Governance Barriers to Renewable Energy in North Africa

Journal Article (2014)
Author(s)

Nadejda Komendantova (International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, ETH Zürich)

Stefan Pfenninger (Imperial College London)

Anthony Patt (International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, ETH Zürich)

Affiliation
External organisation
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1080/03932729.2014.907627
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Publication Year
2014
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
Issue number
2
Volume number
49
Pages (from-to)
50-65

Abstract

Solar power in the North African region has the potential to provide electricity for local energy needs and export to Europe. Nevertheless, despite the technical feasibility of solar energy projects, stakeholders still perceive projects in the region as risky because of existing governance issues. Certain areas of solar projects, such as construction, operation and management, are the most prone to governance risks, including lack of transparency and accountability, perceived as barriers for deployment of the projects. It is likely that large-scale foreign direct investment into solar energy will not eliminate existing risks, but might even increase them. Furthermore, the recent political changes in the region have addressed some governance risks but not all of them, especially bureaucratic corruption. Stakeholders recommend a broad set of measures to facilitate development of solar projects in the region, ranging from auditing of individual projects to simplification and unification of bureaucratic procedures.

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