From 1 - 10 / 20
  • Different academia and research organizations, civil society/NGO, energy equipment manufacturers, energy regulators, energy specialists/consultant firms, energy supply industry, entrepeneur/Productive Industry, financial Institutions, Governments, International Organizations and media implicated in the field of expertise of RE and EE in the ECOWAS region. Data on RE and EE stakeholders is collected by ECREEE regularly. Stakeholders can also register on ECOWREX in the link below and after creating their account and logging in, they can create their stakeholder information point. http://www.ecowrex.org/user/register

  • Data provides information about the development of the Gas Pipeline project for West Africa, including the gas station at each Member state. Compiled by ECREEE from the West African Gas Pipeline Company’s (WAPCO).

  • The Global Environmental Facility Strategic Program for West Africa (GEF-SPWA), The ECOWAS Renewable Energy Facility (EREF) for Peri-urban and Rural Areas, The ECOWAS Renewable Energy Investment Initiative (EREI), The ECREEE projects and the non-initiative projects consist on a series of Investment Promotion Projects for the renewable energy development in the ECOWAS region

  • Includes Data for PV plants, Wind plants, Hydro Power plants, Biomass plants, Ocean Wave plants and conventional energy power plants (coal, diesel, gas and heavy fuel plants) categorized accordingly as operational or planned within a wide range operating capacity. The data is compiled by ECREEE from various sources including: Ministries of Energy of ECOWAS member states, National Information of Energy System reports (SIE), official national utilities websites and reports and the West African Power Pool (WAPP) database. HYDRO POWER PLANTS (information reviewed and updated in 2016): Regarding the information on hydro power plants (small, medium and large): First, the capacity class is according to the ECOWAS classification (small < 30MW, medium 30-100 MW, large > 100 MW). Secondly, the dataset was created using the following methodology: 1. Data on existing and planned hydropower facilities in West Africa was collected from various sources. The main databases investigated were: - ECOWREX database before December. 2015 - GranD database version 1.1 of March 2011 - Aquastat database on dams in Africa of July 2013 - List of “Hydropower & Dams in Africa 2014” in the International Journal on Hydropower & Dams 2015 special issue on “Water Storage and Hydropower Development for Africa” - JICA Nigeria Master Plan - SHP News, Spring 2005: “Small Hydropower – An important renewable Energy source for rural electrification in Nigeria”. Information about the small scale HPPs around the Jos Plateau (Nigeria) - Small Hydropower Projects in Nigeria, Yekinni et al., IJRRAS 22(1), 1/2015 - Website Guinea: http://www.sieguinee-dne.org/index.php/cartographie.html - Map of hydroelectric powerplants in Burkina Faso - World Small Hydropower Development Report 213 - Ghana information Main Power Generation Excel table provided by ECREEE - International Water Power & Dam Construction, Yearbook 2012, table “Dams & hydro plants”. - SE4ALL database by Mr. Pascal Habay - Additional sources: Many individual pieces of information were collected from HPP design documents, research reports, reports by governmental authorities and non-governmental organizations, corporate communiques and reports, newspaper articles etc. 2. Existence and location of the facilities were checked with the aid of satellite imagery. When a location was verified, the exact coordinates were taken from the corresponding point on the river network (GIS vector layer derived from Hydrosheds). 3. For all existing HPPs (operational HPPs and HPPs under construction and under refurbishment), existing information was compared and cross-checked and the most plausible values included in the attribute table. At several HPPs different data sources listed different values e.g. for the installed capacity or dam height. For planned, proposed and identified HPPs, the information from ECREEE and SE4ALL databases was adopted without further investigation

  • Location of settlements in West Africa in identified irrigable off-grid areas in 2018, that could still be in off-grid areas in 2023 according to the least-cost analysis conducted in the framework of the off-grid solar market assessment and private sector support facility design, which was done as an activity of the sub-component 1A of the Regional Off-Grid Electrification Project (ROGEP).

  • Location of settlements that could have access to electricity through off-grid solutions by 2030 according to the least-cost analysis conducted in the framework of the off-grid solar market assessment and private sector support facility design, which was done as an activity of the sub-component 1A of the Regional Off-Grid Electrification Project (ROGEP).

  • Location of health facilities that could have access to electricity through off-grid solutions by 2030 according to the least-cost analysis conducted in the framework of the off-grid solar market assessment and private sector support facility design, which was done as an activity of the sub-component 1A of the Regional Off-Grid Electrification Project (ROGEP).

  • Density of identified off-grid households in ROGEP countries by 2023, per country administrative boundary level 1. The households could have access to electricity through off-grid solutions by 2023 according to the least-cost analysis conducted in the framework of the off-grid solar market assessment and private sector support facility design, which was done as an activity of the sub-component 1A of the Regional Off-Grid Electrification Project (ROGEP).

  • Location of settlements that could be connected to national electricity grids in 2023 according to the least-cost analysis conducted in the framework of the off-grid solar market assessment and private sector support facility design, which was done as an activity of the sub-component 1A of the Regional Off-Grid Electrification Project (ROGEP).

  • Location of health facilities that could have access to electricity through off-grid solutions by 2023 according to the least-cost analysis conducted in the framework of the off-grid solar market assessment and private sector support facility design, which was done as an activity of the sub-component 1A of the Regional Off-Grid Electrification Project (ROGEP).