Togo has launched what it says is the largest solar plant in West Africa that will help provide power to more than 158,000 households and save more than one million tonnes of CO2 emissions.
50 megawatt facility is located in central Togo some 250 km north of capital city Lomé. The plant was built by AMEA Togo Solar, a subsidiary of Dubai-based AMEA Power.
“The Sheikh Mohamed Bin Zayed 50 megawatt-peak power plant in Blitta is the largest solar photovoltaic plant in the sub-region, using solar tracker technology, which increases the efficiency of solar panels by making them follow the path of the sun,” Togolese mines minister Mila Aziable explained during the opening ceremony.
Togo, which imports more than half of its energy from Nigeria and Ghana, is banking on solar power to develop access to electricity for its eight million residents.
“This project is the fruit of our ambition to bring universal access to electricity and provide clean and renewable energy to all,” Togo’s president Faure Gnassingbé said on social media.
“I am thrilled it was done in record time” (18 months), he added.
The inauguration of this platform is the latest in a push to increase access to electricity and develop renewables in the West African country.
“Togo is blessed with resources, Togo is blessed with the sun, so this is one major way of obtaining power,” AMEA Power Chairman Hussain Jasim Al Nowais added.
By the end of the year, officials hope the 127,344 solar panels will produce 90.255 megawatt hours (MWh) of power per year.
Capacity for an additional 20 MW is scheduled to be built on the same site by the end of the year.
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