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Ethiopia continues solar push into homes
Published in Bikya Masr on 01 - 09 - 2013

ADDIS ABABA: The Ethiopian Ministry of Water and Energy reported over 13,200 home solar systems has been installed over the past nine months in rural areas which are not connected to the national electric grid.
The Ministry told to Ethiopian News Agency that the installation is part of the yearlong project which was launched in December 2012 at a cost of 208.8 million Ethiopian birr secured from World Bank.
According to the report, the project has so far benefited more than 13,200 households across the country.
Estimates suggest a total of 25,000 households will benefit in total as the project comes to conclusion in November 2013.
Ethiopia is continuing to look for alternative energy sources and appears to have found possibilities in clean energy. The Ministry of Water & Energy (MoWE) and the Environmental Protection Authority (EPA), have setup a joint steering committee that will develop and implement clean and renewable energy projects which can later be entered into the carbon trading scheme.
A dozen people, three from the MoWE, and nine from the EPA were selected as committee members during a meeting between the two parties, on April 10, 2013, the ministry reported.
The committee will create detailed ideas, look for financing and also work towards entering the projects into the carbon trading scheme, according to Tesfaye Alemayehu, co-ordinator of the bio-energy sector at MoWE, who is also a member of the committee.
Three of the four projects now handed over to MoWE are expected to reduce just over 65.72 thousand tonnes of Carbon-dioxide and greenhouse gases. The fourth, the electric project, if implemented, could save 460.8Gw/hr.
In January, the Development Bank of Ethiopia said that in the coming months it would create an initial $20 million fund to promote and get the geothermal energy projects off the ground. It's all part of a private sector initiative funded by the World Bank, with another $20 million to come later.
Last May, the World Bank granted Ethiopia $40 million to help accelerate the development of renewable energy projects in the country's private sector.
The Development Bank of Ethiopia said that it is in discussions with several interested parties and is collaborating with the World Bank.
The money will help cover the costs of early exploration and drilling activities. When drilling proves successful, the bank will invite private investors to lead geothermal projects and develop power plants in Ethiopia.
Cluff Geothermal – a British company involved in developing Kenya's first geothermal project, in Menengai – has been shortlisted.
"In Ethiopia we have conducted a scoping environmental impact assessment on a site close to the town of Metehara," says Cluff managing director George Day.
"The government of Ethiopia has strong commitments to developing geothermal as part of its energy mix. We must remain patient while the country's regulatory framework is prepared for independent power producers such as ourselves. We are confident that this will be in the next 6 months."
The country has also been keen to boost its solar power capacity.
Miskir Negash, head of corporate relations at the Ethiopian Electric Power Corporation, the state monopoly electricity provider, said recently that "the relative expense of solar energy compared to wind energy or hydro, especially for big projects, relegates its usefulness to smaller-scale projects."
Still, the five-year Growth and Transformation Plan does target another relatively costly power source, geothermal energy, to contribute 70 MW of power to the grid, more than twice the power targeted from solar energy.
A recent survey by the Chinese firm Hydrochina Corporation estimated Ethiopia's solar power potential to be around 2 trillion MW hours, with the northern part of the country having the greatest potential.
One organization trying to fill the gap in the provision of solar energy to the rural population is the Solar Energy Foundation. The German-founded international nongovernmental organization works to provide electrification to rural areas using solar technology and lighting.
Experts have told Bikyanews.com they believe more effort can be made in solar energy in the near future, but investment is needed.
And Germany seems to be responding.
Berlin-based Solarkiosk has developed a solar powered vending kiosk and it has launched the first units in Ethiopia, as part of the company's pilot program to bring solar power to the country.
According to the German company, "it is going where established businesses have not yet gone."
It added that "every kiosk is designed as a kit of parts, only to be assembled upon arrival at its target location. The packages are lightweight, do not require a container and are thus easily transportable to remote, off-road areas – in extreme cases, on the back of donkeys."
Much of the kiosks are to be manufactured centrally in Germany to ensure quality and "durability," others will be made locally in Ethiopia, using local goods such as bamboo, wood, adobe, stone, metal and recycled products.
"After assembly, despite its light weight, the kiosk is safe and secure, an essential quality in communities where even the smallest products are of comparably high value. The entire structure is firmly anchored in the ground. Special detailing of all joints and assembly points on the inside of the building shell makes tinkering with the kiosk from the outside difficult," the company said.
Solarkiosk added that this solar vending stand "is aimed at the kind of places where people sometimes have to travel for days to charge their mobile phones."
Solar panels on the stand's roof produce electricity to provide enough power for solar lighting, mobile phone and car-battery charging, a computer and even a solar fridge.
BN


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