Yahoo – AFP,
Karim Lebhour, 28 June 2015
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Camels
stand near turbines of the Adama wind farm in Adama, south of
the capital Adiss
Ababa (AFP Photo/Vincent Defait)
|
Adama
(Ethiopia) (AFP) - The wind blows hard over Adama, a range of rocky hills in
Ethiopia's highlands that provide the perfect location for one of the
continent's largest wind farms.
"In
February, during the dry season, it is even difficult to stand here," said
Solomon Yismaw, the engineer in charge of 102 Chinese-built turbines each
rising 70 metres (230 feet) into the sky, lining the horizon.
The Adama
wind farm opened last month, its 153 megawatt (MW) capacity making it the
largest wind farm in sub-Saharan Africa, and the latest of three giant
Ethiopian wind farms.
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A farmer
ploughs his land with an oxen
on June 15, 2015 near a turbine of the
Adama wind
farm in Adama, south of
the capital Adiss Ababa (AFP Photo/
Vincent Defait)
|
Farmers
using simple ox carts to plough the soil around the bases of the wind turbines
offer a striking contrast between rural lives, little changed for centuries,
and the central government's ambition to develop a modern, climate-resilient
economy.
Without its
own reserves of either gas or oil, Ethiopia is turning to its significant
renewable energy potential to fuel its rapid economic development -- including
damming the vast Blue Nile, with turbines there providing over 90 percent of
the country's electricity production, and the southern Omo River.
But the
flow of rivers is subject to rainfall that is erratic in Ethiopia.
"We
have an abundance of hydroelectric energy sources, but during the dry season
and when droughts happen the level of the dam decreases," said Solomon,
who pointed out that the wind turbines were immune to the dry spells.
Massive
power needs
"At
that time the wind will complement the dam. The wind is especially strong
during dry season, so wind and hydro complement each other," said Solomon.
Ethiopia's
energy needs are huge. Over 75 percent of Ethiopia's 94 million people, mainly
those living in rural areas, are not connected to the national grid, and the
country needs to increase its electricity production by 20 to 25 percent per
year to meet rising demand, according to figures from the country's energy
ministry.
Ethiopia
has set a target of slashing its carbon emissions by two-thirds within the next
15 years, the most ambitious national goal yet presented to an upcoming United
Nations climate change conference in Paris later this year.
Ethiopia
said it plans to cut emissions by adopting cleaner practices in agriculture,
construction and transport, as well as slowing deforestation.
While work
continues on the vast Renaissance dam on the Nile -- the largest in Africa --
Ethiopia is working to boost other green power projects, harnessing geothermal,
solar and wind energy.
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Camels walk
along a road near a wind farm in Ethiopia, where the highlands
provide the
perfect location to build turbines (AFP Photo/Jenny Vaughan)
|
"Wind
farms are fast track projects, we can construct them within a short time,"
said Tahaguas Andemariam, consultant engineer and professor at the university
of Adama.
"Within
24 months we have constructed this big wind farm of 153 MW -- hydro would have
taken much longer," he said.
The 6,000
MW that the Renaissance dam will generate will dwarf the output of the Adama
wind farm, but the construction of the facility which began in 2011 isn't slated
to finish until 2017.
Yet the
Adama wind farm can still power about 10 million efficient light bulbs.
Another
wind farm, even larger in size and intended to produce 300 MW, is due to be
constructed at Ayesha in the remote eastern desert near the border with
Djibouti, another area with strong winds.
"We
now have the knowledge how to develop the roadmap of this wind technology in
Ethiopia," said Tahaguas, who spent a month in China working with other
engineers to learn more about the turbines.
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