Senegal: Infinity Power, SENELEC Sign Power Deal
Senegalese National Electricity Company (SENELEC) has signed a power purchase agreement (PPA) with Infinity Power.
The contract covers the installation of an electricity storage system for the Taïba N’Diaye wind farm in the Thiès region of western Senegal.
In Senegal, the project to build an electricity storage system for the Taïba N’Diaye wind farm is taking shape.
The project’s developer, Infinity Power, which continues to operate the wind farm after taking over Lekela Power, has just signed a power purchase agreement (PPA) with Senegal’s national electricity company (SENELEC).
The 20-year capacity change agreement paves the way for the construction of the storage system at the Tobène substation in the Thiès region.
The system will be capable of storing 40 MW of electricity, which will “enable the electricity grid to harness all available wind energy and provide ancillary services such as frequency regulation, reactive power support, and energy charging and discharging”, says Infinity Power.
The storage batteries, with a combined capacity of 175 MWh, will be housed in 45 40-foot (21m) shipping containers.
According to Infinity Power, installation of the system will begin in 2024 at the Tobène substation, with commissioning scheduled for 2025. According to Infinity, the storage system will reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions by around 37,000 tonnes a year.
The Taïba N’Diaye wind farm consists of 46 turbines supplied and installed by Danish company Vestas Wind Systems.
The facility has a capacity of 158.7 MW, making it the largest wind farm in West Africa. This capacity represents 15% of Senegal’s installed electricity capacity of 1,555 MW, according to Power Africa.
The wind farm feeds its output into the SENELEC grid. The park is capable of supplying power to 2 million people in Senegal, while avoiding emissions of 300,000 tonnes of CO2 equivalent per year.
Source:Africa-energy-portal
Nigeria: Court Remands 13 Ex-Executives Of NUPENG In Prison
Thirteen ex-executives of Petroleum Tanker Drivers branch of Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) have been remanded into prison custody by an Abuja High in the Federal Republic of Nigeria, on charges of assault.
The ex-executives allegedly assaulted the national president of NUPENG, Williams Akporeha, and two others.
The accused persons were remanded into prison by the presiding judge Justice Yusuf Halilu on a five-count criminal charge on Friday, November 17, 2023.
They were put on trial by the Inspector General of Police for allegedly beating up Akporeha and Wale Afolabi, respectively, NUPENG’s president and general secretary, and the newly elected national chairman of PTD, Augustine Egbon.
Those arraigned include former national chairman of PTD, Lucky Osesua, his deputy, Dayyabu Yusuf Garga, Humble Obinna, Akinolu Olabisi, Godwin Nwaka, and Tiamiu Sikiru.
The rest are Abdulmimin Shaibu, John Amajuoyi, Zaira Aregbo, Patrick Erhivwor, Stephen Ogheneruemu, Gift Ukponku, and Sunday Ezeocha.
According to the case (marked FCT/HC/CR/042/2023), the defendants, on November 1, 2023, laid siege at the PTD office at No. 50 Moses Majekodunmi Crescent, Utako District, against Akporeha, Afolabi, Solomon Kilanko, and Augustine Egbon and committed an offence punishable under Section 114 of the Penal Code Act, 2004.
They were accused of acting in a manner likely to cause the deaths of Akporeha and Egbon, an offence punishable under Section 229 of the Penal Code Act, 2004.
They were also accused of voluntarily causing grievous bodily harm to their victims.
The defendants, however, pleaded not guilty to the charges, after which the prosecution counsel, Frank Longe, applied for a date to begin their trial.
Lead counsel to the accused persons, Chris Oshomogie, SAN, orally applied for the bail of his clients, claiming that the offences they allegedly committed are bailable.
However, the court rejected the oral bail application, ordered him to file a final application and adjourned until November 21 for trial.
Justice Yusuf ordered that the 13 defendants be moved to Kuje prison in Abuja on remand pending the determination of their request for bail.
The Court adjourned till November 21, for commencement of trial.
South Africa: Ramokgopa Commits to Accelerating Generation To Stall Load Shedding
South Africa’s Minister for Electricity Kgosientsho Ramokgopa on Thursday had his back against the wall as Parliamentarians demanded to know his role in the energy sphere and what expertise he had brought to the table as eight months after his appointment, the country still faced debilitating load shedding, which he said was estimated at about R1 billion a day.
Appearing for the first time before the Portfolio Committee on Public Enterprises, Ramokgopa alluded that the country’s grid faced numerous challenges as it had not been designed to take on the baseload that was now required to supply electricity throughout the country.
“The biggest limitation of supply is that the grid was not designed to meet the current needs. The density of the grid is in the Highveld of Mpumalanga and Gauteng provinces which traditionally have generation capacity like close by and take up 72% of the load,” he said.
Ramokgopa said the biggest challenge faced from generation capacity was the high partial load losses, currently at about 14.500 kilowatts to a lower number as previous peaks of losses at about 17000 kW had resulted in higher stages of load shedding, including Stage 6.
He alluded to the insurmountable challenge faced by Eskom in building up a further 14 218 kilometres of the grid, which needed to be ramped up 315% at a cost of more than R390bn that the country could not afford over the next 10 years.
“To put it into context, in the last 10 years, Eskom has developed only 4300 kilometres of transmission but to accelerate it, they will need to install over 14 000KKM at a cost upwards of R390 million,” he said.
He said the total cost of the Energy Availability Plan had not been quantified as yet.
“According to a modelling by the South African Reserve Bank, 1600 MW of unmet demand for electricity translates to a 5% loss of GDP for the economy. So we are aware of the need to better supply electricity to stop the economic loss for the country,” he said.
The country is currently experiencing high levels of outage slips, when Eskom temporarily took power off the grid for repairs or maintenance, which for October amounted to 1783 MW.
“There are instances when we intend to return power at a certain time but if there are delays the outage slips, then affect supply,” he said.
Outlining his five point plan for returning electricity supply to normalcy, Ramokgopa said he was solely responsible for generation while his counterpart, the Minister of Public Enterprises, Pravin Gordhan, had the mandate to dismember Eskom into the three units, mainly generation, transmission and distribution.
Part of Ramokgopa’s mandate is the fixing of Eskom and improving the availability of existing supply, enabling private sector participation in generation for which the production of 66 kW was currently being off-taken by companies and would likely be all established by the end of 2024.
“A survey of project developers conducted by Eskom, the South African Wind Energy Association and the South African Photovoltaic Industry Association shows that 66 kw of wind and solar projects are in the development phase across the country.”
He dispelled doubts about South Africa’s baseload, consisting of coal, gas and nuclear being replaced by the renewable energy mix, as per the Just Energy Transition programme, pointing out that the take-off of renewable energy counted on the existence of the current baseload.
“Coal is part of the energy plan, the success of renewables is based on the existence of the current baseload,” Ramokgopa said.
He said he was engaged with the acceleration of procurement of new capacity from a mix of renewables, gas and battery storage.
“We are currently in talks with Mozambique and Namibia for the supply of at least 600MW, 100 MW from Mozambique’s hydro generation will be secured immediately while the rest will be procured from these countries over the next six months,“he said.
Parliamentarians were informed that Eskom had secured a generation unit to replace the damaged Medupi unit 4 which had been slated to be fully functional by the middle of 2025, but with the acquisition of a second-hand generator with at least 15 years of life left in it, the unit would be running by June next year.
He said Eskom was looking at the acquisition of technology to remotely control geysers amongst Eskom’s customers, which would enable the switching off of the implements which would help in avoiding load shedding.
“Geysers and water heating consumes the greatest amount of electricity which drives the peak demand, that is between 30% and 50% of household consumption. For every 10 insurance claims, one electric geyser is replaced with a solar water heater that has an upfront cost equal to 10% of the insurance claims. The current take-up of rooftop solar is estimated at less than 5%. For every 1 000 households that install a medium-sized system, 5MW of power is taken off the grid. To reduce one stage of load shedding or 1000MW, 200,000 households need to implement a similar system,” he said.
Source:Business Report
Ghana: Gov’t Budgets Gh¢220M To Support Victims Of Akosombo Dam Spillage
Government of Ghana has allocated an amount of GH¢220 million in the 2024 Budget to support communities affected by the recent Akosombo spillage and floods in the Oti, Savannah, and Bono-East Regions.
Ghana’s Finance Minister, Mr. Ken Ofori-Atta, revealed this on Wednesday, November 15, 2023, during his presentation of the 2024 Budget Statement and Economic Policy in Parliament.
“Mr. Speaker, Government has budgeted an amount of GH¢220 million to support the relief phase for the communities affected by the Akosombo spillage as well as floods upstream in the Oti, Savannah, and Bono-East Regions,” Ofori-Atta stated.
The Finance Minister noted that for the restoration phase, the government, through the Ministry of Agriculture, would allocate additional resources to support the restoration of livelihoods.
“We have requested funding from the World Bank under the IDA Crisis Response Window (CRW) to support the resettlement of the victims, restoration of livelihoods, compensation and reconstruction of infrastructure in the affected communities,” he added.
The Finance Minister also expressed excitement that no lives were lost during the flooding incident caused by the Akosombo dam spillage.
“I convey the sincere appreciation of His Excellency President Akufo-Addo and the entire Government to all groups and individuals who have empathised with, and supported the affected families. It is in this same spirit that we must continue to be grateful to God that no lives have been lost due to the devastating spillage from the Akosombo Dam.”
The state-owned power generation company, VRA, on September 15, 2023, commenced controlled spillage of the Akosombo Dam due to high inflows into the dam.
The spillage, however, resulted in flooding of some communities downstream, displacing thousands of people with some houses submerged.
As part of its humanitarian efforts, the VRA set aside millions of Ghana cedis to provide relief items to ease the burden of the victims.
Aside from VRA, both public and private institutions and individuals have made substantial donations of relief items to victims, with some radio and television stations still soliciting support for them.
Source: https://energynewsafrica.com
Ghana: Gov’t To Waive Import Duties On Electric Vehicles For Eight Years
Government of Ghana has announced a plan to waive import duties on Electric Vehicles (EVs) designated for public transportation for 8 years beginning from 2024.
Last Thursday, Minister for Energy Dr. Matthew Opoku Prempeh, revealed that Ghana currently has about 17,000 plug-in electric vehicles usage in the country.
Presenting the 2024 Budget and Economic Statement to Parliament on Wednesday, November 15, 2023, Minister for Finance Mr. Ken Ofori-Atta disclosed that import duties would also be exempted for semi-knocked down and completely knocked down Electric vehicles brought into the country by registered EV assembly companies for the same 8-year period.
He said government would waive import duties on the import of electric vehicles for public transportation for 8 years as well as extend zero rate of VAT on locally assembled vehicles for 2 more years.
Source: https://energynewsafrica.com
Kenya: Petrol Price Maintained…But Diesel, Kerosene Prices Drop
Kenya has maintained the price of petrol for the next one month, effective November 15 to December 14, 2023 period, while the prices of diesel and kerosene have reduced by Ksh2.00 each ($0.013) for a litre of the commodities.
The Petroleum Regulatory Authority (EPRA) on Tuesday announced that the average landed cost of petrol increased by 2.81%, while diesel went up by 3.28%.
Kerosene, on the other hand, increased by 6.31%.
“In order to cushion consumers from the spike in pump prices as a consequence of the increased landed costs, the government has opted to stabilise pump prices for the November-December 2023 pricing cycle,” EPRA said in a statement posted on X formerly Twitter.
“The National Treasury has identified resources within the current resource envelope to compensate oil marketing companies,” EPRA added.
The East African nation imports all its petroleum products in refined form.
Following the latest update, a litre of petrol in the port city of Mombasa, where fuel lands upon shipping, remains at Ksh214.30 ($1.41).
Diesel will retail at Ksh200.41 ($1.32), while kerosene will go for Ksh199.99 ($1.32).
In the capital Nairobi, a litre of petrol under the new pump price guidelines is Ksh217.36 ($1.47), diesel Ksh203.47 ($1.34) and kerosene Ksh203.06 ($1.34).
The fuel prices in Nairobi are almost identical to the charges in Kenya’s third city Kisumu, fourth city Nakuru, and a major town in Rift Valley, Eldoret.
Mandera, a county located near the Kenya-Somalia border and is 1,025 kilometres northeast of the capital Nairobi, has the highest fuel prices under the new review by EPRA, with a litre of petrol going for Ksh231.36 ($1.52), diesel Ksh217.47 ($1.43) and kerosene Ksh217.06 ($1.43).
Source: https://energynewsafrica.com
Court Orders Biden Administration To Hold Oil And Gas Lease Sale
A Federal Appeals court has ordered the U.S government to hold an oil and gas lease sale for the Gulf of Mexico within 37 days.
It will be the last lease sale for the Gulf of Mexico until 2025, Bloomberg noted in a report.
The obligation to sell drilling rights to the oil and gas industry in the Gulf of Mexico was a stipulation in the Inflation Reduction Act spearheaded by Senator Joe Manchin in exchange for his support for the IRA and its climate stipulations.
The federal government, however, actively looked for ways to avoid the auction, at least in its initial size.
Earlier this year, the Interior Department decided to reduce the size of the area to be auctioned to 67 million acres instead of 73.4 million acres, citing the habitat of a rare whale species that fell within the initial area.
The oil industry challenged the decision in court.
The judge ruled in favor of the plaintiffs.
Noting that the BOEM had failed to justify this last-minute change, District Judge James Cain wrote “The process followed here looks more like a weaponization of the Endangered Species Act than the collaborative, reasoned approach prescribed by the applicable laws and regulations.”
Following this ruling, it was time for the environmentalist camp to respond with its own legal challenge, which it promptly did, trying to cancel the lease sale altogether citing the endangered status of the Rice’s whale.
The court, once again, sided with oil and gas.
“The oil industry fought tooth and nail to tear up basic measures to save one of the most endangered marine mammals in the world,” George Torgun, an attorney with Earthjustice, told Bloomberg.
“This could be the difference between doing the bare minimum to save this species and allowing it to vanish.”
The American Petroleum Institute welcomed the decision and said it would guarantee the supply of affordable and reliable energy to Americans.
Source:Oilprice.com
Nigeria: Govt, U.S. Firm Seal Deal On Renewable Energy
Nigeria has partnered with a United States-based firm, Hecate Global Renewables to develop a sustainable renewable energy sector in the country.
Minister for Innovation, Science and Technology, Chief Uche Geoffrey Nnaji disclosed this on Wednesday when a delegation from Hecate Global paid him a courtesy visit in his office in Abuja.
Nnaji said the partnership with Hecate and other renewable energy companies would boost the country’s quest for industrialization, job creation and the desired economic boom.
According to the minister, partnering with the US form is timely and in line with Renewed Hope Agenda of the present administration.
He said FG believed that completing various renewable energy projects in the country would improve power generation.
Speaking, the Director-General, Energy Commission of Nigeria, (ECN) Dr. Mustapha Abdullahi said that the International Renewable Energy Agency has conducted some studies on Solar Energy which will enhance climate change mitigation of greenhouse gasses as well as improve the health of humanity.
Earlier, Hecate’s Head of Business Development, Sub-Saharan Africa, Ms. Catharine Jimmy Mfere, said the company is one of North America’s largest renewable energy generation and Battery Storage projects that develop, build, own and operate in portfolio utility-scale green generation.
She further stated that their main aim in coming to Nigeria is to collaborate with the Ministry and work together in order to manage the energy sector to a world standard.
Source:https://africa-energy-portal.org/
ExxonMobil Drilling First Lithium Well In Arkansas, Aims To Be A Leading Supplier For Electric Vehicles By 2030
Exxon Mobil Corporation has commenced work on the company’s first phase of North America lithium production in southwest Arkansas, an area known to hold significant lithium deposits.
The product offer will be branded as Mobil Lithium, building on the rich history of deep technical partnership between Mobil and the automotive industry.
“Lithium is essential to the energy transition, and ExxonMobil has a leading role to play in paving the way for electrification.
“This landmark project applies decades of ExxonMobil expertise to unlock vast supplies of North American lithium with far fewer environmental impacts than traditional mining operations,” Dan Ammann, president of ExxonMobil Low Carbon Solutions said in a statement copied to energynewsafrica.com.
In early 2023, ExxonMobil acquired the rights to 120,000 gross acres of the Smackover formation in southern Arkansas – considered one of the most prolific lithium resources of its type in North America.
“South Arkansas is our state’s all-around energy capital, producing oil, natural gas, and now thanks to investments like ExxonMobil’s and their combination of skills and scale, lithium,” said Arkansas Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders.
“My administration supports an all-of-the-above energy strategy that guarantees good, high-paying jobs for Arkansans – and we’ll continue to cut taxes and slash red tape to make that happen.”
Southwest Arkansas has a history as an oil and natural gas producer, and the region’s geology is well understood. ExxonMobil is working with local and state officials to enable the successful scale-up of Arkansas’ emerging lithium industry.
Lithium Production Benefits
After using conventional oil and gas drilling methods to access lithium-rich saltwater from reservoirs about 10,000 feet underground, ExxonMobil will utilize direct lithium extraction (DLE) technology to separate lithium from the saltwater.
The lithium will then be converted onsite to battery-grade material.
The remaining saltwater will be re-injected into the underground reservoirs.
The DLE process produces fewer carbon emissions than hard rock mining and requires significantly less land.
“This project is a win-win-win,” Ammann added. “It’s a perfect example of how ExxonMobil can enhance North American energy security, expand supplies of a critical industrial material, and enable the continued reduction of emissions associated with transportation, which is essential to meeting society’s net-zero goals.”
Lithium is essential to the production of lithium-ion batteries, which are used in electric vehicles, consumer electronics, energy storage systems and other clean energy technologies.
Demand for lithium is expected to quadruple by 2030, and virtually all lithium today is produced outside of North America.
Growing Lithium Production and Low Carbon Solutions
The company is targeting its first lithium production for 2027 and is evaluating growth opportunities globally. By 2030, ExxonMobil aims to be producing enough lithium to supply the manufacturing needs of well over a million EVs per year. Discussions with potential customers, including EV and battery manufacturers, are ongoing.
Source: https://energynewsafrica.com
ExxonMobil Starts Production At Third Offshore Guyana Project
American oil and gas supermajor, ExxonMobil has started production at Payara, Guyana’s third offshore oil development on the Stabroek Block, bringing total production capacity in Guyana to approximately 620,000 barrels per day.
In a statement copied to energynewsafrica.com, the corporation said the prosperity floating, production, storage and offloading (FPSO) vessel is expected to reach initial production of approximately 220,000 barrels per day over the first half of next year as new wells come online.
This additional capacity will be the third major milestone towards reaching a combined production capacity of more than 1.2 million barrels per day on the Stabroek Block by year-end 2027.
“Each new project supports economic development and access to resources that will benefit Guyanese communities while also helping to meet the world’s energy demand,” said Liam Mallon, president of ExxonMobil Upstream Company.
“We’re pleased to work in partnership with the Guyanese government to make reliable energy accessible and sustainable.”
ExxonMobil Guyana anticipates six FPSOs will be in operation on the Stabroek Block by year-end 2027. Yellowtail and Uaru, the fourth and fifth projects, are in progress and will each produce approximately 250,000 barrels of oil per day.
The corporation said it is working with the government of Guyana to secure regulatory approvals for a sixth project at Whiptail.
Prosperity joins the Liza Unity as two of the world’s first FPSOs to be awarded the SUSTAIN-1 notation by the American Bureau of Shipping in recognition of the sustainability of its design, documentation and operational procedures.
ExxonMobil’s Guyana developments are generating around 30% lower greenhouse gas intensity than the average of ExxonMobil’s upstream portfolio. According to the independent research firm Rystad Energy, they are also among the best performing in the world with respect to emissions intensity, outpacing 75% of global oil and gas producing assets.
Some 6,000 Guyanese are now supporting ExxonMobil Guyana’s activities in the country, representing more than two-thirds of the local oil and gas workforce. The company and its direct contractors have spent more than $1.2 billion with more than 1,500 Guyanese suppliers since operations began in 2015.
Production started in December 2019.
ExxonMobil Guyana Limited operates the Stabroek Block and holds 45% interest. Hess Guyana Exploration Ltd. holds 30% interest, and CNOOC Petroleum Guyana Limited holds 25% interest.
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Source: https://energynewsafrica.com
Nigeria: NNPCL Launches New Crude Oil Grade Into International Market
The Nigerian National Petroleum Company, NNPC, Ltd has announced the introduction of Nembe Crude Oil Grade, a new crude oil grade, into the international crude oil market.
The announcement of the Nembe crude blend produced by Aiteo, the Operator of the NNPC/Aiteo Oil Mining Lease, OML, 29 Joint Venture, JV, was made at the ongoing Argus European Crude Conference in London on Tuesday.
OML 29, an asset located onshore Nigeria, is operated by Aiteo Eastern Exploration and Production Ltd, Africa’s leading indigenous hydrocarbon producer, following a historic acquisition from Shell in 2014.
A statement by Olufemi Soneye, Chief Corporate Communications Officer, NNPC Ltd. said that the Nembe crude was previously blended with the popular Bonny Light grade and exported via the Bonny Oil and Gas Terminal.
Mr Soneye said the unique selling point of the Nembe grade with an API gravity was highlighted by both the Aiteo E & P and NNPC Limited Leadership at the Argus Conference in London.
“The Nembe Crude Oil grade also has a low sulphur content and low carbon footprint due to flare gas elimination, fitting perfectly into the required spec of major buyers in Europe.
“Two cargoes of 950,000 barrels each of the Nembe Crude Oil grade have since been exported to France and the Netherlands.
“With its attractive Assay of API 29 and low sulphur content, the Nembe Crude Oil grade commands a premium to the global Brent benchmark.
“With the NNPC-Aiteo OML 29 JV back onstream, Nigeria now boasts of an additional crude oil export of two Cargoes at 950,000 barrels each per month and 1.2 Bcf of export gas monthly,” he said.
Mr Soneye said this remarkable achievement signaled the commencement of activities at Nigeria’s newest crude oil terminal, the Nembe Crude Oil Export Terminal (NCOET), which was licensed in line with the extant laws and Crude Oil Terminal establishment regulations.
He further said the terminal was conceived as a Floating Storage and Offloading Vessel (FSO) with a storage capacity of two million barrels and the ability to offload crude oil to any export tanker from AFRAMAX to Very Large Crude Carriers (VLCC).
“It has a loading capacity of 25,000 barrels per hour and will be exporting over 3.6 million barrels of Crude oil monthly at full scale of operation,” he added.
Mr Soneye said currently, hydrocarbon production from OML 29, which was hitherto constrained due to evacuation challenges owing to the security issues around the Nembe Creek Trunk Line, NCTL, corridor, has been debottlenecked.
This, he said, was through a collaborative and creative approach that led to the innovation of the Alternative Crude Oil Evacuation Solution.
The Argus European Crude Conference 2023 in London is a gathering of energy majors, refiners, NOCs, traders, financial institutions, and other representatives from across the global oil markets.
The event also provides a critical opportunity for business leaders to connect, discuss, share and learn from one another.
Source:https://energynewsafrica.com/