Adamu
Adamu, Minister of Education, on Monday performed the ground-breaking ceremony
for the construction of a 10MW solar power plant estimated to cost N4 billion
naira at Ahmadu Bello University, ABU, Zaria.
The project, located at Biye Village, Sabongari Local
Government Area of Kaduna State, is expected to be completed in six months and
is meant to address the energy needs of the university.
It was designed, initiated and financed by ABU in
collaboration with Nigeria-German Energy Partnership with assistance from
Tertiary Education Trust Fund.
During the foundation laying ceremony, the minister
commended the university for its foresight and urged it to sustain the tempo.
Mr. Adamu was represented by Fatima Jidda-Ahmed,
Director, Tertiary Institutions in the Federal Ministry of Education.
He expressed the hoped that the institution would take
advantage of the partnership with Germany, not only in power generation, but in
encouraging engineering students gain from the partnership.
In his speech, the German Deputy Ambassador to Nigeria,
Regina Hess, said the partnership was based on the passion Germany had for
university education in Nigeria.
She said universities would perform better if the
education budget was used judiciously.
“With this project, our passion for Germany has become
the passion for Nigerian government too,” she said.
Mrs. Hess promised to train engineers from the ABU to
become experts in the field of solar energy.
Jeremy Gains, the Coordinator, Nigeria-German Energy
Partnership, recalled that the project started in 2008 in Berlin when the late
President Umaru Yar’Adua and his wife visited Germany.
“Both Yar’Adua and his wife were alumni of the
university. He met Chancellor Martha and she asked how Germany can help
Nigeria.
“The late president said wisely in just three words and
those three words were; power, power, power, adding that electricity is the key
to development,” he said.
Mr. Gains said another alumni of ABU who also facilitated
the project was the late Rilwanu Lukman, when he was both minister and
Secretary-General of Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries.
“German company will come to Nigeria to create power
stations while in return, Nigeria will guarantee energy security in the form of
gas,” he noted.
Earlier, the ABU Vice-Chancellor, Ibrahim Garba, said
ABU, the largest university, not only in Nigeria but in West Africa, had high
demand for electricity.
He said the university spent about N85 million monthly on
electricity, “that’s why we need our own power source to use and probably sell
out to consumers out there.”
Mr. Garba said, all things being equal, the project,
which initial cost stood at N4 billion naira would be completed in the next six
months.
Credit: omojuwa

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