Kenyan President William Ruto, left, with German chancellor Olaf Scholz during the former visit to Germany early this year. Germany Chancellor Olaf Scholz is to visit Kenya from Thursday. PHOTO | COURTESY
Summary
· Scholz's government sees great potential in achieving energy and climate partnerships with Nairobi, a government source said
Berlin. Chancellor Olaf Scholz heads Thursday to East Africa,
seeking clean energy partnerships particularly with "trailblazer"
Kenya where 90 percent of power needs are covered by renewables.
Scholz's government sees great
potential in achieving energy and climate partnerships with Nairobi, a
government source said.
Kenya is already Germany's biggest
trading partner from East Africa and is planning to fully cover its energy
needs with renewables by 2030.
Geothermal power is key in Kenya's
energy mix and offers "excellent conditions" for the production of
green hydrogen.
"The hope is that green
hydrogen could eventually be imported from Kenya," added the German
government source.
Scholz will be visiting a geothermal
power plant at Lake Naivasha on Saturday.
German leaders have over the last
months been sealing energy deals with a wide variety of countries after it was
forced to rapidly wean itself off cheap Russian energy imports following
Moscow's invasion of Ukraine.
For Scholz's government, Kenya plays
a role as an "important economic and value partner".
The relationship is more complex
with Ethiopia, where Scholz will begin his three-day trip.
The country slipped into a civil war
in 2020, when the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) attacked military
installations in the Tigray, triggering a major counter-offensive.
Scholz, who is due to meet Ethiopian
Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed on Thursday, aims to "acknowledge and support
the progress made in the peace process that began in November, but at the same
time call for further steps".
In particular, focus will be on
"grave human rights violations" that Scholz will seek to raise.
In Addis Ababa, the German
chancellor will also visit the headquarters of the African Union, which is
currently mediating in the Sudan crisis.
This week's trip marks the second
time that the chancellor is visiting Africa since taking office in December
2021.
The tour underlines the strategic
importance of the continent and the efforts undertaken by Western states to
counter China and Russia's overtures to the region.
Scholz will seek to rectify Russian
propaganda justifying its war on Ukraine as a result of NATO's expansion zeal.
With an eye on China's huge economic
investments in Africa, Scholz will also seek to "offer political and
economic cooperation on equal terms," the government source said.
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