IHS eyes off-grid solutions to power up its towers

17th June 2016 By: Natasha Odendaal - Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

Mobile telecommunications infrastructure provider IHS is aiming to leverage renewable-energy technology and improved grid infrastructure across its portfolio to reduce its reliance on costly diesel and unstable on-grid electricity to power its tower sites across Africa.

With over $500-million already invested in solar power since 2013, IHS expected its investments to breach the $1-billion mark as power system enhancements continued across IHS’s Africa portfolio, which comprised some 23 300 owned or managed sites across the continent.

“Providing a reliable power supply across our African operations is challenging. High dependence on diesel power, coupled with erratic electricity grids impedes our ability to continually power our sites,” IHS Towers cofounder and interim IHS Nigeria CEO Mohamad Darwish tells Engineering News.

IHS is currently deploying solar panels to the bulk of its Nigeria-based sites to augment or partially replace existing power systems in a programme that is delivering “strong results” since its inception late last year.

“Nigeria has benefited the most from our green energy initiatives since roughly three-quarters of our sites are based there, although, on a site-for-site basis, all countries are benefiting at a similar rate,” he adds.

Solar farm opportunities are currently being pursued in Rwanda in an initiative that could potentially supply power to the national grid in what Darwish describes as the first energy swap model to be used in Africa.

The telecommunications firm is investigating building a pilot solar farm to supply excess power to Rwanda’s national grid in return for the provision of a commensurate amount of electricity during solar downtime. Negotiations with local stakeholders are ongoing.

In Zambia, the group plans to become “almost diesel neutral” over the next two years as the focus on on-grid and off-grid solutions, including solar power, intensifies.

One initiative is the charging of batteries at the sites through the national grid connection or using excess solar energy to ensure the sites reduce their use of diesel power during a grid outage.

Currently, 90% of the company’s towers in Zambia are connected to the national grid, with the other 10% off-grid towers based in rural areas, which have a low power demand and could be powered entirely by solar and battery.

IHS is investing to employ solar technology at the sites to replace the existing generators.