Ghana: Krobo ECG Extends Prepaid Meters Installation

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The Krobo District of the Electricity Company of Ghana is set to continue with its prepaid meter installation in other parts of the District from the second quarter of 2024. The District Manager of ECG  Ing. Christopher Apawu who disclosed this in Somanya on Monday said while prepaid meter installation is still ongoing in the Yilo and Lower Manya Krobo areas, customers in Akrade and Atimpoku will soon get the actual prepaid meters installed for them. He said the process has already begun with pre- installation surveys and education on how the meters work. These will soon be carried out in Akuse and Asutsuare, which are all under the Krobo District of the power distribution company. In all, the District Manager indicated that “above 10,000 meters will be installed for customers in all these areas, adding that “all these replacements will be at the cost of ECG and no customer is expected to pay  for any thing with regards to the replacement. He also indicated that “meter replacements are different from new service requests, hence, while replacements come at no fee to the customer, new service requests are at a fee”. The Manager also advised customers “not to install unauthorised meters in anticipation that they will be replaced as this is illegal”, adding that “we already have data on all the meters to be replaced and any new addition will be identified and culprits will be dealt with accordingly”. Ing. Apawu, when asked about working relationships between the District and customers, indicated that there is a cordial and much better working relationship, revenue is improving, and it is hoped that customer services will keep getting improved for better customer experiences. He also called on customers and by extension, the general public to be supportive of ECG and help protect the company’s installations.       Source: https://energynewsafrica.com  

Leapfrogging Is Not The Quick Energy Fix The World Seems To Think It Will Be

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As the hottest year ever recorded draws to a close, climate change is passing from theory to reality and gaining ever-increasing urgency in statehouses around the world. The goal of achieving net zero CO2 emissions worldwide by 2050 is widely agreed upon by climate experts as necessary to avoid irreversible changes in Earth’s weather patterns that could cause centuries of harm for everyone. The big question, of course, is how do we get there? Who bears what burdens, and how? For the developed world, the answer is strikingly simple: cut, cut, and cut some more. The countries that generate and consume the most energy have brought us to this point, and it’s their responsibility to become more efficient and find new and cleaner ways to maintain their current, comfortable lifestyle. While the cutting part has left much to be desired so far, the new and cleaner part looks promising. The cost of renewable energy (RE) sources such as wind and solar have been drastically reduced over the last decade to become some of the cheapest options available. This is where the question gets thorny: What about the developing world, which has barely even begun to emit carbon, yet desperately wants (and deserves) to catch up to the developed world’s standard of living? How do places like Africa get what they want without erasing progress toward net zero? For many, the answer is leapfrogging. What Is Leapfrogging? In short, leapfrogging is the idea that developing nations can bypass the last century and a half of carbon-heavy energy technology and jump straight to 100% renewable energy with no middle stage. It’s easy to see why this idea is tempting, and why so much talk of it is focused on Africa. Cheap technology is appealing to poor countries, and our equatorial continent between two oceans has some of the greatest potential for solar and wind power to be found anywhere on the planet. Currently, more than 600 million people in sub-Saharan Africa have no access to electricity, and the total population is expected to double in the next three decades, so the demand is already enormous and accelerating by the day. By 2050, one in four people on Earth will be African. Western attendees at climate conferences such as the 2021 and 2022 United Nations Conference of Parties (COP26 and COP27) have opined that the world “cannot afford” for developing countries to follow the same trajectory as Europe, the U.S., and China to reach abundant, reliable energy supply. Mohamed Adow, director of the energy and climate think-tank Power Shift Africa, states that “Africa stands on the cusp of sweeping economic development. Whether this development is powered by clean renewables, or dirty fossil fuels, will go a long way to determining if the world meets the Paris Agreement goal…” Greenpeace urges African leaders “to avoid falling into the fossil fuel trap and lead the continent towards a clean, renewable, affordable and sustainable energy future.” Boiled down, the implication is that Africa should avoid ANY investment in fossil fuels —complete prohibition. Suggesting otherwise in some circles verges on taboo. But is it realistic to expect Africa to go all-in on the latest technology and forego other resources it has in great abundance, like natural gas? Do the numbers back up their assertions? And is it even fair to ask so much from people with so far to go? Not As Cheap As It Sounds Even as solar panels and windmills drop in price, obtaining them is only one part of a much larger equation. Solar arrays, for instance, can be installed on a single home or in a microgrid connected to a small group of residences to power them directly. Multiply this by hundreds or thousands and the arrangement is known as distributed solar energy. Leapfrogging using distributed solar has been described as similar to how the developing world leapt right past landlines and straight to cell phones with seeming ease just in the last couple of decades. If we can do it with communications, then why not energy? Cost, for starters. A basic 8W solar array can cost 10 times more than a cell phone in a single year in Kenya. An 8W system is just enough to power a couple of LED lights and a cell phone charger. If you want to power a TV, a refrigerator, a washing machine, or other energy-intensive appliances, you’ll need a bigger and more costly array. If your village’s microgrid is small, what happens when too many people get refrigerators and air conditioning? Time to increase the size of the grid. And then inevitably, what happens when the sun doesn’t shine? Add storage batteries, or a local power storage facility. Expand from powering homes to industrial and agricultural use? Now your costs are growing exponentially. Realistically, who would stay satisfied for long with just two lights and a phone charger? The difference between distributed cellular and distributed solar is networks. Distributed cellular works because everyone’s cell phone connects to a huge, centralized network of cell towers that are connected to reliable power and do all the work of connecting calls on the back end. Imagine if every home had to have its own cell tower and all the necessary hardware and software to connect to all the other phones in the world, and you can see how quickly that would get very expensive. That is distributed solar’s disadvantage — every separate grid has to do it all, and if one fails, the others can’t pick up the slack. The end result is a patchy, uneven, and unreliable supply of energy that is easily sabotaged by spikes in demand or ebbs in supply. Like cellular, energy works best with economies of scale. Large central networks allow energy demand to be distributed based on supply and demand, with one region’s excess balancing out another’s shortage such that only the largest events can impact the entire grid at once. Can solar and wind grids be built this way? Yes, but to support industrial and agricultural use, it requires a huge investment in land as well as money for a payoff that is currently underwhelming at best. The Benban Solar Farm in Egypt covers more than 37 square kilometers (14.3 square miles) — large enough to be visible from space — but can still only power 420,000 Egyptian homes; a small fraction of the country’s 102 million people. Expanding further might be fine in a country that’s mostly empty desert, but how much land can be set aside in more humid, arable climates where every scrap of farmland is needed to survive? Mixed Energy Won’t Be The End Of The World While renewable energy does look like a great way to get people up and running who are starting with nothing, it clearly isn’t ready to solve all the problems of nations seeking higher levels of prosperity without all the guilt. African countries need to tap the power of the grid and every resource available to them in order to achieve what the West takes for granted every day. That includes fossil fuels, which Africa possesses in abundance, like it or not. But wouldn’t industrializing Africa with fossil fuels lead to climate catastrophe? The answer to that question is often greatly exaggerated. Adding 250 million homes to the grid with 35 kWh/month usage (enough for a TV, refrigerator, and fan), even entirely from coal, would only increase current global greenhouse gas emissions by 0.25%. Of course, no one is suggesting firing up hundreds of coal plants across the continent, but natural gas is widely acknowledged as the cleanest form of fossil fuel, its use for generating electricity is well established, and Africa already has massive amounts of it. Instead of starting at the bottom of the carbon ladder, burning the dirtiest stuff first in its own industrial revolution, Africa is poised to start at the top. The no-carbon approach may not be fully feasible, but a low-carbon approach most certainly is. A Question of Fairness According to a special report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), staying within a 1.5°C maximum average global temperature rise will require a 45% decline in global CO2 emissions from 2010 levels by 2030. In reality, it needs to decline more than twice that fast since global emissions actually grew 10% between 2010 and 2019. In 2021, Africa accounted for just 3.9% of all CO2 emissions worldwide. All of sub-Saharan Africa could triple its electricity use overnight using only natural gas and still account for only a 1% increase in global emissions, so low is its starting point. By combining natural gas with renewable energy to make the best use of both, the increase would certainly be less than that. It is hardly fair for the rest of the world to tell Africa to hold itself back for the “common good” while they continue to belch out 96% of the problem. The solution to climate change is not for the developing world to risk “leapfrogging” over vital steps to industrialization, but for the developed world to do far more to reduce its own output that created the mess in the first place. Africa deserves the chance to improve the quality of life for its people, and it has the resources to solve its own problems if given the chance.         Source: By NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman, African Energy Chamber

Ghana: Africa’s Largest Rooftop Solar Power Project Under Construction In Tema Freezone Enclave

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A private firm Helios Solar Company (Helios), a subsidiary of LMI Holdings is constructing 16.82 MWp rooftop solar at the Tema Freezone enclave in the Republic of Ghana. This would be the largest rooftop solar project in Africa upon completion. Currently, Cornubia Mall’s 5.25 MWp  rooftop solar in Durban, South Africa is Africa’s largest rooftop solar project. The project is intended to supply power to Helios and its partners. It is funded by the International Finance Corporation (IFC) as part of an all-encompassing $30 million clean power and water deal with LMI Holdings to support job creation and greener, more sustainable, and more competitive industrial development in the country. The PV Solar project is designed and engineered by Ghana-based solar energy firm, Dutch and Co. who are the PV EPC and O&M contractor,  and Blossom Enbel Ventures Limited (BEVL) led by Engr. Joseph Makinde, who is the Company CEO, and Lead Project Manager responsible for the grid interconnection. The work of Dutch and Co. involves the installation of the solar system using 29,261 solar panels of the latest N-type technology across a rooftop area of 92,000m2 of the IWC Mega-warehouse located in the Tema Freezone. The two firms served as the Engineering, Procurement, and Construction (EPC) contractors. Their combined expertise ensured the project adhered to international standards and significantly advanced Ghana’s renewable energy infrastructure. A total of 128 Ghanaian nationals are directly employed in the implementation of the solar project. It is projected that the solar system will produce 24,750 MWh of clean, stable and sustainable electricity annually, and will reduce Ghana’s emissions by approximately 11,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide each year, contributing to Ghana’s efforts to address the negative impact of climate change on the country. Last week, Ghana’s Minister for Energy Dr Matthew Opoku Prempeh paid a working visit to the project site. He expressed his delight at the project and his continued support. Chief Executive Officer of LMI Group Holdings, Kojo Aduhene, said the achievement by Helios Solar represents a significant milestone for the company and underscores its commitment to facilitating Ghana’s industrialization ambitions. “As an indigenous Ghanaian company, LMI is committed to the task of facilitating Ghana’s industrialisation ambitions and boosting exports. This partnership with IFC gives LMI the means and space to make big bets in Ghana and beyond. Through this investment, the project will demonstrate how the private sector can bring effective solutions to development challenges. Helios Solar of LMI Holdings seek to support Ghana’s industrialisation ambitions for a greener and more sustainable future and support job creation,” said Mr. Aduhene. Kyle Kelhofer, IFC’s Senior Country Manager for Ghana, also said “This project demonstrates how the private sector can bring effective solutions to development challenges and support job creation. Through this investment, IFC’s first that is funding both infrastructure and development in an industrial special economic zone in sub-Saharan Africa, IFC is supporting Ghana’s industrialization ambitions for a greener and more sustainable future”. Commenting on the solar rooftop project, Dutch and Co.’s General Manager said, “According to the World Economic Forum, the African continent has huge solar energy potential which is significantly untapped. We are proud to be playing our part in changing this narrative by designing and installing what will be Africa’s largest solar rooftop project on behalf of Helios and LMI Holdings and to assist Ghana in meeting its climate change targets.     Source: https://energynewsafrica.com  

Nigeria: Babajide Agunbiade Appointed Non-Executive Member Of Dorman Long

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Dorman Long Engineering Limited, a leading oilfield engineering and fabrication company in the Federal Republic of Nigeria, West Africa, has appointed Engr. (Dr) Babajide Agunbiade, FNSE as a new Independent Non-Executive Director on its board. His appointment was announced alongside the appointment of Chris Ijeli as new Managing Director of the company. As the CEO of Alpha Energy Resources, a diversified conglomerate with interests in offshore production and mining, he is one of the world’s leading offshore production experts and one of only 13 Subject matter experts globally in Subsea production systems. He brings decades of experience to his new role in which he will continue to support Dorman Long’s focus on making a substantial impact not only on the industry but in the communities in which it operates, and beyond. With the appointment of the two esteemed experts driving and supporting strategic growth and development, Dorman Long Engineering is poised to remain at the forefront of the engineering industry. Since its establishment in 1949, Dorman Long has remained committed to furthering the growth of the engineering sector in Nigeria and the sub-Saharan African region.     Source: https://energynewsafrica.com

Ivory Coast: Eni Plans To Invest $10B In Offshore Baleine Field

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Italian oil and gas supermajor, Eni has announced plans to invest $10 billion toward the development of the Baleine field offshore Ivory Coast,West Africa. The investment will be made in three phases between 2023 and 2027 and will result in the production of 200,000 barrels of crude oil per day (bpd). Oil and gas production from the field began in late August 2023, two years after the field’s discovery. Estimated to contain up to 2.5 billion barrels of oil and 3.3 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, first production resulted in 30,000 bpd in 2023. “With a total investment estimated at $10 billion, the Baleine project will have a lasting impact on our economy,” Ivorian  Minister for Mines, Oil and Energy, Mamadou Sangafowa Coulibaly said. Located off the country’s eastern coast, the Baleine field extends through Blocks CI-101 and CI-802, where Eni serves as operator with an 83% stake alongside its partner, national oil company Petroci, which holds the remaining 17% stake. In addition to reducing Ivory Coast’s dependence on gas imports, the project is expected to become the first emissions free development project in Africa under Scopes 1 and 2 of the global standard Greenhouse Gas Protocol.

Uganda: Regional Court Dismisses Suit Challenging East Africa Pipeline Project

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An attempt to stop the ongoing East Africa Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) project has been unsuccessful as East African Court of Justice on Wednesday dismissed a petition seeking to halt the $4bn (£3.1bn) project. According to a report by BBC, the court ruled that the case was filed too late and was therefore time-barred and beyond its jurisdiction. The 1,443km (896-mile) East Africa Crude Oil Pipeline (Eacop), which is being constructed by the Ugandan and Tanzanian governments along with TotalEnergies and China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) has faced pushback from local communities and rights and environmental groups. The groups say the project is displacing communities from their land, desecrating graves along the pipeline route and causing environmental harm. “This judgement marks a continuation of how the global north and various government institutions in Africa are blind to the destruction of the environment and the impact oil and gas has on the climate,” civil society group Natural Justice said in a statement. Natural Justice and the other three civil society organisations that filed the case in 2020 said they would appeal against the decision.   Source: https://energynewsafrica.com  

Dubai: Ghana’s Energy Minister, CNNC Top Officials Hold Talks On Nuclear Energy

Ghana’s Minister for Energy, Dr. Matthew Opoku Prempeh has held discussions with officials of China National Nuclear Corporation (CNNC) in Dubai, UAE, to seek collaboration as Ghana prepares to announce the vendor country and technology option for its first nuclear power plant to be situated in either Central or Western region. CNNC President Gu Jun was present at the meeting with some senior officials. China operates 55 nuclear reactors making it the third leading nuclear power producer in the world. According to data by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), China is currently constructing 24 new reactors to increase its nuclear power capacity. In a post on Facebook after the meeting, Minister of Energy, Dr Matthew Opoku Prempeh said the meeting is in furtherance of Ghana’s keenness on including nuclear energy in its energy mix to meet the foreseen growth of energy demand. “I have no doubt that our quest to establish out first nuclear power plant will soon yield results,” Dr Opoku Prempeh said. Ghana is hoping to operate nuclear power plant by 2030.       Source: https://energynewsafrica.com

Nigeria: Federal Gov’t Signs 12000 MW Power Deal With Germany’s Siemens

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Nigeria has signed a power generation agreement with Germany to produce about 12000 MW to increase the country’s power generation capacity. The agreement was signed on the sidelines of the United Nations Climate Conference (COP28) taking place at the Expo City in Dubai. President of Nigeria Bola Ahmed Tinubu was present when the agreement was signed by the Managing Director of the Federal Government of Nigeria Power Company, Kenny Anue, and the Managing Director of Siemens in charge of Africa, Nadja Haakansson. Speaking on the agreement, Anue reiterated the commitment of President Tinubu to the development of power infrastructure in the country, which he noted, is critical to the ongoing reforms. According to him, electricity and financing are at the heart of the economic reform agenda of the Tinubu administration, adding that the PPI by design encapsulates both elements with the support of partners, Siemens Energy and the financiers that are backed by the German Government. Addressing the President, Anue noted: “Mr. President, with your strong and dynamic leadership through the Minister of Power, now we seek to exploit or expedite what was already a worthwhile a programme in the PPI through this accelerated agreement today. “Some of the things that have been achieved erstwhile by the Federal Government have been the establishment of the FGN Power Company as the special purpose vehicle for the implementation of the project.” He said the German Government has nominated the mandated lead arrangers and financiers, adding that Siemens energy has also successfully delivered 10 units of power transformers and 10 units of mobile substations. In his remarks, Chairman of Siemens Energy Supervisory Board, Joe Kaeser, traced the history of the initial agreement to the Muhammadu Buhari administration in 2018, expressing delight that both parties have now been able to drive the process forward. He said: “I’m particularly happy to be here tonight to witness the signing of the Presidential Initiative for Power because in 2018, the former president, Buhari, wanted me to come to Abuja and explain to him what we did in Egypt. “And I said Mr. President, Egypt has 80 million (people) and we could use 14 gigawatts and Nigeria has 200 million people. So, we could actually need more gigawatts. “Now, after five years, I’m really happy that this agreement that has the spirit of supplying energy to the greater good of Nigerian people has been taken to new level. Thank you very much for doing that. And as we say in Germany good things take time as we have seen tonight.” Speaking on the project, the Minister of Power, Adebayo Adelabu, said the target of the PPI is to add 12,000mw of electricity to the national grid. He said with the signing, yesterday, the process would now proceed apace to ensure constant supply of electricity to Nigerians. He said: “Of course, we knew that there were a lot of delays between 2018 and now that we have not really made significant achievement in terms of proceeding with the contract signed in 2018 because of a lot of factors; some were natural, some human, some were processes. “We also had COVID in 2020, which made the execution of the project slow. But now, it shows that we are ready to move forward with the Siemens projects. “It shows a commitment between the governments of both countries to proceed with this project, which we believe will go a long way in improving the performance of the power sector in Nigeria. “This is an agreement that has to do with end-to-end fixing in terms of grid stabilisation of the entire transmission grid in the Nigerian power sector, which will eventually improve the power supply in terms of regularity, in terms of functionality and in terms of affordability in the years to come. “We are very happy that we’re able to sign this agreement tonight. And in the next couple of months we will witness a lot of activities on the presidential power initiatives project.” On the financial implications, he revealed that the project would be financed under the government export credit facility that is being provided by a couple of German banks to Nigeria. He added: “The original agreement we had was for $2.3 billion. But what we have is up to date, just in region of $60 million, which has to do with the importation of the 10 transformers and the 10 power mobile substations, which Siemens have delivered to the country. “They have been commissioned and we are in the process of installation of these transformers. So far, it has cost us $60 million dollars.” Among Nigerian officials present at the ceremony were Attorney-General of the Federation, Lateef Fagbemi; Minister of Aviation, Festus Keyamo; Power, Adelabu; Environment, Balarabe Lawal; Transportation, Said Alkali; Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr. Dorris Anite and Agriculture, Abubakar Kyari.             Source: https://energynewsafrica.com  

Ghana: ECOWAS Commission Launches ROGEAP In Accra

The ECOWAS Commission on Monday launched its Regional Off-Grid Electricity Access Project (ROGEAP) in Accra, capital of Ghana to raise awareness about the $333.3 million funding available for private sector players in the renewable energy space. The project is funded by World Bank, with co-financing from the Clean Technology Fund (CTF) and Directorate General of International Cooperation (DGIS) of the Government of the Netherlands. It is intended to increase electricity access of households, businesses, and public institutions using modern stand-alone solar technology through a harmonised regional approach. Ghana’s Minister for Energy Dr. Matthew Opoku Prempeh in a speech read for him the by the Deputy Director for Power In-Charge of Renewable Energy at the Ministry of Energy, Ing. Seth Mahu lamented that half of the 400 Million ECOWAS population do not have access to electricity which therefore, makes the off-grid electricity project very important. According to him, it is highly significant that members within the West African States streamline policies upgrade their human resource capital, business models, financing and other critical ingredients in order to scale up off-grid electrification in the West African sub-region. According to the Energy Minister, the International Energy Agency (IEA) identifies the off-grid sector as one of the critical strategies to accelerate electrification projects to achieve UN SDG7, adding that it is therefore imperative that ECOWAS creates the right policy and regulatory incentives, remove policy barriers, and provide market incentives to unlock development financing and private sector capital for rapid investment in the off-grid electrification agenda with a multi-tier perspective. “Decisive, smart and timely solutions are needed if we must avoid missing the SDG7 target. “We need home-grown solutions and partnership to develop the off-grid electrification market. I therefore applaud the World Bank, the Climate Technology Fund, the Netherlands Government for showing commitment and leadership in this regard”, he emphasized. For ROGEAP to succeed, Dr. Opoku Prempeh also suggested that ECOWAS needs strong social and political commitment as members assuring that Ghana is ready to lead urging them to collectively to remove trade barriers including those within the ECOWAS Common External Tariff Agreement so that they can create the market and economy of scale to drive down prices of off-grid renewable energy electrification solutions. As a leading example in the sub- region, the Energy Minister said Ghana has over 88.8% electricity access now and aims to cover the entire country by 2024. Touching on efforts Ghana is making in the area of mini-grid, Dr. Opoku Prempeh said the country is targeting the construction of some 200 mini grids by the end of this decade. Five min-grids are in operation, three under construction, and thirty-five under procurement funding from the World Bank, the Swiss Government, the African Development Bank, the Climate Investment Fund and the Government of Ghana. The Coordinator of ROGEAP, Sylla El Hadji, described the project as a game-changer in the provision of electricity to hard-to-reach communities in Africa. He urged the beneficiary countries to work together to ensure the effective implementation of the project to benefit their citizens.       Source:https://energynewsafrica.com

Oil Prices Retreat As OPEC+ Cuts Another 684KBPD, Brazil Joins OPEC+

Oil prices began to retreat on Thursday afternoon as it became clear that OPEC+ members were agreeing to voluntary cuts beginning in the new year, and that those cuts would be announced only by each member country instead of by the group as a whole. OPEC+ announced during the full OPEC+ meeting on Thursday that because all the cuts agreed were voluntary, they would be announced not by the group, but by the individual member states. Immediately following the meeting’s kickoff, it was also announced that Brazil would join the OPEC+ group effective in January. Three weeks ago, OPEC’s Secretary General HE Haitham al-Ghais said that the group’s door was open should Brazil wish to join. Brazil has a goal of substantially increasing its crude oil production to become the world’s fourth-largest producer by 2030. In September, Brazil exported $3.92 billion in crude oil, while importing $681 million, according to Observatory of Economic Complexity data. This level of exports is a 13% increase year over year, with China as the primary destination. Brent crude oil prices, which had been trading up around 1.5% during the JMMC meeting, sank to +0.16% on the day in the absence of an announced production strategy from the group’s leadership. WTI slipped into the red with a loss of 3.43% on the day following the full meeting. The specifics of what was agreed to for the first quarter of 2024 among the OPEC+ members:
  • Algeria agreed to cut oil production by another 51,000 bpd
  • Kazakhstan agreed to reduce oil output by an additional 82,000 bpd
  • Saudi Arabia agreed to extend its 1 million bpd output cut
  • Russia’s Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak said that it would deepen voluntary oil export cuts by 300,000 bpd, and said it would roll over the existing 500,000 bpd vountary production cuts
  • Oman will cut another 42,000 bpd
  • Iraq will voluntarily cut 211,000 bpd
  • Kuwait will cut 135,000 bpd
  • The UAE will cut 163,000 bpd
Angola not only didn’t announce an additional voluntary cut, but it publicly rejected its current quota, and reiterated its proposal for a 1.18 million barrel quota beginning in January. It added that it will not stick to the new OPEC quota. Not including cut extensions from Saudi Arabia and Russia, the additional voluntary cuts beginning in January and carrying through to the end of March is 684,000 bpd. All together, the total voluntary cuts for the first quarter is 2.184 million bpd. The next OPEC+ meeting is scheduled for June 1, 2024.         Source:Oilprice.com  

Nigeria: Kaduna Electric Apprehends Man For Stealing Power

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Kaduna Electric, one of the power distribution companies in the Federal Republic of Nigeria has apprehended a man for allegedly stealing electricity. According to the power distributor, the suspect one Opafola Abiodun of No. 18 Mopa Road, was apprehended during a night operation. A statement signed by the Head Corporate communications of the company, Abdulaziz Abdullahi, on Thursday, November 30, 2023, alleged that Abiodun had been tapping electricity from the 11KV Leventis Feeder and was caught in an external by-pass on meter number 04190482713. Opafola was disconnected from the power supply on Sept. 28, and charged ₦104,823. “Surveillance personnel on a routine monitoring operation caught him red-handed on November 24; prompt action was taken, and the matter was reported to the police, leading to his arrest. “The case is currently under the jurisdiction of Kaduna Electric’s security unit, preparing for prosecution. “In response to the repeated offences, a second charge of ₦92,774.39 has been booked against the accused. It stated that the incidence underscored Kaduna Electric’s unwavering commitment to contending illegal activities within its service area and ensuring a fair and lawful distribution of electricity to all customers.     Source: https://energynewsafrica.com

Kenya: Geothermal Development Company Signs Deal To Supply Cement Factory With Steam

Kenya’s Geothermal Development Company (GDC) has signed a 20-year deal to supply a cement manufacturing company with steam for use in running its operations. GDC and Karsan Ramji & Sons Limited, manufacturers of Ndovu Cement, inked the deal on Tuesday, November 28, 2023. GDC will provide Karsan Ramji with 40 tons per hour of geothermal steam to be used for power generation and the heat to dry during cement production. This is the first of its kind agreement in Kenya where an industrialist is seeking to generate own geothermal power for the manufacturing process. It is estimated that in such an arrangement between corporates can dramatically cut the cost of production. According to GDC Chief Executive Officer Paul Ngugi, the deal marks a significant milestone in the history of energy, especially geothermal. Ngugi noted that the direct use of geothermal energy is a versatile area that has well been demonstrated in the Menengai steam wells. At Menengai, Ngugi said there is direct-use projects in heating greenhouses and aqua ponds, milk pasteurisation, and even in drying of cereals. Speaking during the signing ceremony, GDC Managing Director and CEO Paul Ngugi said this marks a departure from the conventional power generation into a promising realm of captive power and thermal heat. “Indeed, it is refreshing to see new investments made with energy as a key plank. Such investments will not only, in the long run, help to cut the cost of energy, they will make our products and services competitive and attractive. Investment of this nature will create direct and indirect job opportunities that our country so desperately yearns,” said Mr. Ngugi. “We are happy that Karsan Ramji found it fit to become part of the geothermal community. The investment they are going to make in this project is a vote of confidence on geothermal energy as a baseload, its affordability, and green credentials. This model is the future of geothermal. We are optimistic that more investors will find value by emulating this approach.” “As part of our market expansion strategy, we plan to construct our second cement grinding plant in Nakuru that will also have a separate raw material drying plant,” said Kishor Varsani, the CEO of Karsan Ramji & Sons Limited. The factory will have a capacity of producing between 600 and 800 tonnes of cement per day and will directly employ approximately 120 people and over 1,500 indirectly. Varsani said at Ndovu Cement, they have a strong commitment to the environment, and in 2021 made a strategic decision to gradually wean off fossil fuel and embrace renewable forms of energy in their operations. “Our target is to have 100 percent of the energy requirements in all of our facilities being met by renewable energy sources by the year 2040. It is in this spirit that we have chosen to partner with GDC for our energy requirements,” he said.   Source:https://energynewsafrica.com

Ghana: Torentco Pulls Out Of TOR Partnership Deal; Fingers Opoku Prempeh

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After several weeks of being the subject of discussion in the Ghanaian media space over its planned partnership deal with state-owned Tema Oil Refinery, the embattled private entity, Tema Energy and Processing Limited, formerly Torentco Assets Management Limited has shockingly announced its withdrawal from the partnership. The firm did not walk out of the proposed partnership without letting Ghanaians know who is behind their troubles as they pointed accusing fingers at the country’s Minister for Energy Dr. Matthew Opoku Prempeh as the person behind their troubles. In a statement by the Board of Tema Energy and Processing Limited which narrated how they became part of the entities that submitted proposals for selection as a strategic partner for the revamping of ailing Tema Oil Refinery (TOR), it said the leadership of General Transport Petroleum and Chemical Workers Union (GTPCWU) approached their partner in the person of Mr Asante Berko, a former Managing Director of the refinery, to assist to revive the refinery since it was sinking. The TEPL Board said when the current TOR Board was constituted there were two proposals and alleged that the Minister wanted the TOR management and Board to work with the proposal from the two and not them. “The Minister of Energy who was expecting the other 2 proposals to be rubber stamped, formally wrote to the board to suspend looking at other proposals and bring everything to his office for approval,” TEPL Board said. It added that “the pace at which we had moved we suspect has unnerved people and right on cue has led to a wave of recent attacks.” “We always suspected that the Minister of Energy was using the leadership of GTPWU as his “umkhonto ithiphu”(it means spearhead an attack or campaign in Zulu language)but it is shocking that venerable institutions such as the Attorney General’s office and OSP can be pulled into it,” TEPL stated. “Fighting the state to do a complex transaction that revolves around reviving a moribund asset is tiring and unfortunately we are no longer interested. We wish you luck in pursuing the process with one of the many lucrative offers. “As to the question of whether we lacked capacity, all one had to do was wait for us to perform within the 60 days windows and their fears would have been confirmed, alas, I suspect they were afraid of the answer and so could not take a chance,” the statement asserted. Troubling as it was, your management approached transaction counsel to do a due diligence report on the shell company knowing very well and ignoring the deal structure was not complete and then passing out the draft report to unauthorized individuals for the sole aim of misrepresenting what our proposal was. If we did not have intimate knowledge of your balance sheet this among other breaches of the NDA we have signed and will warrant a lawsuit, the board said. The statement continued that “It was not lost on us that the moment we concluded in signing the key bloc of the transaction, which was a Processing Agreement, the first scale of media attacks started, with all sort of wild accusations. Journalists started calling to accuse us of doing a “bad deal” which after a minute of discussion realized that they knew nothing of what they spoke of.” “We advised the management and Board to treat our proposal as an academic exercise and do what the Minister wants but to the credit of Jerry Hinson he wanted to discharge his duties (then) with the level of seriousness that it deserved,” TEPL said in their letter to the acting Managing Director of TOR Daniel Osei Appiah. Recently, General Transport Petroleum and Chemical Workers Union (GTPCWU) petitioned the Office of the Special Prosecutor to investigate TOR -Torentco transaction because it lacks transparency. The Union also noted that the company in question lacks competence and finance capacity to enter into lease agreement with TOR. In response to the petition, the Special Prosecutor directed Management of TOR to suspend the transaction noting that it has commenced investigation into the deal. Few days afterwards, the Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Godfred Dame, also in a letter made a damming opinion on the deal stating the compact lacks competence and financial capacity to take over the running of the state owned refinery. His opinion was based on due diligence report on the deal commissioned by management of TOR. “From the DDR, TAML has no financial and technical capacity to undertake the proposed transaction.” “TAML has no established affiliation with Vitol or with any other company, which has the needed funds and technical capacity to undertake the Proposed Lease Transaction and without whose support TAML lacks the financial and technical capacity to undertake its obligation under the Proposed Lease Transaction,” it stated. The Ministry further indicated that the TAML lacked the requisite licenses and documentation to undertake the proposed lease transaction, proceeding with the project would therefore be contrary to the law. Below are letters from OSP, Attorney-General and Tema Energy and Processing Limited. TERMINATION LETTER TOR-2_231129_165025 Attorney General Letter-TOR-15 Nov 2023         Source: https://energynewsafrica.com

Powering To Empower- How Clean Energy Is Driving Development In Rural Ghana (Article)

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In the heart of Bui, a small town located in the Bono Region of Ghana, the Bui Power Authority’s Hydro-Solar Hybrid plant has made significant strides in revolutionizing the energy landscape and propelling local industries forward sustainably. Ghana, like many African nations, has long grappled with energy access and reliability issues, hindering industrialization in both urban and rural communities. Between late 2012 and 2016, Ghana experienced a severe electricity crisis called “Dumsor”. This crisis was caused by a drought from the Volta lake that threatened electricity production from the Akosombo dam; Ghana’s largest energy generating station. The crisis triggered a severe power rationing program resulting in heavy load shedding throughout the country. At the height of this crisis, consumers faced at least 16-hour power cuts within every 24-hour period. Although the country has made significant strides in increasing electricity access to 86% – ranking 1st in Sub-Saharan Africa – the reliability and affordability of power remain ongoing challenges and Ghana still faces persistent power supply challenges. To address these shortfalls, the Government of Ghana introduced policy interventions in 2019 aimed at boosting the utilization of renewable energy and fulfilling its commitments to achieving Sustainable Development Goal 7 (SDG 7). The key of these interventions was the Government’s Renewable Energy Master plan, which sought to among others, increase the proportion of renewable energy in the national energy generation mix from 42.5 MW in 2015 to 1,363.63 MW by 2030. Through this, Ghana integrated some renewable energy solutions into its national grid which also includes a Hydro-Solar Hybrid (HSH) plant at Banda in the Bui enclave. This HSH plant, managed by the Bui Power Authority, has a hydro capacity of 404MW and a solar capacity of 55MW. The plant makes use of Huawei’s Smart Photovoltaic (PV) Solution to fuel the national grid which supports communities, factories, enterprises and small-scale businesses of over 24,000 locals in the Banda community. The locals, whose primary occupation is cashew and sugarcane farming, rely heavily on the energy produced to operate the machinery required for planting, harvesting, and processing of these raw materials into valuable end products, such as sugar and cashew oil. Among these is a Cashew Nut Processing Factory located within the Bui enclave called Bui Cash-U Factory. Covering an expansive area of about 2000 m2, the factory currently, employs about 150 people to processes between 6 to 8 tons of cashews daily. Beyond providing employment opportunities, the factory also focuses on equipping locals of the Bono Region in the cashew nut value chain business. “Through this factory, I have learnt to how to plant, harvest and select the best cashew for processing”, said Afeke, a worker at the factory. She further indicated that factory provides a stable and better source of income as compared to her previous seasonal job. Cashew holds significant importance for Ghana, especially in terms of foreign exchange revenue.  According to a United Nations Conference on Trade and Development report, the country was the world’s largest exporter of cashews in 2021 earning over $128.70 million from cashew nut exports in the first quarter. As home to 10 active cashew processing plants, Ghana has the capacity to process 65,000 tons of raw cashews annually. The country’s cashew industry currently employs over 800,000 people directly and indirectly across the cashew supply chain, including farmers, factory workers, buyers, and exporters. Huawei’s Smart PV Solution extends beyond power generation. By collaborating with Meinergy, the owner of the cashew factory and the Bui Power Authority, the company seeks to provide industrial training for 800 locals in the cashew nut value chain business. Speaking on the subject matter, the First Lady of Ghana, H.E Rebecca Akufo-Addo indicated that, her office remains committed to working closely with industry partners and Huawei, to help bridge the gender divide and transform the lives of Ghanaians. According to her, “the world is going green and projects such as the Hydro-Solar Hybrid plant fueling activities of a huge cashew factory at a rural town, is an indication that Ghana is on the right path towards the realization of a sustainable and eco-friendly digital future.” In harnessing the power of renewable energy, this initiative does not only address the nation’s energy challenges but also paves the way for economic growth, bringing hope to rural communities and empowering them for a brighter future. References
  • Kupzig, N. and Ackah, C. (2023) The effect of an electricity crisis on firms – a case study of Dumsor in Ghana, SSRN.
  • Cashing in on cashews: Africa must add value to its nuts (2021) UNCTAD.
  Source: Huawei