Zuva Petroleum is determined to reduce its carbon footprint through renewable energy. The Zimbabwe-based oil company recently launched a project to build 180 solar power plants in the country. The electricity generated will be used to power Zuva Petroleum’s petrol stations, liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) sites and depots.
The oil company plans to start work in 2021. “We also plan to channel 30 per cent of the electricity produced by the solar power plants to the national grid through a net metering system. This will improve the electricity supply to the population. Of Zimbabwe’s 16 million people, only 32 per cent have access to electricity,” says Zuva Petroleum.
Zimbabwe’s rush to solar energy companies
Zuva Petroleum thus joins other companies engaged in the solarisation of their installations in Zimbabwe. In July 2020, Pretoria Portland Cement (PPC) appointed a company to build and operate a 32 MWp photovoltaic solar power plant in Colleen Bawn, in the province of Matabeleland South. PPC is expected to draw 16 MWp of electricity from the future plant for the operation of its clinker plant (the main component of cement, editor’s note) in Colleen Bawn. The remaining 16 MWp will be injected into Zimbabwe’s national electricity grid.
During the same period, the Swiss embassy in Harare acquired a small 160 kWp solar power plant to supply its residences. The surplus electricity is sold to the state-owned Zimbabwe Electricity Transmission and Distribution Company (ZETDC).
Inès Magoum