Accordingly, one of the major solutions to electrification in Africa – a continent with a population of over 600 million who lack access to reliable energy – is green energy, particularly regarding microgrids, with low-cost energy sourced from hydro, solar, and wind to power isolated communities. While the world looks towards adapting their energy mix to improve sustainability, Africa has the opportunity to use its renewable energy potential to meet the rising demand of electricity while achieving sustainable development goals, with some African countries already making significant progress.
Mozambique’s Green Energy Capacity
Using nearly 100% green and sustainable energy, Mozambique is the greenest country in the world, with hydropower accounting for the vast majority of its installed capacity at approximately 81%, with the remainder being made up of solar, gas, and other sources. Capable of producing 187 GW of power from hydro, coal, gas, and wind, the southern-African country has the largest power generation potential of all countries across the region.
Mozambique’s largest supplier of power is its 2,075 MW Cahora Bassa hydro dam, operated by state-owned power utility, Hidroelectrica de Cahora Bassa, with the dam’s operations located on the Zambezi River in the country’s Tete Province. The Cahora Bassa dam is southern Africa’s largest hydroelectric power plant and serves as the most efficient power generating station in Mozambique.
Despite Mozambique’s enormous potential, however, a mere 34% of its population has access to reliable electricity, in part due to the country’s underdeveloped transmission and distribution network. Within the next decade, however, it is projected that natural gas will provide 44% of Mozambique’s total energy generation, diversifying its energy mix, and providing a larger portion of the population with access to electricity.
Ethiopia
With an abundance of hydropower and solar, Ethiopia has the potential to generate upwards of 60,000 MW from renewable sources. Approximately 90% of the east-African country’s power generation is derived from hydro-electric sources, with the remaining 10% generated from wind and thermal. The Government of Ethiopia currently has plans to expand its installed generation capacity by an additional 5,000 MW by 2022, enabling the country to meet its growing electricity demand, which is expected to grow by approximately 30% per year.
Current projections from state-owned electricity producer, Ethiopian Electric Power, indicate that the country’s total installed generation capacity will be 10,358 MW by 2022, with the government now diversifying its energy mix with other sources, such as solar, wind, and geothermal. In its history, 99% of the country’s total energy use has been derived from green energy, with Ethiopia contributing just 0.08 tons of CO2 emissions per capita.
Zambia
85% of Zambia’s installed electricity generation is hydro-based, with the country’s main electricity power stations including its 1.08 MW Kariba North Bank Power Station, the 840 MW Kafue Gorge Upper and Lower Power Stations, the 108 MW Victoria Falls Power Station, the 24 MW Lunsenfwa Hydro Power Station, and the 120 MW Itezhi-Tezhi Hydro Power Station, contributing to the central-African country’s installed capacity of 2,800 MW. 99% of Zambia’s total energy used has been derived from green energy resources, ranking the country as the third greenest in the world, contributing only 0.07 tons of CO2 emissions per capita.
Kenya
Kenya is one of the world leaders in renewable energies, deriving most of its energy from geothermal sources. In 2016, the east-African country generated 26% of Africa’s entire renewable energy in terms of wattage and is a global leader in its number of solar power systems installed per capita. Despite the abundance of its solar potential, solar PV still only accounts for less than 1% of Kenya’s energy mix, with its current installed capacity of 2.3 GW comprised of 57% hydro and 32% thermal. With regards to CO2 emissions, Kenya has emitted some of the lowest in the world at 0.4 tons per capita. Hydropower is Kenya’s single largest source of electricity generation, which provides approximately 677 MW of the country’s total installed grid capacity. In 2019, Kenya brought online a 50MW solar plant, resulting in renewable energy accounting for more than 90% of the country’s energy mix.
Ghana
With an installed generation capacity of over 5,300 MW, Ghana has one of the highest rates of access to electricity in Africa, with its power supply consisting of 38% hydroelectricity and 61% thermal, and the remaining 1% being attributed to solar power. As outlined in the country’s Renewable Energy Master Plan – released in 2019 – Ghana aims to increase the proportion of its national energy generation mix from its 2015 levels of 42.5 MW to 1,363.63 MW by 2030, while also reducing its dependence on biomass as the main source of fuel for thermal energy applications. The plan also iterates Ghana’s development goals of providing renewable energy-based electrification opportunities to over 1,000 off-grid communities, while promoting local participation in the renewable energy industry. Historically, Ghana is one of the greenest countries in the world, contributing merely 0.4 tons of CO2 emissions and generating a majority of its energy, 68.26%, from renewable sources.