Minister for Energy, Boakye Agyarko, is hopeful that within the next 18months, 50 megawatts of solar power will be added to the national grid to augment country’s energy delivery.
Speaking to B&FT after the
signing of Memorandum of Understanding on renewable energy between the
government and ENI Ghana, Mr. Agyarko said: “We are looking at an 18months
development and delivery time lines but it will all depend on a number of
factors within their control; but, our expectation is that if all go on well
within 18months we should be able to start loading power from the solar systems
through the same switchyard as Bui Power Authority’s Hydro onto the national
grid.”
The Bui Power Authority, he said,
has completed its switch yard to evacuate the full additional 250 megawatt to
come online.
“What has not happened yet is ENI
and Bui Power Authority sitting down and looking at the engineering of the
solar portion and the development of the farm; that is something we have to
leave to both sides to work out diligently. But within 18 months these
engineering solutions and delivery are possible.”
Mr. Agyarko explained that
government is playing a facilitating role with the construction of the solar
system, since the project is entirely an ENI project.
“It is an ENI project; government is
only facilitating the construction of the solar system where it will deliver
power, it is just like any other independent power producer; it is not a cost
to government,” he stressed.
Government has a target to have
renewable energy constituting 10 percent of the country’s generation mix by
2020. There is also a plan to have government institutions supplementing their
energy source with solar power.
Presently, less than 1% of
electricity consumed locally is from renewable energy sources, a situation some
players in the industry find worrying.
Parliament has already ratified a
framework Agreement on the Establishment of the International Solar Alliance
(ISA).
This means Ghana has already joined
some 121 countries to access US$2 billion from the Indian government towards
making renewable energy a reliable alternative to the more expensive sources of
energy on the continent.
With this ratification, government
hopes to expedite the integration of renewable energy in the sources for
electricity among its institutions and agencies, including Junior and Senior
High Schools.
Over the next five years, there
would be significant increase of PV energy in the power mix for the country.
Signing the agreement, Luca
Consentino, Executive Vice President ENI, Milan-Italy, assured government of
the firm’s commitment to deliver world class solar power to help augment the
country’s energy.
ENI, an Italian international
petroleum company, has been in Ghana since 2009. The government is in a US$7bn
contract with the company to produce oil and gas at Cape Three Points.
Even though the company is involved
in the exploration of oil and gas, Mr Consentino indicated that his outfit
is interested in renewable energy because “we believe that renewable energy is
the future.”
For that reason, he said, it was
collaborating with the government to realise its long-term strategy of
integrating traditional businesses with renewable energy sources.
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