Kenya to build Africa's biggest windfarm

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http://www.mg.co.za/article/2009-07-28-kenya-to-build-africas-biggest-windfarm

With surging demand for power and blackouts common across the continent, Africa is looking to solar, wind and geothermal technologies to meet its energy needs

One of the hottest places in the world is set to become the site of Africa's most ambitious venture in the battle against global warming.

About 365 giant wind turbines are to be installed in desert around Lake Turkana in northern Kenya -- used as a backdrop for the film The Constant Gardener -- creating the biggest windfarm on the continent. When complete in 2012, the $881-million project will have a capacity of 300MW, a quarter of Kenya's current installed power and one of the highest proportions of wind energy to be fed in a national grid anywhere in the world.

Until now, only North African countries such as Morocco and Egypt have harnessed wind power for commercial purposes on any real scale on the continent. But projects are now beginning to bloom south of the Sahara as governments realise that harnessing the vast wind potential can efficiently meet a surging demand for electricity and ending blackouts.

Already Ethiopia has commissioned a $314-million, 120MW farm in Tigray region, representing 15% of the current electricity capacity, and intends to build several more. Tanzania has announced plans to generate at least 100MW of power from two projects in the central Singida region, more than 10% of the country's current supply. In March, South Africa, whose heavy reliance on coal makes its electricity the second most greenhouse-gas intensive in the world, became the first African country to announce a feed-in tariff for wind power, whereby customers generating electricity receive a cash payment for selling that power to the grid.

Kenya is trying to lead the way. Besides the Turkana project, which is being backed by the African Development Bank, private investors have proposed establishing a second windfarm near Naivasha, the well-known tourist town. And in the Ngong hills near Nairobi, the Maasai herders and elite long-distance athletes used to braving the frigid winds along the escarpment already have towering company: six 50m turbines from the Danish company Vestas that were erected last month and will add 5,1MW to the national grid from August. Another dozen turbines will be added at the site in the next few years.

Christopher Maende, an engineer from the state power company KenGen, which is running the Ngong farm and testing 14 other wind sites across the country, said local residents and herders were initially worried that noise from the turbines would scare the animals.

"Now they are coming to admire the beauty of these machines," he said.

Kenya's electricity is already very green by global standards. Nearly three-quarters of KenGen's installed capacity comes from hydropower, and a further 11% from geothermal plants, which tap into the hot rocks a mile beneath the Rift Valley to release steam to power turbines.

Currently fewer than one-in-five Kenyans has access to electricity but demand is rising quickly, particularly in rural areas and from businesses. At the same time, increasingly erratic rainfall patterns and the destruction of key water catchment areas have affected hydroelectricity output. Low water levels caused the country's largest hydropower dam to be shut down last month.

As a short-term measure KenGen is relying on imported fossil fuels, such as coal and diesel. But within five years the government wants to drastically reduce the reliance on hydro by adding 500MW of geothermal power and 800MW of wind energy to the grid.

Not only are they far greener options than coal or diesel, but the country's favourable geology and meteorology make them cheaper alternatives over time. The possibility of selling carbon credits to companies in the industrialised world is an added financial advantage.

"Kenya's natural fuel should come from the wind, hot underground rock and the sun, whose potential has barely even been considered," said Nick Nuttall, spokesperson for the United Nations Environment Programme. "After the initial capital costs this energy is free."

The Dutch consortium behind the Lake Turkana Wind Power (LTWP) project has leased 66 000 hectares of land on the eastern edge of the world's largest permanent desert lake. The volcanic soil is scoured by hot winds that blow consistently year round through the channel between the Kenyan and Ethiopian highlands.

According to LTWP, which has an agreement to sell its electricity to the Kenya Power & Lighting Company, the average wind speed is 11m per second, akin to "proven reserves" in the oil sector, said Carlo Van Wageningen, chairperson of the company.

"We believe that this site is one of the best in the world for wind," he said.

If the project succeeds, the company estimates that there is the potential for the farm to generate a further 2 700MW of power, some of which could be exported.

First, however, there are huge logistical obstacles to overcome. The remote site of Loiyangalani is nearly 480km north of Nairobi. Transporting the turbines will require several thousand truck journeys, as well as the improvement of bridges and roads along the way. Security is also an issue as the region is known bandit country, and many locals are armed with AK-47 assault rifles.

LTWP also has to construct a 425km transmission line and several substations to connect the windfarm to the national grid. It has promised to provide electricity to the closest local towns, currently powered by generators.

The greening of Africa
At the end of 2008, Africa's installed wind power capacity was only 593MW. But that is set to change fast. Egypt has declared plans to have 7 200MW of wind electricity by 2020, meeting 12% of the country's energy needs. Morocco has a 15% target over the same period. South Africa and Kenya have not announced such long-term goals, but with power shortages and wind potential of up to 60 000MW and 30 000MW respectively, local projects are expected to boom. With the carbon credit market proving strong incentives for investment other types of renewable energy are also set to take off. Kenya is planning to quickly expanding its geothermal capacity, and neighbouring Rift Valley countries up to Djibouti are examining their own potential. As technology improves and costs fall, solar will also enter the mix. Germany has already publicised plans to develop a €400-billion solar park in the Sahara.

:cool::cool:
 
Its' great to see people going green. We need to broadcast our green efforts more so in the states.

Its hard trying to get people I know to recycle. I went green sometime ago ie recycling, riding my bike instead of driving, having bamboo floors, low flow toilets. I also installed LED light bulbs. I eat organic food daily, When I'm home I bike to Whole Foods and back. I DVR Planet Green tv shows ie Emeril Green, World's Greenest,Renovation Nation etc etc. I unplug my electronics when I'm not using them. I have a local elecric bill. I use organic laundry detergent, organic dishwashing liquid and organic toothpaste. Its' not that hard going green.



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The wind may carry a solution for Kenya</font size>
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Desert will be site of major project to help boost energy supplies</font size></center>


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Kenya built its first wind farm, above, outside Nairobi. In
January, construction will begin on a $760 million wind
farm in the Chalbi Desert. (Miguel Juárez For The Wash-
ington Post)


Washington Post
By Christopher Vourlias
Saturday, November 21, 2009


NAIROBI -- Kenya's Chalbi Desert is a bleak, forbidding stretch of coarse sand and ash-gray ridges broken by clusters of tiny huts. It is also one of the windiest places on Earth, experts say, and it soon will be the site of Africa's largest wind farm.

<font size="3">In January, a consortium of Dutch and Kenyan investors will begin construction on the $760 million project, which envisions more than 350 wind turbines towering over desert expanses near Lake Turkana in northern Kenya. When completed in 2012, the wind farm is expected to boost the power supply in this nation by almost 30 percent. </font size>

Kenya is one of the continent's greenest countries, with nearly three-quarters of its power coming from hydroelectric and geothermal sources. But its efforts to harness the wind have put it at the forefront of a budding movement in Africa, ahead of a global climate change conference in Copenhagen next month.

Ethiopia inked a $300 million deal last year with the French company Vergnet to build a wind farm. Tanzania is constructing two facilities that will boost its power supply by nearly 10 percent. And South Africa, the continent's largest economy, hopes to complete 18 wind farms by 2014.

Kenya's first wind farm, in the Ngong Hills outside Nairobi, began feeding into the national grid in August. Additional sites are being scouted near Lake Naivasha, a popular tourist retreat northwest of Nairobi, and in the blustery northeast near Ethiopia.

"What you see in Africa is a severe shortage" of power, said Phylip Leferink, sales and marketing manager for Vestas, the world's leading supplier of wind turbines. "They have an urgent need for bringing up the capacity as soon as possible."

Power shortages have forced blackouts from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, to Johannesburg this year, but the shortages have been especially acute in Kenya. A prolonged drought has dried up riverbeds and crippled the country's hydroelectric plants. Officials have imported fossil fuels as an emergency stopgap, raising concerns among environmentalists. Energy prices have soared.

The effects have been felt from the industrial centers to the sprawling shantytowns and the suburbs of the capital. Rationing has brought rolling blackouts to Nairobi, and manufacturers have been forced to scale down production because of power cuts. In the aftermath of last year's post-election violence, the power shortages have been a further burden for a country struggling to regain its footing as East Africa's economic powerhouse.

"We are paying for the sins of our leaders," said Geoffrey Machariah, a taxi driver, who endures frequent power cuts in his Nairobi home. "Since last year, we are all suffering."

The Turkana project is this country's most ambitious energy venture to date. The site encompasses 25,000 acres on the edge of the Chalbi Desert, an area chosen for the "natural, low-level jet stream" blowing south from the Sahara and the Ethiopian highlands, said Nick Taylor, chief operating officer of the Lake Turkana Wind Power consortium. It is part of a broader initiative to introduce nearly 500 megawatts of wind power within five years.

Leferink, the Vestas marketing manager, estimated that the Ngong Hills project took two years to complete, whereas "more traditional generating methods, like coal-fired power plants, need a long lead time to be realized."

However, the technology required to build large-scale wind farms involves substantial investment. In addition to its on-site costs, the Turkana consortium invested in extensive road upgrades to transport equipment from Nairobi to the site, Taylor said.

But Hermann Oelsner, president of the African Wind Energy Association, said the long-term benefits outweigh the short-term costs. "In the beginning the cost appears high, but if you calculate the electricity costs over the whole lifetime of a project, then it is cheaper than fossil fuels."

Sub-Saharan Africa still lags far behind the developed world as a source of wind power. But the prospects south of the Sahara are improving, in part because of access to better and cheaper technologies, and because of growing uncertainty, in the face of climate change, that traditional energy sources will be sufficient to meet growing demand.

As governments turn to newer technologies to shore up their energy supplies, Oelsner and others say wind will play an increasingly vital role.

"Wind will be a big part of the energy mix . . . as we run out of fossil fuels," he said. "But we must start now."

Vourlias is a freelance journalist based in East Africa.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11/20/AR2009112004313.html
 
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Kenya wind firm signs Vestas, to pick contractors</font size></center>



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Reuters
By Helen Nyambura-Mwaura
December , 2009


NAIROBI (Reuters) - A Kenyan firm looking to put up a 300 MW wind project says it has signed a turbine deal with Denmark's Vestas Wind Systems A/S and will soon pick contractors for a transmission line and substations.

The Lake Turkana Wind Power's (LTWP) 430 million euro windfarm project in the remote and windy Loiyangalani region of northwest Kenya should start initial production in June 2011 and be in full swing a year later.

Once completed, the project could meet about a quarter of Kenya's total energy demand, which stands at some 1,200 MW, just slightly below the installed capacity.

"That's completed, that's been done," director Chris Staubo said of the deal with Vestas. "We are about to actually sign on the JDA -- joint development agreement -- with equity participants and that should be signed before end of next week."

The JDA, which sets out how equity partners move forward with the project, will be ready before December 18, he said.

LTWP's Chairman Carlo Van Wageningen told Reuters in September that the company had been discussing an exclusivity deal with Vestas to supply its V52 turbines.

LTWP invited expressions of interest in April by companies willing to construct a 428 km (266 mile) transmission line and four substations to link the remote region to the national grid.

Staubo said 33 companies responded and 11 of them were invited to tender bids.

"The tenders were closed on the October 19 and the evaluation process ... will be finalised on Wednesday."
The African Development Bank is the lead arranger for the project, which Staubo said was still on schedule and on target.

"All the financing is still fully in place," he said.

The company terminated discussions with London-based Globeleq to take up an equity stake. Three companies were left in the negotiations that should will end with a JDA next week, Staubo said but declined to name the firms.

"We just didn't agree on the development process so we just agreed to disagree," he said.


http://af.reuters.com/article/investingNews/idAFJOE5B90J220091210?sp=true
 
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