Niger Republic seeks to ease dependence on Nigeria with new power station
Niger Republic seeks to ease dependence on Nigeria with new power station
Niger on Wednesday inaugurated an
oil-fired power station in the capital Niamey, part of an initiative to ease
its heavy dependence for energy from Nigeria.
The 89-megawatt facility is designed
to provide backup for Niamey, the southern region of Dosso and Tillaberi in the
west in the event of a cut in electricity supplied by Nigeria. The inauguration
ceremonies were hosted by President Mahamadou Issoufou, who is stepping down
after two terms in office, an AFP reporter saw. Niger is the poorest country in
the world, according to the UN’s Human Development Index, a benchmark of 189
nations.
It opened a diesel-powered
80-megawatt plant near Niamey in 2017 but suffers from chronic power cuts,
which sometimes last for days. The nearly 66-billion-CFA-franc ($120-million /
100-million-euro) cost of the new plant is being financed under a 15-year
public-private partnership with a Mauritanian company, Istithmar West Africa.
Niger became a small net producer of oil in 2011 and has a refinery at Zinder,
in the south of the country.
Nigeria News Paper
No comments