draft National Policy on Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency, At the presentation of the draft policy at a stakeholders’ workshop in Abuja, Director of the Electrical Inspectorate Services (EIS) in the Federal Ministry of Power, Abayomi Adebisi, said under the policy, 8,188MW will be achieved with renewable energy by 2020 on a medium term, while the long-term target is on the realisation of 23,134 MW by year 2030.

    Adebisi said renewable energy would contribute 1.3 per cent this year to the national grid with a corresponding increase of 8 per cent and 16 per cent, between 2020 and 2030. “While large and small hydropower would contribute 2,121 MW and 140 MW to the renewable energy generation this year. It is also expected that solar accounts for 117 MW, with biomass electricity at 12.3 per cent,” he said.

    Adebisi added that the policy development was being facilitated by some partners with a grant from GIZ, a German agency. “We sourced for grants from GIZ, then we pooled over 30 documents from people who had once done something on renewable energy. We got a committee of experts to develop the policy, and the draft was approved by the ECOWAS Centre for Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency (ECREE) in May 2013,” Adebisi explained.

    The power sector regulator, Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) has also come out with a number of incentives aimed at promoting investments in renewable energy such as a guaranteed market for renewables, simplified licensing process, land access and a feed-in- tariff.