News24 – AFP, 2013-12-04
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| A man works along a road near turbines at Ashegoda wind farm in Ethiopia's northern Tigray region. (Jenny Vaughan, AFP) |
Ashegoda -
From the sky, the 84 glimmering white turbines at Ashegoda wind farm shoot up
from the ground like massive spokes, standing out high amid vast expanses of
yellow wheat.
Ethiopia's
northern Tigray region, mostly populated by cattle farmers who grow the
country's staple grains, is an unlikely site for a modern French-run wind farm,
let alone sub-Saharan Africa's largest.
With its multi-billion
dollar projects in wind, hydropower, solar and geothermal energy, Ethiopia's
pioneering green energy efforts aim to supply power to its 91 million people
and boost its economy by exporting power to neighbouring countries.
"Ethiopia
stands alone in Africa as using green energy for transformative growth,"
said Ahmed Soliman, from Britain's Chatham House think tank.
Current
energy production capacity stands at 2 177MW, with ambitions to reach 10 000MW
by 2015.
Ashegoda's
turbines, which tower above young boys in tattered clothes watching over their
livestock, have a total capacity of 120MW, making it the biggest on the
sub-continent.
Growing
interest
The project
was built by France's Vergnet Group, and is the first of several planned wind
farms in the country, including a 204MW Chinese-built site under construction
in the southeast.
Ashegoda,
780km from Addis Ababa, is part of ambitious plans to transform Ethiopia into a
middle-income, carbon-neutral country by 2025.
The $313m
wind farm, funded by the French government and several private French banks, is
an indication of growing interest from European companies in Ethiopia, where
Chinese, Indian and Turkish investments are also growing.
Both France
and Ethiopia's government are "very enthusiastic to reinforce even more
links", said Romano Coutrot, site manager at the wind farm, adding
Ashegoda is one of Vergnet's "most important" projects globally.
The project
took four years to complete and became fully operational in October, but faced
several hurdles along the way.
Soaring up
to 80m high, the turbines had to be driven to landlocked Ethiopia on semi-paved
roads from Djibouti, which posed a major challenge.
Completion
was further delayed to relocate the site 5km north after the aviation authority
said it was interfering with its airspace.
Coutrot
admitted that doing business in Ethiopia can be challenging, with
infrastructure shortfalls and crippling bureaucracy.
"The
taxation system, customs, the relationship with authorities, it's sometimes a
bit difficult," he said, speaking from his office on site amid the
imposing turbines.
Ethiopia
ranks 125 out of 189 countries on the World Bank's ease of doing business
index.
"Government
services like customs, land issues, other government services are
improving," said Minister for Water and Energy Alemayehu Tegenu, insisting
the government was committed to improving conditions for investors.
Aggressive
investments
The
government says its investment in green energy is a central pillar of its
development plan, crucial in a country where the majority of people live on
less than $2 a day.
"Health,
education, communication, water supply, industry, these all need sustainable
and reliable power supply," Alemayehu said.
Only 53% of
the country currently has access to electricity, with large swathes of
Ethiopia's rural regions in the dark and relying on firewood for basic
household needs.
"Unless
you have this kind of ambitious plan, the pace of population pressure will take
over and you won't see any change," said Belay Simane, professor of
environment at Addis Ababa University.
The country
is already exporting power to Djibouti and Sudan, with a line to transport
energy to Kenya under construction.
Soliman
said it will solidify Ethiopia's role as a leader in green energy in the
region.
"Ethiopia
will have a competitive regional advantage, not having to rely on economically
and technically less-feasible sources of energy such as gas or oil to meet growing
demands, which many East African countries are doing," Soliman said.
The hard
currency earned from these power exports will go toward increasing the number
of renewable energy projects in Ethiopia, according to the government.
Heavy
investment in the green energy sector extends beyond economics: the country is
keen to avoid the mistakes of countries such as China or India, that
experienced rapid economic growth but with grave environmental costs.
"If we
invest in these resources, we can develop in a green way without affecting the
environment like they did in Europe," said Fisseha Gebremichael, Ethiopian
Electric Power Corporation's Ashegoda project manager.
Alemeyahu
said he hopes Ethiopia's aggressive investments in wind and other renewable
energy resources will persuade other African countries to follow suit.
"We
don't want to keep African populations in the dark for a long time, we have to
run very fast to access light for industry and for social and economic
development," he said.
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