CREEE and the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) organized a regional workshop on Energy Planning Methodologies and Tools in Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire from 10–12 December 2012.
The workshop aimed to acquaint energy planners in the region with appropriate methodologies, using the ECOWAS Renewable Energy Planning model developed by IRENA, based on the MESSAGE modelling tool (software developed by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to support national governments in energy planning).
The workshop was part of the joint ECREEE–IRENA initiative- Promoting a Sustainable Market for PV Systems in the ECOWAS Region (ProSPER)- with a focus on capacity building to foster renewable energy development in the region. The workshop was also part of the ECOWAS training programme on Energy Planning Support for the Elaboration of Renewable Energy Action Plans for ECOWAS Member States, organized by ECREEE in collaboration with its partners.
The targeted participants were professional staff from the planning units at ministries and electricity utilities. Thirty participants attended the workshop, most of them senior staff from their respective energy planning units who also had experience in energy planning models and analysis tools. The participants came from 13 ECOWAS Member States, specifically from the Ministry of Energy as well as the national electricity utility.
During the two-and-a-half days, participants learned the basics of the ECOWAS Renewable Energy Planning Tool (EREP) as well as how to use the MESSAGE tool to run the simulation and channel results into EREP. They were able to run their own country simulation and compare different scenarios.
The main outcome of the workshop was the acknowledgement that EREP was a tool that could play a useful role in energy planning. The availability of EREP is exceptionally timely as Member States, following the adoption of the regional renewable energy policy, are working on the development of their national renewable energy action plans (NREAP) in an effort to achieve the regional targets.