Rwandans blame the
"demons" of Lake Kivu for the deaths of fisherman and others who have
occasionally disappeared on one of Africa's great expanses of water in the
heart of the continent.
Now Rwanda is turning the
methane gas which can bubble up from the lake bed, sometimes with fatal
consequences, into a lifeline by generating electricity to help businesses
expand and light up a nation with a chronic power shortage according to
Reuters.
Across Africa, governments
are struggling to increase power capacity and expand grids to meet the demands
of growing populations with rising aspirations. Poor electricity supplies are
often cited as one of the biggest hurdles to investment.
Rwanda's KivuWatt plant,
which started in May, is part of a network of projects aimed at providing 70 percent
of the 11 million population with power from the grid or off-grid by 2018, up
from 25 percent now. Much will come from renewable resources.
"The country cannot
grow if you don’t have power," Jarmo Gummerus, country manager for the
plant developed by U.S. company ContourGlobal, told Reuters on the lush shores
of Lake Kivu, where a hi-tech barge gathers methane from the depths.
Rwanda, one of Africa's
poorest nations but also among its fastest growing, is harnessing its limited
solar, peat and hydro resources to curb the landlocked country's fuel import
bill while keeping power flowing to spur on industry and create jobs.
Lake Kivu's methane has now
been added to the list of its emerging resources, formed from biogas created by
decomposing matter on the bed of the lake that is trapped by a layer of
mineral-rich water flowing off nearby volcanic soil.
Left untapped, it could one
day explode or, as in the case of another lake in Cameroon, poison inhabitants
on shore if it bubbles up in large quantities, experts say. Locals say it has
already claimed unsuspecting victims on the lake.
"There is a story that
there are demons in the lake," said Gummerus. Highly-combustible methane
is extracted from other toxic gas that is mixed with it, he said. "It just
kills almost immediately so it’s a very dangerous," he added.
His company is now carefully
extracting the methane to power a 26 megawatt (MW) plant, with plans to
increase that to 100 MW by 2020 at a cost of about $500 million to $600
million.
Despite that hefty
investment, using domestic resources is a boon for a nation which has to truck
all imports into the country about 1,400 km (870 miles) through Kenya or
Tanzania, often along traffic-clogged roads that are poorly maintained.
Eventually, Rwanda could
generate about 350 MW from methane, with a similar potential in the Democratic
Republic of Congo, which shares the lake. Congo yet to tap the gas supplies.
The start-up of the KivuWatt
plant is already benefiting local businesses in the region of rolling green
hills and volcanic peaks, which the government wants to promote as a tourist
destination.
Credit:Reuters/CNBC
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