Africa plans huge dam project

uploaded by vmr_public April 22, 2008 at 10:46 pm
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Africa plans huge dam project by vmr_public

The Grand Inga project would dam Africa's largest river and generate an estimated 40 gigawatts of power.

If plans for the dam go ahead, it is expected to cost $5.5 billion and come onstream in 2018.

Banks, businesses and representatives of several African nations met in London on Monday to try to breathe new life into an $80 billion hydroelectric power project in Congo that could be the world's biggest.

The Grand Inga dam could, if it gets the green light politically and commercially, dwarf China's Three Gorges scheme and increase Africa's power generation by more than one-third.

But the problems dogging the project are massive, ranging from political instability including the Democratic Republic of Congo's (DRC) recent civil war to local objections and, not least, the massive costs involved.

"We have been trying to facilitate the decision-making that would allow these projects to go forward on a sustainable and affordable basis," said Gerald Doucet, head of the World Energy Council (WEC), which is hosting the meeting.

"We are trying to bring affordable, clean energy to the DRC and Africa," he told a news conference. "These projects have to benefit Africans, not only in terms of the social and civil side but also job creation and electricity connections in Africa that allow people to move out of poverty."

Never has the demand for clean power been higher, driven by economic growth, rising urbanisation and the battle against climate change due to burning fossil fuels.

Big business, which for years shunned Africa, has suddenly developed a new interest, attracted by the rich pickings to be had in the new carbon emissions market and the credits they can get from investing in so-called clean development projects.

The run-of-river Inga I hydroelectric plant was commissioned in 1972 and Inga II followed a decade later. But both have fallen into disrepair and now only manage to produce about one quarter of their joint capacity of 1.7 gigawatts of electricity.

The little power they are producing is going exclusively to power the mines of Katanga, with none to local people in a country where 92 percent of the population is without electricity.

"We have to address the concerns of the people living in the area. There aren't many, but those who do live there haven't seen any benefit from Inga I or II," Doucet said during a break in the two-day meeting.

Both are now being refurbished with World Bank money, but the Canadian company carrying out the work has warned that, due to silting problems, even when new machinery is installed output will still be one-third below capacity.

 

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Title: Africa plans huge dam project
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Created: Tue, 04/22/2008 - 10:46pm
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