The International Renewable Energy Agency has concluded that Africa
could quadruple its renewable energy share by 2030, generating a quarter
of the continent’s energy needs. These are the primary conclusions from a new report published by the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA), Africa 2030,
which aims to create “a comprehensive roadmap for Africa’s energy
transition,” and recommends 14 actions deemed helpful to speeding the
uptake of renewables across Africa.
The report is part of IRENA’s REmap 2030 program. “Africa holds some of the best renewable energy resources in the
world in the form of biomass, geothermal, hydropower, solar and wind,” said IRENA Director-General Adnan Z. Amin.
“This, combined with the precipitous drop of renewable energy
technology costs, creates a massive opportunity for African countries to
both transform and expand their energy systems while providing a
pathway for low-carbon economic growth.”
According to the report, Africa could see renewable energy
“realistically meet” 22% of its energy needs by 2030, which equates to a
more than four-fold increase on the 5% of 2013. Beyond the obvious
benefits of minimizing traditional fossil fuel energy technologies, the
report also concludes that such a scale-up of renewables in Africa “is
an affordable means to help meet fast-growing energy demand while
increasing energy access, improving health, and achieving sustainability
goals.”
“Africa’s economy is growing at unprecedented speed,” write the authors of Africa 2030.
“One of the core challenges as African countries continue to grow and
develop is energy: meeting rising demand for power, transport and other
uses in a way that is economically sustainable and safeguards
livelihoods.”
The report identifies four key modern technologies as having the
“highest deployment potentials” for Africa — modern biomass for cooking,
hydropower, wind, and solar power. Specifically, the authors of the
report believe that renewable energy could transform the continent’s
electricity sector by pushing the share of renewables in the electricity
mix to 50% by 2030 if the report’s suggestions are implemented.
Hydropower and wind could each grow to around 100 GW capacity, while
solar could grow to around 70 GW, resulting in an overall tenfold
renewable energy capacity increase, and a reduction of 310 megatonnes of
CO2 in emissions by 2030.
A shift to biomass-based cooking would reduce the use of traditional
cook stoves by more than 60%, and save the continent between $20 to $30
billion annually by 2030 through the reduction of health complications
commonly caused by current cooking methods, causing indoor air quality
issues.
“Tapping into renewable energy resources is the only
way African nations can fuel economic growth, maximise socio-economic
development and enhance energy security with limited environmental
impact,” said Mr. Amin. “The technologies are available, reliable and
increasingly cost-competitive. The onus is now on Africa’s governments
to create conditions to accelerate deployment, paving the way for
Africa’s unfettered, sustainable development.”
The report puts forward fourteen recommendations,
categorized under creating and enabling policy and regulatory framework;
adopting investment promotion measures; and promoting off-grid
renewable energy solutions to improve access to modern energy and
contribute towards poverty reduction.
http://cleantechnica.com/2015/10/06/africa-quadruple-renewable-energy-capacity-2030/
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