Tag: President of the African Development Bank (AfDB) Group

  • Electricity access in Ghana grew by 27% in 10years– report

    Electricity access in Ghana grew by 27% in 10years– report

    Adnan Adams Mohammed

    A African Development Bank (AfDB) report has indicated that, access to electricity in Ghana rose from 56.5 percent in 2012 to 83.5percent in 2021, translating into a 27% in a period of about 10 years.

    The current access rate of Ghana is estimated to be about two times of African Development Fund (ADF) beneficiary countries average rate.

    According to an AfDB report on Ghana’s power development, it estimated that, in urban areas nearly 94% of the population has access to electricity, and in rural areas, the share is 70%. This is three times higher than ADF countries’ average.

    “The share of the population with access to clean cooking solutions also increased markedly, growing from 16.4% in 2012 to 24.9% in 2021. This progress consolidated Ghana’s position as one of 10 countries in Africa whose access to electricity rate is the highest”, data contained in the report released, last week, noted.

    Between 2012 and 2021, Ghana almost doubled its total installed electricity capacity, leaping from 2.9 GW to 5.1 GW and generating more than 15,000 GWh. This includes an increase of installed renewable capacity from 1.2 GW to 1.7 GW, with hydropower taking the lion’s share (99%).

    The share of renewables in the energy mix declined, however, producing a fall in production efficiency, with more kilograms of CO2 emitted per dollar of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in 2021 than in 2012.

    The upsurge in capacity and skills, which resulted in part from a rise in independent power producers’ generation of electricity, the report stressed, has allowed Ghana to resolve the major energy crisis that hit the country from 2012 to 2016 as a result of erratic rainfall that crippled hydroelectricity production in the Lake Volta region.

    The report however said electricity distribution remains a challenge in the country.

    Starting in 2017, the increase of generation capacity supplied Ghana with more power than was in demand (demand peaked at about 2.5 GW between 2012 and 2020).

    This absorption gap reflects pervasive shortfalls in the grid, which is hampered by inefficiencies in the distribution network and by skills gaps, especially in the installation and maintenance of energy equipment. Redressing these shortfalls, the report said, is critical to reducing the import of skills, which increases the cost of doing business in Ghana.

    As electricity losses through transmission, distribution, and collection are concerned, Ghana’s performance increased from 21.5% in 2012 to 22.6% in 2021, which is worse than ADF countries as a whole.

    To address this, the report said, government undertook certain governance-related actions, notably restructuring the legacy debts of the state-owned Electricity Company of Ghana (among other things, clearing its arrears) and reforming electricity tariffs to stimulate competition and encourage the private sector to participate in distribution.

    The Bank also shaped a more efficient distribution system within the framework of its support for the energy sector.

    AfDB said it will continue to support Ghana’s objective of supplying its citizens with universal access to energy by better generating and distributing electricity, among other things by  increasing off-grid connections in the country’s northern regions.

    The Bank is also standing with Ghana as the country manages climate risks, channels resources for adaptation, and transitions to green energy.

    “To reach its goals in this area, Ghana needs more investments in renewable energy-not just from one funder, but from many”, it said.

    In January 2022, the African Development Fund granted $27.4 million for the Ghana Scaling-Up Renewable Energy Programme. This contribution leveraged another $28.5 million in co-financing from the Climate Investment Funds and parallel financing of USD 13.3 million from Switzerland’s Secretariat for Economic Affairs.

    The programme will generate an estimated 111 MWh of renewable energy each year, thus contributing 13.5% of renewable energy to Ghana’s energy mix (excluding hydropower) and mitigating greenhouse emissions of 0.7 million tons of CO2-equivalent.

    The Bank’s ongoing Affirmative Finance Action for Women in Africa programme-to which the Green Climate Fund contributed $20 million-is another investment in clean energy.

    The programme is expected to reduce emissions by replacing diesel, fuelwood, and charcoal with renewable fuels, used sustainably. This operation and others like it will help supply the efficient, affordable, and sustainable energy that Ghana needs.

  • Ghana signs $69.88m renewable energy deal to enhance electricity access

    Ghana signs $69.88m renewable energy deal to enhance electricity access

    Ghana has signed a $69.88 million renewable energy agreement to enhance electricity access in the next four years.

    Under the agreement, about 6,890 households, 6,001 Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs), and 6,890 public buildings will be connected to electricity.

    About 1,350 schools and 500 health centres would also benefit from the project, which would include the design, engineering, supply, construction, installation, testing, and commissioning of mini-grids and standalone systems.

    Seventy communities across nine Island districts through mini-grids, 505 communities in 11 districts through standalone solar photovoltaic (PV) systems in the country.

    The “Scaling-up renewable energy Programme (SREP),” is to close Ghana’s 12.8 per cent electricity reach deficit by increasing access to clean and reliable energy and support socio-economic development.

    It is to also help reduce public sector electricity debt as well as bills for SMEs and households while supporting the implementation of environmental, climate, and social management plans in the country.

    Mr. Ken Ofori-Atta, Minister of Finance signed the protocol agreement with Dr Akinwumi Akin Adesina, President of the African Development Bank (AfDB) Group.

    He also signed the financial agreement of the project with Mr. Dominique Paravicini, AfDB’s Governor for Switzerland.

    Speaking at the signing of the agreement, Mr. Ofori-Atta, said the project: “Dovetails fittingly into an urgent global agenda and demonstrates our country’s commitment to enhance the economic and social viability of low carbon investments.

    It is also in support of the country’s commitment to creating new energy-efficient markets and stave-off a future energy crisis by achieving energy sufficiency.

    The project also: “Fully align with the Government’s overarching ambition of increasing the contribution of Renewable Energy in the generation mix to 10 per cent by 2030 while achieving our emission reduction targets,” he added.

    Mr. Ofori-Atta indicated that the project would provide stable and cheaper electricity to hundreds of people across the country and usher in new economic opportunities, particularly for women in rural areas.

    On his part, Dr. Adesina noted that the project would support Ghana in meeting its renewable energy requirement on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and build a resilient economy.

    “This project will increase access to clean and reliable electricity services and support low carbon socio-economic development of Ghana. It will directly support Ghana’s efforts in building resilience to the socio-economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.”

    This would be done through the provision of electricity to healthcare centres, Island communities, enabling the refrigeration of vaccines and testing facilities for COVID-19.

    “The project will facilitate the self-sufficiency of Ministries, Departments, and Agencies (MDAs), through rooftop solar power generation and storage under the net metering component,” he added.

    Mr. Paravicini, said that the signing of the agreement showed Switzerland’s continuous support to bring sustainable and affordable electricity to households and businesses.

    SREP would be implemented between 2022 and 2025, under three components; the first would comprise of the development of 38 mini-grids and standalone solar PV systems for 2,000 SMEs, 1,350 schools, 500 health centres, and 400 communities.

    The second component, which is net metering, aims at up-scaling existing projects to about 12,000 units of roof-mounted net-metered solar PV systems to reduce public sector electricity debt and bills for SMEs and households.

    The final component would be the supervision of works including operating costs for the SREP Project Implementation Unit, Distribution Utility, and the implementation of environmental, climate, and social management plans.

    Source: GNA