http://resourceinvestingnews.com/27758-africa-solar-energy-abengoa.html
Mon, Dec 12, 2011
Feature Articles
Post by James Wellstead, Resource Reporter
By James Wellstead � Exclusive to Resource Investing News
While falling solar panel prices have been sinking the ships of some
solar producers, emerging markets utilities are finding attractive
cost incentives in building solar into their grids as prices of solar
panels have fallen by 40 percent in the past year alone.
African countries in particular, alongside a number of other emerging
market economies, appear to be the saving grace of clean energy
markets. Ernst and Young recently reported in its Renewable Energy
Country Attractiveness Index that as American and Western European
markets have been besieged by a �perfect storm� of political and
economic uncertainty, emerging energy consumers in markets like North
Africa, the Middle East and South East Asia now represent the
immediate future for renewable energy.
While legal and political support persist as stumbling blocks for a
variety of African countries, the region�s physical geography, minimal
existing grid infrastructure and the persistence of energy poverty of
its collective citizens offer powerful arguments in favor of Africa
becoming a solar-stronghold in both grid-integrated generation and
small-scale, decentralized applications.
Africa�s solar potential
Home to some of the best geographical conditions on earth for solar
power production, solar energy developers are finding fertile ground
in Africa�s sunbelts. Contrasted against its abundant sunshine,
however, is a dramatic scarcity of energy production which has left
some 587 million people across the continent without access to
electricity, according to the International Energy Association.
While the majority of electricity production in Africa is currently
supplied from fossil fuel sources (particularly coal and oil and gas),
solar remains highly competitive as a grid production source. Despite
its relative abundance of fossil-fuel energy resources, the continent
has long grappled with its ability to establish sufficient electricity
infrastructure to supply its own inhabitants.
Some 85 percent of that 587 million without access to electricity are
people living in rural areas. To these groups, solar (despite its cost
premium in developed economies) is actually quite cost competitive.
David Nickols, Managing Director of WSP Future Energy, recently said
in a Wall Street Journal interview that rural people who get their
power from diesel generators pay about US $1 per kilowatt hour,
compared with just US $0.20/kwh for solar photovoltaic power.
�Because renewables [in Africa] are compared against decentralized
diesel generators off-grid, the financials for renewables may well
look attractive,� said Nickols.
With the abundance of solar panel supply currently flooding world
markets, now is a particularly opportune time for low income markets
like those in sub-Saharan Africa to look to solar as a practical
electricity solution. To date, the majority of solar energy projects
in Africa have been small scale systems for homes where South Africa
and Kenya, with 11,000 kWp and 3,600 kWp respectively, are the most
developed markets.
But more recently, a number of countries have begun to fund and
develop large-scale solar installations set to support grid
development of local markets, as well as supply neighbouring European
markets. The following are a few of the most recent large-scale
projects.
Namibia
On the sunny southwest coast of the continent, Namibia is looking to
duplicate its mineral sector success within its solar energy sector.
Recently, the nation of 2 million, which relies heavily upon coal
imports from South Africa, has announced a new 25 year power purchase
agreement with a group of Washington, DC-based investors which would
see the government purchasing electricity from a 500 megawatt (MW)
solar plant near its capital, Windhoek.
The ground mounted solar photovoltaic power project will cost between
US $1.6 and $2 billion for its initial engineering and construction
costs, the project could double in production output (to 1 gigawatt)
from the addition of wind generation additions.
Africa Energy Corp., the group leading the project, is headed by Jigar
Shah (also the head of Virgin mogul Richard Branson�s Carbon War Room)
and was created specifically to finance the project. The project will
commence in January of 2012 and will take about two years to complete.
Morocco
With a distance of only 8 miles separating the country from Spain,
Morocco is probably the best example of the external opportunities for
African solar power producers. Recently, the World Bank approved a US
$297 million loan to finance the country�s Ouarzazate Concentrated
Solar Power Plant Project which will have a 500 MW capacity, with the
potential to expand to 2,000 MW by 2020.
This project is also the testing ground for the much larger US $530
billion renewable energy Desertec Industrial Initiative which seeks to
provide 100 percent of North Africa and the Middle East�s power supply
by 2050, as well as 15 percent of Europe�s electricity supply.
Desertec�s next solar development will include a smaller 150 MW solar
project in Egypt.
The Ouarzazate project is also a case study in the cost savings
African countries can offer. Similar sized projects in the United
States, such as BrightSource Energy�s 370-megawatt Ivanpah project,
received a $1.6 billion loan guarantee from the Department of Energy
this past April.
South Africa
Home to the 2011 Durban round of International Climate Change
Conference, South Africa�s Department of Energy recently announced
that it has awarded Spanish renewable energy developer Abengoa the
rights to build two concentrating solar power (CSP) farms in South
Africa. The deal is one of a number of projects recently approved
under a government tender which totaled 1,416 MW of CSP, solar
photovoltaic and wind projects.
With US $1.3 billion in investments, the two CSP developments (the 50
MW Khi Solar One and 100 MW KaXu Solar One) will be the first CSP
facilities in South Africa. The projects will contribute towards South
Africa�s target of building 17,800 MW of renewable energy capacity by
2030.
Long reliant upon coal to provide upwards of 90 percent of the
country�s electricity, South Africa is looking keen to see itself as
an African leader into a new era of renewable energy.
Securities Disclosure: I, James Wellstead, hold no direct investment
interest in any company mentioned in this article.
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