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Dakar city: Senegal in renewables drive, unveils new solar park

2016/10/29

As Senegal pushes to become a regional player in renewables on a continent where the majority remain off-grid, the country at the weekend officially launched a new 20-megawatt solar power plant in Bokho, north of the country.

The project follows through on a COP21 commitment by Senegal’s president, Macky Sall to cut greenhouse gases.

The 20 -megawatt Senergy 2 project, located close to the Mauritanian border, will serve 160,000 people with electricity and will contribute to Senegal’s target of serving 20 % of its energy needs with renewables by the end of 2017.

Senegal is presently fully entering the era of clean energy, helping to save the planet by reducing greenhouse gases.

A Paris-based investment company, greenwish focused on renewable energy in Sub-Saharan Africa developed and built the $28 million project.

In his address at the launch, Senegal’s president, Mack Sall said it was significant to lower electricity prices and urged Senelec to think about the possibility of reducing electrical costs as early as January 2017.

Senegal is presently fully entering the era of clean energy, helping to save the planet by reducing greenhouse gases. Therefore, from here in Bokhol, I call on all partners who want to support us in the development of alternative energy,” he said.

GreenWish CEO Charlotte Aubi-Kalaidjian noted that energy diversification was vital as raw materials become additional and additional volatile, adding that with the price of petrol decreasing, solar energy prices will be additional competitive in the long-term.

“Each country needs to diversify its energy sources. In Senegal, solar power has its place. The all of sunshine here, it’s about 40 degrees right presently, is double compared to what solar farm of the same capacity in England or in northern France would produce and allows us to produce electricity at a competitive price,” she added.

According to GreenWish, Senergy 2 is set to prevent the emission of carbon dioxide by 23,000 tonnes each year.

It is an attractive prospect for a country with a dire power deficit, and which currently meets most of its needs by burning imported oil in hugely inefficient diesel generators.

According to the World Bank, about 57 % of the West African country has access to electricity.

Senegal is hoping to become an example for renewable energy in West Africa, a region that still lags behind in its development and use of the technology.

Investors in renewable energy say that they want dependable cash flows, but in a lot of African nations, weak legal frameworks, unclear land rights and poor transmission infrastructure make this hard to guarantee.

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