Electricity sector in Ghana
Data | |
---|---|
Electricity coverage (July 2012100%) | 74% (total), 60% (rural) |
Installed capacity (2014) | 2,100 MW |
Share of fossil energy | 25% |
Share of renewable energy |
75% (hydro, bio energy, thermal energy) 1% (solar, wind energy) |
GHG emissions from electricity generation (2013) | 0.2 Mt CO2 |
Average electricity use (2010) | 298 kWh per capita |
Distribution losses (2012) | 3% |
Transmission losses (2011) | 3% |
Residential consumption (% of total) | 50% |
Industrial consumption (% of total) | 37.5% |
Commercial consumption (% of total) | 12.5% |
Average residential tariff (US$/kW·h, 2011) | 0.0016 |
Annual investment in electricity (2013) | 1,000,000,000 billion (40% public, 60% private) |
Services | |
Share of private sector in generation | 53% |
Competitive supply to large users | Yes |
Competitive supply to residential users | No |
Institutions | |
Responsibility for regulation | GEC-Ghana Energy Commission Office |
Responsibility for policy-setting | GEC-Ghana Energy Commission Office |
Responsibility for the environment | National Environment Commission; Ghana Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) |
Electricity sector law | Yes (2007, modified in 2012) |
Renewable energy law | Yes |
CDM transactions related to the electricity sector | 1 registered CDM project |
Ghana generates electric power from hydropower, fossil-fuel (thermal energy), and renewable energy sources. Electricity generation is one of the key factors in order to achieve the development of the Ghanaian national economy, with aggressive and rapid industrialization; Ghana's national electric energy consumption was 265 kilowatthours per capita in 2009.[1][2] Ghana exports some of its generated energy and fossil fuels to other countries.[1] Electricity transmission is under the operations of Ghana Grid Company.[3] The distribution of electricity is under Northern Electricity Distribution Company and Electricity Company of Ghana.[4]
History
The first Ghana government-sponsored public electricity supply in Ghana commenced in the year 1914 at Sekondi-Takoradi, operated by the Ghana Railway Administration (Ghana Railway Corporation). Power supply was extended to Sekondi-Takoradi in 1928. The Ghana Public Works Department had commenced a limited direct current (DC) supply in Accra during the year 1922. A large alternating current (AC) project started on 1 November 1924, and a small plant consisting of three horizontal single cylinder oil-powered engines was installed in Koforidua in 1925.
In 1926, work started on electrical distribution to Kumasi.[5] A restricted evening supply commenced in May 1927, and a power station was brought into full operation on 1 October 1927.[5] In the same year DC supply was installed at Winneba but this was subsequently changed to AC by extending an existing supply from Swedru and during the period 1929-30, a limited electricity supply was extended to Tamale until a new AC plant was installed in 1938.[5] The next power station to be established was Cape Coast in 1932 which was subsequently taken over by the Ghana Electricity Department in 1947.[5] A Ghanaian power station at Swedru was commissioned in 1948 and this was followed by the installation of generating plants at Oda, Dunkwa-on-Offin and Bolgatanga in 1948.[5] On 27 May 1949, an electricity supply was made available at Nsawam through the building of an 11000 volt overhead transmission line from Accra.[5] The Keta electricity supply which was included in the programme was delayed by staff difficulties and was not commissioned until 1955.[5]
The Tema power station was commissioned in 1956 with a 3 x 650 kilowatts (870 hp) diesel generating set.[5] The Ho power station followed in 1957 and from 1961-64.[5] The Tema power station was extended to a maximum capacity of 35,298 kilowatts (47,335 hp), thus, making it probably the biggest single diesel-powered generating station in Africa.[5]
In 1963 the Ghana Electricity Division brought into operation the first 161,000 volts transmission system in Ghana, which was used to carry power from the Tema Power Station. At its peak in 1965, about 75 percent of the power was used in Accra.[5]
In 1994, Ghana's total generating capacity was about 1,187 megawatts, and annual production totaled approximately 4,490 million kilowatts and the main source of supply is the Volta River Authority with six 127-megawatt turbines.[5] The Volta River Authority's Akosombo Hydroelectric Project provided the bulk of all electricity consumed in Ghana, some 60 percent of which is purchased by Volta Aluminum Company (Valco)for its smelter. The power plant export amounted to an estimated equivalent of 180,000 tons of oil in 1991.[5]
The balance of Ghana's electricity was produced by diesel units owned by the Electricity Corporation of Ghana, by mining companies, and by a 160-megawatt (210,000 hp) hydroelectric plant at Kpong, about 40 kilometers downstream from Akosombo. A third dam at Bui on the Black Volta River had been under study for some time, with the aim of increasing power supplies in northern Ghana and for export; the project is as of 2013 in the late stages of construction.[5]
Other sites with the potential for power generation, on the Pra River (Ghana), the Tano River, the White Volta River, and the Ankobra River, would also require substantial investment.[5]
Ghana has attempted to increase distribution of its electricity throughout the country. One program, Ghana has initiated, will provide reliable and widespread electricity in the urban and southern parts of the country.In addition, the extension of the national grid to the Northern Region was commissioned in 1989. The extension links northern Ghana to the power generated from the Akosombo Dam.[5]
The second phase of the extension will connect major towns in Upper East Region with the regional capital, Bolgatanga, at a cost of US$100 million.[5] The final phase will see exports of electricity across the northern national border of Ghana to Burkina-Faso.[5] In early 1991, furthermore, the Electricity Corporation of Ghana began the expansion of electricity networks in the northwestern areas of Accra and the Ghanaian corporation aimed to extend the supply of electricity to all isolated centers in Ghana where diesel is the main source of power.[5] Plans were also afoot to increase the supply of electricity by utilization of thermal energy and construction was anticipated by late 1994 on the country's first thermal power generating plant near Sekondi-Takoradi and scheduled for completion in 1997, the plant contributed 300 megawatts (400,000 hp) of electricity to the Ghana national grid.[5]
Since 2007, Ghana has become an electricity exporter and since 2011 an exporter of crude oil, and natural gas,[6] and a generator of electricity by thermal energy, hydropower, solar energy and renewable energies since 2012.[7]
Fossil fuel
Crude oil and Natural gas production
Ghana produces 140 million-200 million cubic feet of natural gas per day and in which natural gas production in Ghana has been restrained from full production capacity since December 2012, due to delays in construction of a Ghanaian gas refinery in Sekondi-Takoradi that was scheduled to be completely built by December 2012 and now scheduled to be completely built by December 2013, and due to which in turn has led to gas flaring and Ghana losing hundreds of millions a day since December 2012 in revenues from natural gas production since December 2012 totalling to extra billions of dollars a year lost from the Ghanaian GDP since December 2012 due to the delays in construction of gas refinery in Sekondi-Takoradi.[6]
A Ghanaian oilfield which is reported to contain up to 3 billion barrels (480,000,000 m3) of crude oil was discovered in 2007,[8][9] and according to the Ghanaian government, the country could expand its petroleum reserves up to 5 billion barrels (790,000,000 m3) of crude oil in reserves within a few years.[10]
Ghana produces 200,000 barrels of crude oil per day on average from an expected 1-2 million barrels of crude oil per day,[6] and an expected crude oil production revenue of US$ 30 billion a year; as with Angola also a crude oil producer has an expected 2 million barrels of crude oil production per day,[11] and receives an expected $33.7 billion a year in crude oil revenues.[12]
Tremendous inflow of economic capital from fossil fuel into the Ghanaian economy began from the first quarter of 2011 when Ghana started producing crude oil and natural gas in commercial quantities and the Ghana crude oil industry accounted for 6% of the Ghanaian economic revenue for 2011 Oil and Gas exploration in Ghana continues, and the amount of both crude oil and natural gas in Ghana continues to increase.[6]
Solar energy
The biggest photovoltaic (PV) and largest solar energy plant in Africa, the Nzema project, based in Ghana, shall be able to provide electricity to more than 100,000 homes.[13] The 155 megawatt plant shall increase Ghana's electricity generating capacity by 6%.
Construction work on the GH¢ 740 million (GB£ 248 million) and the 4th largest solar power plant in the world, is being developed by Blue Energy, a UK-based renewable energy investment company, majority owned and funded by members of the, Stadium Group, a large European private asset and development company with GB£ 2.5 billion under management. Project director is Douglas Coleman, from Mere Power Nzema Ltd, Ghana.[13]
Unlike many other solar projects in Africa that use concentrated solar power, solar plants will use photovoltaic (PV) technology to convert sunlight directly into electricity.[13] Installation of more than 630,000 solar PV modules shall begin by the end of 2013 with electricity being generated early in 2014.[13] It is due to reach full capacity at the end of 2015.[13]
As per August 2015, the project is still under development.[14]
Wind energy
In addition to hydropower and solar energy, Ghana also produces a lot of other renewable energy, other forms of energy that produce electricity in Ghana are wind power, geothermal and biomass.[15] It is the official goal of Ghana energy industry to have 10% of Ghana’s energy mix come from renewable sources (not counting large-scale hydropower) by 2015, or at the very least by 2020.[16]
Ghana has Class 4-6 wind resources and locations of the high wind areas – such as Nkwanta, the Accra Plains, and Kwahu and Gambaga mountains. The maximum energy that could be tapped from Ghana’s available wind resource for electricity is estimated to be about 500 – 600 GWh/year.[16] To give perspective – In 2011, per same Energy Commission, the largest Akosombo hydroelectric dam in Ghana alone produced 6,495 GWhrs of electric power and, counting all Ghana's geothermal energy production in addition, total energy generated was 11,200 GWhrs in the same year.[16] These assessments do not take into consideration further limiting factors such as land-use restrictions, the existing grid (or how far the wind resource may be from the grid) and accessibility.[16] To conclude, wind energy has potential to contribute significantly to the country’s energy industry – 10% can certainly be attained in terms of installed capacity, and about 5% of total electric generation potential from wind alone.[16]
Bio energy
Ghana has put in place mechanisms to attract investments into its biomass and bio-energy sectors to stimulate rural development, create jobs and save foreign exchange.[7]
The vast arable and degraded land mass of Ghana has the potential for the cultivation of crops and plants that could be converted into a wide range of solid and liquid bio-fuels, as the development of alternative transportation fuels could help Ghana to diversify and secure its future energy supplies.[7] Main investments in the bio-energy subsector existed in the areas of production, are transportation, storage, distribution, sale, marketing and exportation.[7]
The goal of Ghana regarding bio-energy, as articulated its energy sector policy, is to modernize and examine the benefits of bio-energy on a sustainable basis.[7] Biomass is Ghana's dominant energy resource in terms of endowment and consumption, with the two primary bio-fuels consumed being ethanol and biodiesel.[7] To that effect, the Ghana ministry of Energy in 2010 developed the energy sector strategy and development plan.[7] Highlights of the key policy objectives strategy for the renewable energy subsector include sustaining the supply and efficient use of wood-fuels while ensuring that their utilization does not lead to deforestation.[7] The plan would support private sector investments in the cultivation of bio-fuel feedstock, extraction of bio-oil and its refining into secondary products, thereby creating appropriate financial and tax incentives. The Ghana Renewal Energy Act provides the necessary fiscal incentives for renewable energy development by the private sector, and also details the control and management of bio-fuel and wood- fuel projects in Ghana.[7] The Ghana National Petroleum Authority (NPA) was tasked by the Renewable Energy Act 2011 to price Ghana's bio-fuel blend in accordance with the prescribed petroleum pricing formula.[7]
The combined effects of climate change and global economic turbulence, had triggered a sense of urgency among Ghanaian policymakers, industry and development practitioners to find sustainable and viable solutions in the area of bio-fuels.[7]
Currently, Brazil, which makes ethanol from maize and sugarcane respectively, is the world's largest bio-fuel market.[7]
See also
References
- 1 2 "The sector of electricity in Ghana". Proexca (in Spanish). Canary Island. 2011. Retrieved 23 April 2013.
- ↑ "Consumption of Electrical Energy (kWh per capita)". World Bank (in Spanish). Retrieved 23 April 2013.
- ↑ "overview". www.gridcogh.com. Retrieved 26 August 2013.
- ↑ "New Electricity Company Launched In Northern Region". northernghana.com. Retrieved 26 August 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Clark, Nancy L. "Electrical Power". A Country Study: Ghana (La Verle Berry, editor). Library of Congress Federal Research Division (November 1994). "This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain".
- 1 2 3 4 "Ghana's Jubilee oil field nears output plateau -operator". reuters.com (Reuters). 23 April 2013. Retrieved 6 June 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 "Renewable". energymin.gov.gh. Retrieved 23 April 2013., Shao Hai Jun (5 October 2012). "Ghana to attract investment into bio-energy sector". china.org.cn. Xinhua: China Internet Information Center. Retrieved 23 April 2013., "Ghana to attract investment into bio-energy sector". wacee.net. Retrieved 23 April 2013.
- ↑ "Ghana leader: Oil reserves at 3B barrels – Yahoo! News". Web.archive.org. 22 December 2007. Archived from the original on 26 December 2007. Retrieved 21 December 2010.
- ↑ "Kosmos Makes Second Oil Discovery Offshore Ghana". Rigzone.com. 25 February 2008. Retrieved 6 June 2013.
- ↑ McLure, Jason. Ghana Oil Reserves to Be 5 billion barrels (790,000,000 m3) in 5 years as fields develop. Bloomberg Television. Wednesday, 1 December 2010.
- ↑ "Angola’s Black Gold: what lies ahead, resource curse or a glorious future?". thisisafrica.me. Retrieved 6 June 2013.
- ↑ "Angola’s Sonangol Earned $33.7 Billion in 2011 Oil Sales". bloomberg.com (Bloomberg News). 24 February 2012. Retrieved 9 May 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Adam Vaughan (4 December 2012). "Africa's largest solar power plant to be built in Ghana". The Guardian (London). Retrieved 21 April 2013., Matt McGrath (4 December 2012). "Ghana solar energy plant set to be Africa's largest". BBC News. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
- ↑ "Africa’s largest solar (PV) power plant". Blue Energy Co. 5 August 2015. Retrieved 22 October 2015.
- ↑ Energy Foundation of Ghana. "Energy in Ghana". Retrieved 23 April 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Renewable Energy – what is Ghana’s wind power potential". arrakis-group.com. Retrieved 23 April 2013.
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