Ethiopia wind farm. Picture: REUTERS/KUMERRA GEMECHU
Wind turbines at the Ashegoda wind farm, on the Tigray region plateau in Ethiopia, are part of the strategic plan the country is implementing to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Picture: REUTERS/KUMERRA GEMECHU

KINDEYA Redaie has no electricity in his house but he bought two oxen with the money the state gave him in exchange for the right to put a wind turbine on his land.

"I would have preferred keeping my field but I’m proud to live where the country’s first wind turbine was set up," the farmer says, gazing at the huge white blades above his head.

On the Tigray region plateau, in northern Ethiopia, 70m-high masts — 84 of them — stand amid a landscape where the dry stony soil is still turned over with a plough. The Ashegoda wind farm, built by French companies Vergnet and Alstom, is a "clean" development in one of the world’s poorest nations.

In its quest to be regarded as an emerging country, Ethiopia has set itself the goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions. It’s a huge ambition for the country of 100-million people, where the economy has been growing at 10% a year. It’s a goal that makes the country a model six months before the December United Nations (UN) Climate Change Conference in Paris whose aim will be to ratify an agreement to limit the rise in temperatures to 2°C.

Like the majority of Ethiopians, Redaie must still settle for charcoal and "cow wood" (dried cowpat) when he wants to cook his meals or have warm water. Power produced by the Ashegoda complex, which runs along underground cables before reaching the national network’s high-voltage lines, is still too expensive for him.

All over the Horn of Africa country, construction sites have emerged to build solutions without expensive, imported fossil fuels, and to provide a place for wind and solar energies that are less vulnerable to drought than hydroelectricity.

The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, under construction on the Blue Nile River and a source of tension with the country’s Egyptian and Sudanese neighbours, nevertheless promises to be one of Africa’s most powerful hydroelectric behemoths.

Government officials contributed to its funding, which will be covered by national reserves. "I invested two months of salary in state obligations for the Renaissance," says Ghrmawit Hailé, strategy chief at the environment ministry. Her mission is to execute the roadmap of the late prime minister, Meles Zenawi. "Every ministry knows its carbon dioxide production reduction goals," she says.

The country is trying to create "a green economy that will hold up to the climate", which requires the involvement of every sector responsible or vulnerable to climate change. That means energy, of course, but also agriculture, transport, industry and construction.

"Climate change is a strategic issue for Ethiopia," the preamble to this project statement reads. "It can annihilate our development, exacerbate social tension, destabilise the Horn of Africa by stirring up the competition for access to water."

Faced with such an issue, it is easy for the government to reject criticism. "No infrastructure project sees the light of day without causing population displacements," says Arkebe Oqubay, adviser to Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn. "But we make sure that the affected communities are generously compensated. It’s the law," he said.

For several years, the Gibe III Dam, being built in the Omo Valley, has been the target of a virulent campaign by Survival International and International Rivers. "The government is certain it’s right, and we know what it can cost to contradict it," says an ecologist activist who wishes to remain anonymous.

The temperatures in Ethiopia could rise by 1.2°C by the end of the next decade, authorities warn.

"Climate modification is already causing significant migrations," warns Satishkumar Belliethathan, a member of the young Ethiopian Panel on Climate Change. "Farmers are seeing their pasture lands decreasing."

This group, inspired by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, will provide the government with the remaining scientific data it needs to stick to its strategy despite the criticism it faces.

Foreign sponsors are getting in on the project too. "Ethiopia won’t be able to do it alone," warns Sinkinesh Beyene, who leads the climate department of the UN Development Programme in Addis Ababa. "It needs money and foreign experts."

The UN agency is one of the first to have embraced the late Zenawi’s plans. Today, it manages a part of the international aid through a fund based in New York, trains officials for climate negotiations and sends others to train in renewable energies.

At the World Climate Summit in Lima in December, France, Germany, Sweden and Denmark joined Norway and the UK in promising to become backers. "Our plan is to invest $7.5bn a year by 2025," says Ghrmawit Hailé, indicating a cabinet filled with projects awaiting funds. Far from Ashegoda and its promises, the pollution and chaotic urbanism of Addis Ababa, they are a constant reminder that the future is still unwritten.

However, if the gamble by Ethiopia pays off, by 2030 the carbon footprint of its 100-million people will be the same as the Netherlands’ today.

New York Times