Bioenergy Development Strategy and Investment Plan for the Economic Community of West Africa States

Start Year

2011

End Year

Ongoing

Status

Geographical Scope

Description

Like other regions of Sub Saharan Africa (SSA), the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) faces many challenges as it strives to reduce poverty and improve the socioeconomic well being of its population. One of the key challenges facing economic growth in the region is limited access to modern energy services and growing energy security challenges. The region faces widespread and unsustainable production and use of traditional biomass (firewood and charcoal). About 80% of the primary energy consumption comes from traditional biomass and over 90% of the population use wood and charcoal for domestic cooking. While biomass is an important energy resource in the region, its traditional use has many negatively impacts on ecosystems, health and the climate. For instance, WHO estimated that nearly 600 000 people died of indoor air pollution in Africa in 2012 (WHO, 2015).


However, there is potential for a transition to a more sustainable future, provided appropriate development pathways are identified, nurtured and supported by relevant policy and regulatory frameworks. Developing modern energy supplies, especially in support of rural development and transforming the agricultural sector by adding value to agricultural products and creating markets for rural farmers is a potentially transformative intervention in the region (World Bank, 2015; IRENA, 2015).


Fortunately, the ECOWAS region is endowed with significant biomass resources with which to produce food, fuel and fibre to feed its people and fuel its economic development. Thus, a strategy towards modernising biomass use is widely viewed as an important element of the transition to sustainability in the region. It is therefore important for the region to develop strategies to make this transition a reality and ensure access to modern energy services and improved livelihoods for its communities. These modern bioenergy technologies include more efficient and clean cooking technologies such as improved fuelwood cookstoves, bioethanol cookstoves and biogas systems; clean transport fuels such as bioethanol, biodiesel, biomethane, as well as heat and electricity. Already, some initiatives have been developed, demonstrated or rolled out in several countries in the region either at national level or as isolated projects with varying degrees of success and impact. The main thrust at regional level should be to facilitate the scale up of such technologies across the region to enable significant and wide-scale impact.
 

Main Objectives

To modernise the bioenergy sector in Africa has been undertaken through a consultative process spanning several years and involving a cross section of stakeholders and African Union Member States

Main Activities

Developed studies with the aim of supporting African countries to implement policy and regulatory framework for bioenergy that support modernization of the bioenergy sector
Baseline studies on bioenergy development
Bioenergy Framework & Policy Guidines (endorced by CEMA)
Bioenergy Resolution adopted by AU Assembly
Mainstreaming of Bioenergy Framework
Capacity Building Workshops on best practices in SSA
Technical training projects development and packaging, and Waste-to-Energy
Development of the Bioenergy Strategy for the EAC
Development of the Bioenergy Strategy for the CAR

Outcomes and Impact

Policy Options for Bioenergy Energy Development in Africa (2011)
Technical and Economic Assessment of Biofuels in Africa (2011)
Africa Bioenergy Policy Framework and Guidelines (2013)
Seven Case Studies on Regulatory Reforms for Adoption of Biofuels Programmes in Cameroon, Ethiopia, Kenya, Mali, Mauritius, Rwanda, and South Africa (2015)
Mainstreaming Gender in Bioenergy Development
Localisation of Clean and Renewable Energy Technologies in Africa.

Negotiations involved

Annual Budget (in millions)

0.00

Currency Used

Euro

Patnering Entities

Energy Sectors and Subsectors

Energy Access
Energy Policy
Renewable Energy
Biofuels and Waste
Clean Cooking Energy

Agenda 2063 Focus

Aspiration 1: Inclusive Growth and Sustainable Development
Aspiration 6: People Driven: Women, Youth and Children
Aspiration 7: Africa global influence

Sources

The second ordinary session of the sub-committee on energy of the Specialised Technical Committee on Transport, Transcontinental and Interregional and Infrastructure, Energy and Tourism (STC-TTIIET), 30 Nov - 1 Dec 2020.

 

Brought to you by:

AEEPAFRECAfDB      AUDA-NEPAD     SE4All Africa Hub