Early this year, Kenyans woke up to the
stark reality of decreasing water levels in dams that supply their most
essential utilities— water and electricity.
Hard-hit is Ndakaini dam that supplies about 84 per cent of Nairobi water, causing a dire shortage of the commodity in Nairobi.
The
weather conditions affected water levels in all Seven Fork Hydro
stations. Water levels for some hydro dam water have dropped by as much
as 45 per cent.
In the Horn of Africa, 20 million
people face the risk of starvation due to prolonged drought. Three
million out of those that are faced with this menace are in Kenya. In
2015 it was reported that Zambia faced a crisis as the biggest man –
made reservoir was drying up.
Lake Kariba dam is
world’s largest man- made reservoir by volumes and it supplies about
1,830 megawatts of power to Zambia and Zimbabwe.
In
East Africa, farmers have seen a decline in coffee and tea yields due to
prolonged dry spells. Recently, East Africa countries have moved to
take stringent measures to control fishing in shared water in Lake
Victoria due declining fish stocks in the lake.
Climate has also hit fishing in Lake Tanganyika, Africa’s deepest and oldest Lake.
Researchers have found sustained warming throughout the
decades has hindered a vital mixing process (common to all lakes around
the world) that helps spread nutrients and oxygen through the water—an
alarming insight that reveals why there is a declining marine population
in Lake Tanganyika.
It is now official that 2016 was
the hottest year on record. The effects of climate have without a doubt
manifested across the world and in a significant way. From extreme
weather like floods and typhoons, to melting ice glaciers and wild
fires.
Researchers have also come up with a report that rising temperature is a threat to wheat, one of the world’s most vital crops.
Climate
change will also hurt us via water. A World Bank report has found that
perhaps the most severe impact to climate change could be effects on
water supplies.
The reports suggest also that lack of
water could have a knock back effect to economic growth in some parts
of the world by as much as six per cent by the year 2050.
No
one in the world has done less to cause climate change than sub –
Saharan Africa. Yet the region is experiencing some of the most severe
effects of climate change. The world’s poorest are almost most
vulnerable to climate change.
When world leaders
converged on Paris for the climate convention I in December 2015 that
produced the historic COP21 Accord, a consensus was reached to take
measures to hold the rise of global temperatures to below be 2º celsius
by the end of the century. From a wide range of aspects, energy is at
the very centre of it.
Africa has the least
electricity proliferation in the world; in fact close to 600 million
people in the continent do not have access to electricity.
Africa
also has the highest renewable energy reserves in the world. According
to International Energy Agency (EIA) 18 out of 35 countries with the
highest renewable energy reserves in the world are in Africa.
Africa
seeks to achieve Universal Electrification by 2030 in an investment
that is estimated to cost $450 billion to generate 240 gigawatts of
electricity to connect some two thirds of its population that are
currently in the dark.
This is Africa’s moment to seize
leadership in climate change action, including fully and broadly
embracing renewable energy and good environmental practices to shift
the continent to a low carbon future.
Investing in
renewable and environmental conservation is not just good for the
environment but is also good business practice that holds huge potential
for economic development and jobs creation.
Kenya is
among top countries for renewable energy in Africa. It is the largest
renewable energy investor on the continent after South Africa.
With
an estimated 10,000 MW of geothermal, it is home to Africa’s largest
wind power project Lake Turkana Wind Power Project. The country has five
large hydro dams and 260 mini hydro dams.
Kenya also
has a good strategy for biofuels energy development. In 2015 George Farm
Biojule Project (2 MW) in Naivasha became the first Biofuel energy
project to inject electricity to the grid.
Finally the country is also working on a development plan to build the first nuclear power plant by 2025.
Kenya
also has a favourable and coherent energy policy. In 2016 the country
was ranked among the fastest growing renewable energy markets in the
world by Ernest & Young Renewable Energy Countries Investment
Attractiveness Index (RECAI) for 2016.
Kenya ahead of COP21 pledged to cut carbon emissions by 30 per cent by 2030 and achieve a 10 per cent forestry covers.
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