Renewable energy will need more investment, or Africa will stay dependent on fossil fuel
Renewable energy will need more investment, or Africa will stay dependent on fossil fuel
December 15th, 2022
Renewable energy technologies such as solar photovoltaics and onshore wind power can help sub-Saharan Africa meet its energy requirements from sources that have lower emissions than fossil fuels.
Currently, the sub-continent gets 0.01% of its energy supply from wind, 2% from solar, about 4%-5% from geothermal, 17% from hydro and 77% from fossil fuel. About 70% of current greenhouse gas emissions come from the global energy sector.
Clearly sub-Saharan Africa needs to reduce its dependency on fossil fuels. Even though its greenhouse gas emissions account for only 3% of global emissions, the region’s reliance could be the source of a future carbon tsunami. This would happen if energy demand skyrocketed on the back of rapid population growth, urbanisation and economic growth.
There are many who advocate a move to hydropower, which currently accounts for 17% of the continent’s energy mix. And the trend is to increase its share.https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/3T99M/1/
But I believe there are dangers in this. Based on my research, and the work of others, I would argue that there are three reasons to suggest that African countries need to diversify their energy sources and avoid a very high dependency on hydropower.
The main concern is climate uncertainty. This could potentially pose a threat to hydropower generation. Generating energy from hydropower depends on precipitation and temperature patterns. Heavier rains and more prolonged droughts will affect the ability of countries to produce hydropower.
The second concern is related: developing hydropower facilities takes decades. It’s hard to plan that far ahead when future climate conditions are uncertain.
And the third difficulty is that the region is vulnerable to water shortages and is already experiencing the consequences.
These obstacles call for energy diversification to solar, wind and geothermal. The cost of solar has declined by 85% and that of wind by 56% in the last year alone. This makes these technologies much more affordable and accessible.
But policy barriers currently impede the development, use and application of these low-carbon energy technologies.
Dangers ahead for hydropower
The intensity and duration of precipitation varies across sub-Saharan countries and regions. For example, in southern Africa in 2020 precipitation was less than the historical average for the region.
In other areas, wetter weather is expected through to 2100. In the eastern African region this period is projected to be wetter and accompanied by heavy rains. Variability between years and heavy floods can make managing dams difficult, and disrupt the electricity supply.
This has already been seen to happen. Heavy floods and wreckage have disrupted the operation of dams in Zimbabwe, Mozambique and Malawi. In the case of Malawi, this significantly reduced hydropower generation capacity in 2019).
Variations between years in rainfall and evaporation affect stream flow and determine hydropower generation output.
Hydropower generation in TWh
Policy studies have identified five major barriers to the development and uptake of solar and wind technologies in sub-Saharan Africa:
- institutional – lack of coordination between different organisations
- technical – a trained labour force and expertise to implement, regulate and monitor technologies
- socio-cultural – low acceptance of the technologies
- financial barriers – lack of subsidies and incentives, and fragmented taxation
- regulatory – weak bodies and problems with land leasing processes.
- These barriers are intertwined and reinforce one another. For example, the lack
Next steps
There is a tremendous chasm between aspirations and policy execution in Africa. To close this gap the following steps need to be taken.
Policy barriers must be lifted and there needs to be better co-ordination between the various players.
Secondly, financial limitations must be eased. The debt-laden climate finance structure must be revised. Climate finance for the most vulnerable countries is scarce and the application process is long and cumbersome when the opportunity arises. Climate finance should be need-based and practical to help the most vulnerable and bridge the chasm between financial need and supply.
In addition, development banks and donors need to champion and invest in the areas considered risky by private businesses. They need to lay the business foundations to make the sector attractive for private investments. In return, governments must adopt policies and strategies that encourage private investments in solar, wind, and geothermal technologies.
Abay Yimere, Postdoctoral Scholar in International Environment and Resource Policy, Tufts University
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.