May 29, 2012 · 12 Comments
Photo: Working on the wind turbine to try and cut Abaarso Tech’s energy costs (John/Abaarso Tech)
“There are so many different industries that seem promising – infrastructure, food and beverage, oil and minerals, and telecommunications”
By John (Abaarso-Tech-School)
- Someone recently asked me about which sectors in Somaliland I thought might be attractive for potential investment. After all, frontier markets are rapidly gaining popularity amongst Western investors, from Myanmar to Nigeria. Particularly in Africa, there are so many different industries that seem promising – infrastructure, food and beverage, oil and minerals, and telecommunications. Private equity firms based primarily in London and Dubai have begun to zero in on neighboring Ethiopia, which has consecutively posted impressive GDP growth, has Africa’s 2nd largest population, and exports a wide variety of agricultural and mineral products.
Somaliland, however, has not received much attention from investors in comparison to other African countries. The ongoing instability and civil war in southern Somalia, as well as the maritime piracy industry off the coast of Puntland, has deterred many would-be investors from putting their money anywhere near Somalia. The few large-scale investments in Somaliland have mostly been funded by successful Somali businessmen from the diaspora.
Although not blessed with mineral wealth, arable land, or a large population, Somaliland does have a few sectors that might interest seasoned investors or savvy entrepreneurs.
Infrastructure is one major area. China, Ethiopia, and Somaliland have reportedly already signed a trilateral deal to expand and renovate Berbera’s port and build a sealed road all the way from Berbera to Addis Ababa. Ethiopia is one of Africa’s largest and fastest growing countries, but it is land-locked and relies almost entirely on Djibouti’s port for importing and exporting goods. Berbera is a deepwater port that could be very beneficial to both Somaliland and Ethiopia and would provide a competitor to Djibouti. In comparison to Ethiopia, the roads in Somaliland are horrendous. Most have not been repaired in decades and the road from Hargeisa to Wojaale (the Ethiopia/Somaliland border) is not even paved for the last 20 or 30 km. A smooth, sealed road all the way from Addis Ababa-Hargeisa-Berbera would vastly improve Berbera port’s importance and would provide a massive boost to Somaliland’s economy.
Although the infrastructure is in various states of decay, I believe the energy sector challenges infrastructure as the most badly-needed improvement for Somaliland’s economy. Power in Somaliland remains prohibitively expensive, and the country’s population pays close to $1 per kilowatt hour for electricity. To put that in perspective, Americans pay close to $0.12/kWh. Such a high price will guarantee that industry and manufacturing in Somaliland remain nascent and will prove to be a major impediment to expanding and diversifying the country’s economy.
Why is the price of power so high? Years of civil war destroyed most of the country’s infrastructure, and Somaliland’s continued lack of international recognition has made it difficult to attract money from donors or companies interested in providing affordable energy solutions. There are no power plants here, and 100% of the power comes from expensive, environmentally-unfriendly diesel generators. Private generator owners charge neighbors exorbitant prices depending on their electricity usage, and it is not uncommon for households or small shops to pay per lightbulb!
The few power lines that run through Hargeisa sag languidly and only function to transport excess electricity from a large generator to neighboring houses and shops. Contributing to the dysfunctional, decentralized energy sector is the fact that diesel generators are expensive to operate. All diesel is imported from the Gulf. The boarding school where I live and teach has two generators – a small one for use in the daytime and a large, high-powered one used at night to power our security lights throughout campus. The school’s managing director told me that on average, we spend about $15,000 a year just on diesel for the generators
Recently, our school has built and installed a wind turbine to try and reduce our costs and environmental pollution. I believe the wind turbine is the first of its kind in this country, and we imported all of the parts from China (the 20 meter tall base, the actual blade, batteries, etc.) A prominent Somali engineer who lives overseas helped manage and oversee the construction of the project. The process was time-consuming – from pouring the concrete foundation to renting a crane to help set the 20 meter base upright to hooking up hundreds of high-voltage batteries.
Now fully functional and by far the tallest structure on campus, the wind turbine is expected to cover 90% of our energy usage, and should pay for itself within a couple of years. We will continue to use the generators at times when the wind is still or if there are any problems with the turbine.
To me, a wind turbine seems like the perfect solution to the school’s energy costs. Located about 20 km outside of Hargeisa in an open valley, Abaarso is incredibly windy most of the time. However, wind energy is a bit more complicated than many people realize, and should ideally be paired with another power source to maximize its benefit. If you think of hybrid cars, for example, the most successful ones combine electric power with gas-fueled power. With wind energy, you need a back-up power source for times when the wind is not blowing, the batteries are not fully carrying the charge, or you want to fine-tune your electricity usage by increasing or decreasing the voltage.
One potential option would be to combine wind energy with hydroelectric power imported from Ethiopia. The Ethiopian government has spent close to $8 billion on various projects to dam the Nile River and generate electricity. Ethiopia has become a major producer of hydroelectric power and there are now talks of the country exporting power to neighboring countries in the region. Such an option for Somaliland, however, would require an enormous upfront capital investment which would certainly require external financing from an organization like the IFC or the World Bank. High-voltage cables would need to be laid from eastern Ethiopia to the Somaliland border, but I have heard price estimates in the ballpark of $90 million to complete such an initiative. This project would cut electricity prices drastically for Somaliland’s population of over 3 million, but remains a pipe-dream without international recognition or clear access to funding.
Another alternative would be building a power plant that uses oil or coal and would service the capital city, Hargeisa, which is home to roughly half of Somaliland’s population. Building such a plant and revamping Hargeisa’s dilapidated electrical grid might cost in the neighborhood of $40 million and funding would also need to come from a variety of sources. At the same time, it could prove to be a great investment by monopolizing the country’s energy sector, providing power at a fraction of the previous cost, and making power affordable enough to encourage industry. Current power prices in Somaliland are prohibitively expensive for any kind of large industrial production.
Whatever the solution is, until Somaliland finds a more efficient way to provide power to its citizens, be it through a government-run energy monopoly or a private company, the country will face serious challenges in expanding its economy.
By John (Abaarso-Tech-School)
Origin:
May 29, 2012
Follow @somalilandpressBy goth Mohamed
John (Abaarso-Tech-School),
I appreciated for sharing this on public. I'm an electrical Engineer in electronics components design major. I've been involved in designing and installing of a few mini renewable energy projects in Canada and the USA. I might be able to offer assistance in power requirements or perhaps pass it on to my contacts if you could let me know the annual power consumption at Abaarso-Tech-School..
Better yet, it'd probably help more if you could give me the annual pwr consumption for Abaarso-Tech-School and a couple other facilities with the similar sizes in Hargeisa, that would allow me to crunch the numbers up for an estimate of enough renewable energy through out the year for 25 yrs.
Osman Qaal
There is nothing called Somaliland John and the region is part of Somalia. As an American man with education, I know you would never entertain for example Texas been returned to Mexico or even allowing it to secede.
Somaliland region is Somalia's version of Texas except unlike Texas we never robbed the region from anyone.
The Somali people and its united government will solve all those issues because if you know before the fall of Siad Barre, Hargeisa never used to experience any energy shortages.
He did not give the attention it deserved but nonetheless it was better than what it is today. They still using the roads Siad Barre built over 25 years ago.
Right now the place is run by one warlord called Zero'aanyo (Silaanyo) and things are deteriorating. Homeless is on the rise so is hunger, water shortages, energy shortages and the trash is mounting like artificial mountains, thus all indicating poor sanitation and health care.
Silaanyo only cares about stealing the money and wiring it to his family in London so they can buy UK houses. This old man is not honest nor sincere.
By next year I predict the whole thing will collapse and Mogadishu will recover and Somalia will be united again and the sufferings will end in all Somali cities.
Abaarso tech is appreciated and once Somalia is reunified, the government will directly fund Abaarso Tech and the institution will play an important role in shaping future Somalia. Keep doing what you are doing but dont be brainwashed by this Somaliland game——-Texas is going no where so is Somaliland.
@kayse.
your right about your comment.no wonder They don’t want to hear The truth it’s like someone buried his/her in The sand time is catching up They have no where to go put face reality.
The residents in Berbera will not entertain the idea of handing the port to Silaanyo and his gang from Garadag under a shady cover of "privatization" and "Chinese deal". There are no Chinese interested in the port because China and the Chinese will not support two subclans to secede from their people and nation. If they do that, it means the Chinese are validating the case of Taiwan and Tibet.
Unlike Taiwan and Tibet, only two subclans want to secede from Somalia because they claim they suffered the most under Siad Bare rule, which, of course is laughable.
All Somalis have suffered from the conflict both directly and indirectly. The flame has been burning in the south for 21 years with little break and they are not complaining nor giving up on the Somali dream.
Two subclans do not represent the interest of the Somali people nor their voice. The time to grief is over, the time to protest is behind us, the time for hate and segregation has faded. Today Somalia is turning the page and its entering a new chapter of reconciliation. It has learned a great deal in the last two decades and the way it will get things right is if every Somali took part in the reconstruction and healing of this batted nation.
It is no time to be running after a dream that isn't coming. The days the world used to divide are no longer here. Today the world uses the following terms; globalization, diversity, multiculturalism, bloc, global, corporation, TNCs aka Transnational corporation, Multinational, Alliance, Axis, treaty, regional..etc
The world today invests in places where the above terms are used because in today's world, business is both described and driven by those same terms.
No business is gonna go the opposite to DE-coporation because investing in Somaliland which is under two subclan means DE-corporatism.
Is Somaliland an autarchy? Yes to some degree but when it lacks the resources, human capacity and skills as well as manufacturing and technology knowledge—it is not self sufficient at all.
I'm from Hargeisa and I'm all globalization.
Kaye I stopped taking you seriously a long time ago. They say a leopard never changes its spots.
Yesterday you were an extreme Somaliland fan and today you are an extreme anti-Somaliland individual. Therefore, a man who changes his principles based on a dislike of the man leading is sad.
I believe Kayse will be the type to tomorrow support Somaliland again once Silanyo is out.
To unionists I have this to say do not trust this man for he changes his allegiances more times than I change my socks.
This is his reply to an article on Somaliland reunifying with Somalia some 3 months ago:
Kayse:
"While I respect Mr Dhimbil's opinion, putting forward his view without extreme measures like we see from people from the south, I have to say first of all Somaliland won't go back to famine, destruction, piracy, extremism, rape, suicide, hunger or civil war because thats all Somalia stands for. Nor does Somaliland wants to be part of the world's biggest refugee camps namely Dadaab and Badbaado. Not for us, not for our kids or mothers.
Somalia offers nothing but war. Somalilanders would rather be three people but living in peace than to be among Somalia's twenty million who are all homeless in Kenya and Ethiopia, fed by aid agencies, which they often kidnap anyways."
http://somalilandpress.com/what-if-somaliland-doe…
Granted I do respect your right to have an opinion no matter how different it is, yet my beef with Kayse is how snake like his changes are. Stick to one philosophy
For this reason all people should never take this man seriously at all just because of that. No-one is angry at you because of your unionist views rather its how hard you are trying to distort the Somaliland image and to sow seeds of conflict in Somaliland because of your beef with Silannyo. When Silanyo's administration comes to an end do not ever try and claim Somaliland again for we have no need for people who base their nationality on whether they like the President or not. A man dies by his principles and I always respect a man who sticks to his principles not a man who does a 360 degree political turn based on their whims every other day.
This is the last time I ever respond to such a man
The kid,
First of all I don't follow your comment nor anyone else, besides I don't have beef with any of you guys.
Somalia is not perfect and for it to be right, the north have to play more leadership role. I do not support secessionist project regardless who is in power for the two subclans and I do not support a Somalia entirely dominated by the south.
If the North played more role and powers were fairly distributed, Somalia will stand for something but I never gave up on Somalia.
I had the flag of Somalia in my house since 2003 and today it still flies.
No one is going to support two subclan protest event—Somalia today has hope and north Somalia is needed to step up and reach out to the south and not allow the south to return to the unrest.
I no longer refer "Somaliland" as Somaliland but the Council and perhaps a new term should be Garadag Council.
I can diss Somalia however I want, its my country and at the end of the day, nothing can change the fact that I am a Somali.
kayse.
GOOD ON YOU MATE THE TRUTH HURTS YOU HAVE A LOT OF FREINDS FROM EVERY PARTS OF SOMALIA & IT’S GROWING BY THE HOUR.THOSE WHO DISAGREE THEY HAVE RIGHT TO DO SO PUT NO MAKE MISTAKE KAYSE HAS RIGHT TO EXPRESS HIS VIEW LIKE ANY OTHER CITIZEN.
Kayse,
Everything is based on clan/tribal matters to you. Hargeisa houses for over 1 million people, there'd be a civil war every day if there're too many like you among it's residents. Buddy, you've miserably failed at you whole life,.
Osman Qaal
Kayse, Kayse, Kayse, crazy Kayse, let's see where and how far you might run with all these bs of
your own doing. Let's see anything you say could make any real difference. Keep cracking like
hell and then you know what you will have achieved nothing for your nervous breakdown
abusive speeches. Keep cracking untill your cracking is no more no more no more. iska dhuuz dhuuz
iyaba wa dawo'e kkkkk
Cheers
A habr yonis man who is not intune with habr yonis policies, kayse you fail to understand that to be a qabilistic, you have to follow qabiil protocol.
All i have to say is, go kill yourself. Your useless.
Spot on. Let him ask a few of his fellow Habar Yonis guys anywhere in the world whether they support the "council in west Hargeisa's Mogan house" or the government in Mogadishu. I think their unmistakable choice would depress him further.
Kayse seems to know nothing about Hargeysa during the Barre regime, there was only electric power in one downtown area plus the governmental Shaab district, and from the early 80's that power was for only three hours (6pm to 9pm).
He talks of reunification where in reality there is no Socio-economic interest for Somalilanders to exchange 24hr power in most urban locations for the old faynuus, which is now a relic of the past as well as the Defunct Somali Republic and its 3pm Bandow, looting, extra judiciary killings, not to mention the despotic Carte Blanche policies of the Southerners.
A big No to Unification A Big No to the Faynuus.