Friday 12 July 2013

Report: How Tanzania can overcome its energy woes


By Sylivester Ernest, The Citizen Reporter  (email the author)

Posted  Thursday, July 11   2013 at  12:08
In Summary
Released in Dar es Salaam at an inter-parliamentary hearing on exemplary African forest policies on Tuesday, the study conducted by Germany-based World Future Council (WFC) and the Heinrich Boll Foundation shows that Renewable Energy Feed-in Tariff policies (REFiTs) are most successful when they are an integral part of a country’s wider development strategy.


Dar es Salaam. Tanzania has a great opportunity to become more independent from expensive and intermittent energy imports should it embrace the use of renewable energy sources, a new study says.
Released in Dar es Salaam at an inter-parliamentary hearing on exemplary African forest policies on Tuesday, the study conducted by Germany-based World Future Council (WFC) and the Heinrich Boll Foundation shows that Renewable Energy Feed-in Tariff policies (REFiTs) are most successful when they are an integral part of a country’s wider development strategy.
The hearing brought together parliamentarians and policy-makers from Gambia, Kenya, Malawi, Rwanda, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia as well as key civil society actors and experts in forest policies.
According to the study, high level political support and strong buy-ins from civil society and the private sector are crucial factors for the successful development and implementation of REFiTs. The policy encourages investment in the generation of renewable energy-from individual home owners and communities as well as big companies-by guaranteeing to buy and pay for all the electricity that is produced from renewable sources.
The 155-page report, which is aimed at African policy makers, civil society and the private sector, provides an in-depth analysis of existing and drafted REFiTs policies in 13 African countries including Tanzania.
Other countries are Algeria, Botswana, Egypt, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Mauritius, Namibia, Nigeria, Rwanda, South Africa and Uganda. The study shows that when tailored to local conditions; REFiTs policies successfully increase the overall energy production of areas both on and off the electricity grid.
The director of WFC Africa office, Ansgar Kiene, said when releasing the report that the decentralised nature of the policies provide an opportunity to empower communities and revitalise local democracy and self-governance by allowing for alternative models of ownership and governance.
“Tanzania had already opened its electricity market to independent power producers back in 1992…its experience particularly with min-grids should be seen as an advantage when it comes to drafting supportive frameworks for the accelerated renewable energy production,” Mr Kiene said.
The report identifies a variety of national and international measures to shift financial resources towards renewable energy uptake. They include levies on fossil fuels and contributions from the United Nations Green Climate Fund.
The report was released prior to the official opening of the hearing by Vice President Mohamed Gharib Bilal, who stressed that contributions to environmental sustainability and poverty alleviation could only take place with good forest governance - appropriate laws, institutions, policy decisions and practical systems.
The hearing was organised by with the support of the Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism and the Tanzania Forest Services Agency, in collaboration with the United Nations Forum on Forests and the FAO Regional Office for Africa as well as the UNDP.