Seplat Energy Advocates for a Just Energy Transition for Africa
Seplat Energy Advocates for a Just Energy Transition for Africa
Seplat Energy Advocates for a Just Energy Transition for Africa
– By Jerome Onoja Okojokwu-Idu

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Seplat Energy Advocates for a Just Energy Transition for Africa.

As the global push towards energy transition intensifies, Nigeria’s indigenous oil exploration and production giant, Seplat Energy Plc, has advocated for a just  transition for Africa.
The Chief Executive Officer of Seplat Energy, Roger Brown
The Chief Executive Officer of Seplat Energy, Roger Brown

The Chief Executive Officer of Seplat Energy, Roger Brown, stated this in Lagos while delivering a keynote at the 45th edition of the Nigeria Annual International Conference and Exhibition (NAICE) organised by the  Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE), Nigerian Council, with the  theme, “Global Transition to Renewable and Sustainable Energy and the Future of Oil and Gas in Africa.”

Rpresented by  the Director, New Energy at Seplat,  Effiong Okon, Brown said for a successful energy transition in Africa: “We must support the goals of the Paris Agreement and align with society’s objective to get the world to net zero carbon emissions by 2050, if not before.; as lower-emission hydrocarbons, particularly gas, have a role to play during energy transition by replacing diesel generators and biomass.
“Though hydrocarbon export will continue to be a mainstay of the Nigerian economy and will fund Nigeria’s growth as well as its energy transition, the Oil & Gas Industry has a role to play as a responsible steward of Nigeria’s oil and gas assets, including those that might be divested.”
According to him, in the longer term, the reality and threat of climate change requires the decarbonisation of energy systems in Nigeria, but sustainability and transparency must be at the heart of business operations and decision making.
Brown noted that there is the need to balance decarbonisation with development, adding that: “Global warming and climate volatility are existential threats to humanity and nature. The world needs to accelerate efforts to achieve net-zero and mitigate warming effects. Africa’s climate, agriculture and people will suffer most in the coming decades.
The problem has been caused by emissions from developed-world countries that have enjoyed their ‘carbon privilege’ and built strong economies on fossil fuels.
“However, we need to consider the reality in the continent. Poverty, hunger, unemployment, population growth abound here. Africa contributes just 3.3% of global emissions. Most Africans (600 million) lack access to reliable energy, which hampers development. Use of inefficient and costly diesel / petrol generators saps financial resources, drains foreign exchange and creates pollution.
“Biomass use for cooking causes deforestation, health problems and nearly 0.5 million premature deaths in Sub-Saharan Africa every year. The developed-world’s drive to impose decarbonisation on Africa will constrain development.”
Making a case for gas, the Seplat CEO who spoke on  “Operationalising a Clean Energy Transition for Sustainable Development in Africa,” said the developed-world pressures to abandon fossil fuels are being pushed back by recognition of the need to drive development with reliable energy.
COP27, he explained, would focus on how best to achieve this balance for the benefit of tomorrow’s 2.5 billion Africans, of whom 500 million will be Nigerian, adding that given current low emission levels, Africa can achieve a disproportionate improvement in living stands through a globally small increase in emissions from cleaner gas for power and cooking.
He called on players in the continent to leverage oil and gas revenues to cash flow transition, but also tap international transition funding where available, hence the need for good corporate governance.
The Seplat Energy boss therefore urged industry operators to focus on quick wins first, which are: decarbonising the upstream and focus on producing ‘advantaged’ low-carbon barrels with low Scope ½; end routine flaring and redeploy gas to power operations and local communities; and deploy renewables to power operations where possible, and share with local communities.
He added: “We need to develop gas as transition fuel (Gas-to-power to replace diesel, move along value chain into power, e.g. business parks, large buildings; hybrid gas-to-power / solar offerings; and bottled gas products for domestic use. In addition, we can expand into renewables (hydro, wind, geothermal, blue/green hydrogen; and develop and monetise carbon capture and storage.
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