Vice President Yemi Osinbajo
The Federal Government on Thursday in London boosted
its power programme with the signing of an agreement with the United
Kingdom on the use of solar energy to provide electricity to rural
people.
Vice President Yemi Osinbanjo,
who led Nigeria’s delegation to the event at the Facebook Headquarters,
signed on behalf of the Federal Government while the UK Minister of
State for International Development, Mr Grant Shapps, signed on behalf of the UK government.
The
event was performed shortly after the launch of the Africa Energy
Campaign initiated by the U.K. Department for International Development.
Osinbajo
said his presence at the launch was
to underscore Nigeria’s commitment
to the national and regional effort to improve accessibility to power,
especially solar power for our peoples.
According
to him Nigeria will do its best to ensure that the campaign to boost
supply and consumption of solar energy is invigorated and gave an
assurance that the Federal Government would work closely with the DFID.
He
said that the programme was an opportunity for Africa adding that the
advantage of the launch was that the partners could bring universal
access to energy.
"With the cost of solar
power 20 years ago that would have been impossible; the combination of
innovation in technology, the low cost of solar power has made this all
the more possible.
''This is an incredible opportunity in Africa, especially Nigeria with over 96 million people who do not have access to power.’’
Osinbajo noted that the use of kerosene had created a lot of safety and environmental issues adding that
''a default energy source should be solar and the option was not
available for so long, but now it is cheaper, safer, and more
environmentally friendly’’.
He observed that
the campaign was an opportunity for investment which could get a boom
such as was experienced in the telecommunications sector in the country.
Osinbajo
said that Nigerian market provided the greatest opportunity for the use
of small scale solar solutions adding that the country would be the
ideal base to push the solar solution in the continent.
''But the challenges are probably as clear as the prospects but thankfully enough they are surmountable.’’
The VP urged those who would drive the campaign to also determine the effective cost that would not further impoverish the poor.
He
noted that there could not be one particular solution to the need for
power adding that the alliance being created by the partners was
important.
According to Osinbajo, Nigeria’s
partnership with DFID was successful with the application of solar power
technology in over 100 schools, hospitals and many primary healthcare
centres in Lagos alone.
In his speech Shapps said
that the Africa Energy was a campaign to bring justice to more than 600
million people around the continent without access to electricity.
According
to him many Africans did not have light in their homes and their
children unable to do their homework, while others die of household
pollution from use of kerosene and charcoal.
He
said the situation was unacceptable and that the campaign needed a group
of coalitions and alliances cutting across the business and political
boundaries and people with technological capabilities and civil society
movements to make it work.
''We have a cause and we have a challenge but it is achievable,’’ he said.
Also speaking Mr Kofi Annan,
former Secretary General of the UN, said it was incredible that the
global community had taken the challenge of providing cheap and friendly
energy for the people.
While noting that over 620
million Africans lack access to electricity he added that 300 million
would still lack access by 2040, a decade after the UN target of
developmental goals for universal energy.