4. ECOWAS RE & EE POLICIES
Adopted by the ECOWAS Authority
of Heads of State and Government,
July 2013, Abuja
ECREEE is coordinating the
implementation of the RE and EE
Policies
ECREEE is the SE4ALL Focal
Institution for ECOWAS
Sustainable Energy Country Action
Plans developed across the 15
Member States
WWW.ECREEE.ORG
Developed in Partnership with
UNIDO, Austria, Spain, European
Union, RECP, EUEI-PDF
6. Sustainable Energy Country Action Plans developed
across the 15 Member States
WWW.ECREEE.ORG
NEEAP
Nation
Energy
Efficiency
Action Plans
Energy Access
Action Plan
NREAP
National
Renewable
Energy
Action Plans
Small Hydro Power
Bioenergy
Solar PV & Thermal
Wind
Clean Cooking
EE Lighting
EE Building
Electricity Distribution
EE Standards
Conventional Power Plants
Grid Extensions Gender Mainstreaming
Rural Electrification
7. Development of National RE and EE Action Plans and the SE4ALL
Action Agenda in ALL Member States
Regional RE and EE
Policies and SE4ALL
National RE, EE and
SE4ALL Action Plans and
Policy Framework
Implementation on the
National and Regional
Level
ECREEE SUPPORT TO THE Action Plan PROCESS
8. THE “Abidjan Process” on Action Plans
1ST Phase
• Development of the templates and procedures for the
Action Plan Process
• 15 National Consultants to assist Member States with
the development of the Action Plans;
• Establishment of a backstopping team of international
experts to provide on-going support
9. THE “Abidjan Process” on Action Plan Process
2nd Phase - Development of the Action Plans at National Level
• High Level kick-off Meeting in each MS
• Data collection and Validation of the Baseline report (national workshop)
• National Stakeholder Consultations/Meetings (throughout the process)
• Development of Scenarious and measures
• National Validation of the Action Plans
• National political Adoption of the Action Plans
3rd Phase
• Implementation and monitoring of the Action Plans at national and
regional level – 2020/2030
10. Regional Action Plan Consolidation Process
• Regional Report to be prepared and presented at the forthcoming ECOWAS Energy
Week (October 2017)
• Integration of regional Initiatives and master plans
• In-depth review of current national action plans
• Ensure consistency of information/data vis-a-vis other official documents at country and
international levels
• Compilation of findings and recommendations to MS
• Consolidation of national targets in regards to the regional targets
• Bilateral consultation with MS to address any issues that may arise from the
consolidation process.
11. ECOWAS Investment Prospectus Framework
Structured into 4 pipelines and the enabling environment
WWW.ECREEE.ORG
Pipeline 1
• Generation,
transmission
and
distribution
(on –grid)
Pipeline 3
Off-grid (Mini-
Grids and
standalone
systems)
Pipeline 3
Bioenergy and
Cooking
Projects
Pipeline 4
• Energy
Efficiency
12. The ECOWAS SE4ALL Investment Prospectus ...
…aims to achieve the SE4ALL goals by identifying and developing a set of implementable
programs and projects, including their investment requirements, which can be presented to
potential private and public investors.
…presents an integrated set of prioritized and sequenced investment opportunities
…integrates the technical, financial, and implementation requirements for achieving an
intermediate goal and outlines the annual funding requirements for capital investments,
technical assistance and capacity building.
…identifies policy frameworks or government priorities relevant to reaching these outcomes.
WWW.ECREEE.ORG
14. ECOWAS Countries Moving to Establish Ambitious Goals and
Measures to Achieve Them
Financial support to
developers through
rural electrification funds
Output-based
subsidies for energy
services products
Traditional subsidies
Direct public investments in
access projects
Special support for
Renewable energy
Electricity access goal
35%
rur by
2025
36% by
2025
50% by
2015
100% by
2020
100%
by
2030
95% urb.
62% rur
by 2022
65%
rur by
2030
55% urb.
87% rur
by 2030
100%
by
2030
82% by
2030
75% by
2020
80%
rur by
2030
100%
by
2030
100% by
2017
15. Planned Increase in Electrification
• The Electrification rate
will increase from 42%
(2012) to 100% (2030)
• Over 60m HHs will gain
access to electricity for
the period 2015-2030
• No of HHs electrified
(on-grid and off-grid)
from1.7 to 4.7m HH/yr 0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
3500
4000
4500
5000
2015 2016-20 2021-25 2026-30
ThousandHouseholdsperyear
Annual number of connected Households
Urban HH Rural HH
16. Target on modern & efficient fuel access
• The access to modern cooking fuel
from 25% (2012) to 83% (2030)
• Over 60 m hhs to gain access from
2015-2030
• HHs to have access to LPG - 25m,
Averagely 0.6 - 1.5mHH/yr
• LPG consumption- 0.5 - 3.5 mt/yr
• Hhs to have access to ICS- 35m,
Averagely 1.1 -2.7 mHH/yr
25%
31%
57%
72%
83%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
0
10000
20000
30000
40000
50000
60000
70000
80000
2012 2015 2020 2025 2030
Accessrate
Thousandhouseholds
ECOWAS targets for access to modern &
efficient cooking fuel
HH w modern energy (Butane, Biogas) HH w improved cookstoves Access rate
17. Planned Evolution of Biomass Consumption
• The promotion of
LPG and improved
cook stoves will
curb firewood
demand to
sustainable supply
levels:
• Less than 200 mt/yr
in 2030,
• Instead of current
250mt/yr
• BAU case-450 mt/yr
0.1%
7.2%
33.4%
48.8%
58.9%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
0
50000000
100000000
150000000
200000000
250000000
300000000
350000000
400000000
450000000
500000000
2012 2015 2020 2025 2030
Savingsoverbaselinescenario
Firewooddemand(tonne/an)
Primary Firewood demand in ECOWAS region
Firewood baseline Firewood SE4ALL Savings (%)
18. Planned Increase in RE Generation Capacity
• The share of renewable generation capacity will stay around 20%
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
0
5000
10000
15000
20000
25000
30000
35000
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030
RatioREcapacitytototal
installedcapaicty
InstalledREcapacityMW
Renewable Energy Generation Capacity Forecast
Hydro Solar Biomass Wind Ocean Storage RE/Installed capacity