Nigeria’s Energy Crisis and the Sustainability Question

J. Jack, Better Jack
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Abstract

Nigeria’s deepening energy crisis will continue to pose a challenge to the attainment of the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals by 2030 despite being the largest producer of oil and gas resources in Africa. With an expanding population of over 200 million people and a rapidly growing economy, the demand for energy has significantly increased over the last decade. However, with a meagre electricity generation capacity of 3 500 to 5 000 MW, only about 53% of Nigeria’s population is connected to the national electric grid accounting for a per capita electricity consumption of 144 kWh, one of the lowest in Africa. To bridge the widening gap between energy demand and supply, millions of Nigerians have continued to rely on unsustainable alternatives such as petroleum-based electricity generating sets to meet domestic, commercial and industrial energy demands. It is against this backdrop that we, by relying on a critical analysis of secondary sources, examined the nature of Nigeria’s energy crisis, the emergent coping behaviour in response to the energy crisis and its impacts on sustainability. We submit that the perennial energy crisis in Nigeria undermines inclusive energy transition and stifles socio-economic growth in the country. Consequent upon this is the emergence of other forms of negative coping behaviour such as artisanal crude oil refining in the oil rich Niger Delta region in which the attendant economic, social, health and environmental implications are most manifest.
尼日利亚的能源危机和可持续性问题
尽管尼日利亚是非洲最大的石油和天然气资源生产国,但其日益加剧的能源危机将继续对到2030年实现联合国可持续发展目标构成挑战。随着2亿多人口的增长和经济的快速增长,对能源的需求在过去十年中显著增加。然而,尼日利亚的发电能力仅为3500至5000兆瓦,只有约53%的人口接入了国家电网,人均用电量为144千瓦时,是非洲最低的国家之一。为了弥合日益扩大的能源供需差距,数百万尼日利亚人继续依赖不可持续的替代能源,如石油发电机组,以满足家庭、商业和工业的能源需求。正是在这种背景下,我们依靠对二手资料的批判性分析,研究了尼日利亚能源危机的性质,应对能源危机的紧急应对行为及其对可持续性的影响。我们认为,尼日利亚长期的能源危机破坏了包容性能源转型,扼杀了该国的社会经济增长。随之而来的是出现了其他形式的消极应对行为,例如在石油丰富的尼日尔三角洲地区手工提炼原油,由此产生的经济、社会、健康和环境影响最为明显。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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