●Automotive agency to lead
green vehicle revolution ●Stakeholders list effects
on economy
As part of measures to
battle global warming, Nigeria, a signatory to the Paris treaty, may ban petrol
and diesel vehicles within the next decade.
The
Guardian Nigeria report continues:
President
Muhammadu Buhari signed the Paris agreement earlier in the year to reduce
greenhouse gases emissions. Experts said petrol and diesel vehicles are leading
causes of pollution across the world.
Indeed,
the country is also a signatory to the United Nation’s Sustainable Development
Goals, which has made compulsory reduction of pollution before 2030 a priority.
The
level of pollution in a country like Nigeria, where major cities are already
regarded as the world’s worst in terms of air quality, has been projected to
rise following the adoption of green vehicles in other countries. Green
vehicles are those not powered with petrol or diesel.
If
Nigeria that depends greatly on revenue from oil is to ban the use of petrol
and diesel vehicles, it amounts to suicide if nothing crops up to take the
place of oil in the national revenue matrix. The country’s finances shall
steeply dip such that budget implementation to execute projects and programmes
for the development of the country will be near impossible. In fact, energy
analysts are worried that the prevailing drive to shift from fossil fuel could
reduce Nigeria’s oil earning by half in the next 10 years.
But
the nation is still capable of weathering the storm. While the mining of
minerals accounts for only about 0.3% of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in
Nigeria, the Managing Director, Epina Technology Limited, Prof. Eguakhide
Oaikhinan, said an exploding market for batteries to replace oil could turn
mineral resources such as lithium, graphite and cobalt into new sources of
revenue for the country.
Already,
there is surging demand for batteries which are made up of raw materials like
cobalt, graphite and lithium found in high deposits in the northern part of the
country. The lithium-ore battery market is expected to grow at a 21.7% rate
yearly in terms of the actual energy capacity required. It was 15.9 GWh in
2015, but would hit a whopping 93.1 GWh by 2024.
Oaikhinan
said: “Minerals containing lithium ore can be found mainly in the northern part
of the country, particularly Nasarawa State. Graphite is available in Kaduna
State. If these minerals are characterized and processed for industrial uses,
we can see a shift gradually from a crude oil-dependent country to a more
competitive industrialized nation.”
The
reality is defined by moves by buyers of Nigerian crude oil, including
India, Netherlands, Italy and the United Kingdom to explore other sources
of energy even as they set deadlines to reduce the use of petrol and diesel
vehicles in their territories.
Against
plans by France, U.K., U.S., India and Norway to ban the new sales of petrol
and diesel cars, the Director General, Agency for Automotive Development, Aliyu
Jelani is sounding optimistic. He says the Nigerian government is ready to lead
the citizens away from depending solely on petrol and diesel vehicles.
Jelani,
the designer of General Motors’ Chevy Volt, who was appointed by the Federal
Government in a drive to turn Nigeria to an automotive manufacturing hub, said
players in the national automotive policy must shift attention to green
vehicles. He said government would encourage investors, particularly Nigerians
in the diaspora, and friends of the country across the world, to invest in
green revolution.
But
some of the stakeholders who spoke to The
Guardian, were pessimistic about the readiness of Nigeria to go green.
They argued that the country lacked basic infrastructure, especially
electricity supply, to support electric vehicles.
The
Co-founder, Sustainability School Lagos and associate lecturer, Centre for
Petroleum, Energy Economics and Law (CPEEL), University of Ibadan,
Dr. Olufemi Olarewaju, said the country did not have a future in oil
anymore. According to him, one of the direct consequences is that there would
be drastic reduction in the demand for crude oil.
“We
were worried that oil was going to finish, now we are sure that oil is going to
remain in the ground. With the new aggressiveness of automobile manufacturers,
there is going to be a sharp demand in battery storage. We will have sharp
demand for clean energy automobile. There will be significant reduction in
demand for oil and that will obviously affect our economy,” Olarewaju said.
Apart
from the anxiety over revenue shortfall, Olarewaju urged policy makers to
develop a proactive end-of-life policy that will mitigate looming environmental
pollution as Africa, particularly Nigeria, has been projected to become a
dumpsite for phased-out petrol and diesel automobile products.
He
said: “There have been discussions on end-of-life policy for automobile. But I
am not aware if we have such a policy in Nigeria, so that makes it difficult
for us to know what to do with these vehicles that come to places like Nigeria.
We are facing a converging from waste perspective, which is an environmental
issue and convergence from revenue perspective.
“The
next thing we need to begin to look at is how to convert the challenge to an
opportunity. We are incapacitated. We cannot stop or influence the global
trend. We need to move the economy to non-oil. We need to look at the
opportunities of the green energy itself. We can win in two ways; by
contributing to climate change issues, which may affect Africa more than any
other part of the world. We can also look at it from the economic
diversification point. Private and public sectors need to get curious in investing
in clean technology as an added component of what we are trying to do in
economic diversification.”
The
Managing Director, Stallion NMN, which assembles Nissan, Infiniti and other
brands in Nigeria, Parvir Singh doesn’t see the feasibility of his company
importing green vehicles into Nigeria unless enabling infrastructure is
created.
Considering
the poor state of electricity supply in Nigeria, Singh expected the country’s
journey to green vehicles to begin from the point of stable power supply.
Electric vehicles such as the Nissan Leaf and BMW have been introduced in South
Africa.
The
Director General, Africa Clean Energy Summit, Dr. Victor Fodeke, said the
country required a holistic plan that would enable the introduction of green
vehicles into the country.
“We
cannot ban petrol and diesel vehicles in Nigeria. We need to look at the
technology and infrastructure necessary for them. We need to put our national
circumstance into consideration,” he said.
While
Volvo announced it would stop the production of internal combustion engines
vehicles, stressing that every car it makes from 2019 onward would be an
electric motor, India’s Power Minister, Piyush Goyal, said only electric cars
would be operating in the country by 2030.
Though UK-based IHS Markit said electric and hybrid vehicles currently account for only three per cent of global auto sales, the country has announced a plan to invest about £3 billion to cut illegal levels of air pollution. UK’s Environment Secretary, Michael Gove said the country would halt the sale of diesel and petrol cars and vans by 2040.
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