Opinion & Analysis

Achieving green energy objectives

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Solar panels: The proof of the government’s seriousness will be on how sufficiently green energy policies and strategies are resourced in the future. 

By George Wachira  (email the author)
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Posted  Tuesday, July 7  2009 at  00:00

The government has launched a campaign to promote green energy, which in the past has only received token interest and resources.

The proof of the government’s seriousness will of course be on how sufficiently the green energy policies and strategies are resourced in the future .

At least the low energy bulbs campaign hinted by the Prime Minister seems to indicate that there is intention and seriousness to walk the talk.

On the subject of alternative green energy and conservation, enough seminars have been held and numerous reports have been published , and what is now needed are definite workable strategies and resources.

There is danger in hyping discussions and enthusiasm on alternative energy only when oil prices are high and unaffordable, and when prices go down we lose focus and interest on the subject.

Oil prices will always go up and down as they have always done in the past. We need consistent policies and action guided not by oil prices, but guided by the fact that in the longer term alternative green energy is prudent for good economic and climatic benefits.

Green energy has many facets that are of interest to Kenya. The major one and the most immediate is economic in that green energy will normally involve cheaper locally available or produced alternatives.

The second is climatic, as the same alternatives are mostly a means to carbon reduction in that they replace the oil-based energy.

Thirdly it is social in that growing of green energy in the form of biofuels provides social economic benefits for many unemployed Kenyans.

For this reason a Green Energy policy and strategy should be multi-faceted and look at all aspects of national and global benefits.

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Let us look at biofuels. There was a lot of pre-occupation with biofuels when oil prices were high.

Debates and action on this subject appear to have diminished as soon as oil prices went down as urgency seems to have disappeared. We need efforts that are not start /stop depending on oil prices.

Brazil in the 70s decided to have a firm and long term policy and strategy on biofuels irrespective of global oil prices, and today Brazil cannot regret as their success on biofuels is permanent.

Biofuels were demonized last year when food prices went up, but the biofuels that Kenya was promoting were not supposed to be in competition with food production.

A bio-diesel strategy was meant to focus on non-food crops like jatropha, croton and castor, which are not in competition with food production.

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