Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Energy in the Democratic Republic of the Congo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

One of theInga dams, a major source ofhydroelectricity in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

TheDemocratic Republic of the Congo was a netenergy exporter in 2008. Most energy was consumed domestically in 2008. According to theIEA statistics the energy export was in 2008 small and less than from theRepublic of Congo.[1] 2010 population figures were 3.8 million for the RC compared to CDR 67.8 Million.

Electricity

[edit]

The Democratic Republic of the Congo has reserves ofpetroleum,natural gas,coal, and a potentialhydroelectric power generating capacity of around 100,000 MW. TheInga Dam on theCongo River has the potential capacity to generate 40,000 to 45,000 MW of electric power, sufficient to supply the electricity needs of the whole Southern Africa region. Ongoing uncertainties in the political arena, and a resulting lack of interest from investors has meant that the Inga Dam's potential has been limited.

In 2001, the dam was estimated to have an installed generating capacity of 2,473 MW. It is estimated that the dam is capable of producing no more than 650–750 MW, because two-thirds of the facility's turbines do not work. The African Development bank agreed to supply $8 million towards dam expansion. The government has also agreed to strengthen the Inga-kolwezi and Inga-South Africa interconnections and to construct a 2nd power line to supply power to Kinshasa.

In 2007, the DR Congo had a gross production of public and self-produced electricity of 8.3 TWh. The DR Congo imported 78 million kWh of electricity in 2007. The DR Congo is also an exporter of electric power. In 2003, electric power exports came to 1.3 TWh, with power transmitted to theRepublic of Congo and its capital,Brazzaville, as well as toZambia andSouth Africa. There were plans to build theWestern Power Corridor (Westcor) to supply electricity fromInga III hydroelectric power plant to the Democratic Republic of the Congo,Angola,Namibia,Botswana andSouth Africa.

The national power company isSociété nationale d'électricité (SNEL).

Only 13% of the country has access to electricity.[2] As of 2003, 98.2% of electricity was produced by hydroelectric power.[3]

The DRC a member of three electrical power pools: SAPP (Southern African Power Pool), EAPP (East African Power Pool), and CAPP (Central African Power Pool).

Hydropower

[edit]

In the 1930s a large hydroelectric power station inMwadingusha was built, serving the mining industry of Haute-Katanga. Transmission lines of 120 and 50 kV connected toLubumbashi andLikasi.[4]

The country has vast potential in hydroelectricity. The second stage of the hydroelectric dam was completed in 1982 on the lower Congo River atInga Falls, with a large portion of its power production supplying hydroelectricity to the mining industry and Kinshasa. Further plans are to build the proposed 11,050 MW Inga IIIhydropower project with the construction of two dams. There will be approximately 2,000 km and 3,000 km of transmissions lines within the DRC and across its borders respectively. The Inga III hydropower project is expected to electrify Kinshasa, lead to the development of theDRC's mining sector, and exported hydroelectricity.

Petroleum

[edit]

The DROC hascrude oil reserves that are second only toAngola's in southern Africa. As of 2009, the DROC's crude oil reserves came to 29 million cubic metres (180 million barrels). In 2008, the DROC produced 3,173 cubic metres (19,960 bbl) of oil per day and consumed 1,700 cubic metres (11,000 bbl) per day. As of 2007, the DROC exported 3,194 cubic metres (20,090 bbl) per day and imported 1,805 cubic metres (11,350 bbl) per day.

In 2007, the DROC produced 836,000 metric tons of crude petroleum, exported 836,000 metric tons and had a reserve of 25,000,000 metric tons. The DROC had no refining capacity as of 1 January 2005, and must import refined petroleum products. In 2002, imports of refined petroleum products totaled 1,301 cubic metres (8,180 bbl) per day.

Oil product imports consist of a range of refined fuels, includinggasoline,jet fuel,kerosene,aviation gas,fuel oil, andliquefied petroleum gas (LPG). The 2012 estimates of the DRC's petroleum reserves are divided into offshore and onshore categories. Offshore reserves amount to approximately 84,491,000 barrels of proven reserves and 4,613,000 barrels of probable reserves.[5] Onshore reserves are significantly higher, with 177,320,000 barrels of proven reserves and an additional 4,571,000 barrels of probable reserves.[5]

Thesefossil fuel resources are mainly located in three majorsedimentary basins:

  • The Coastal Basin, situated in the province ofKongo Central (formerlyBas-Congo), is the only one currently under production. It spans an area between 5,992 and 7,000 km2 and contains crude oil, natural gas (estimated at 24 billion cubic meters as of 1986), and asphalticlimestone with abitumen content ranging from 11% to 37%, totaling approximately 960 million tons of bitumen.[5]
  • TheGraben ofTanganyika extends across the eastern provinces ofHaut-Uélé,South Kivu,North Kivu, andHaut-Katanga. This basin contains significantmethane gas reserves withinLake Kivu, estimated at around 50 billion cubic meters.[5] According to Akim Akilimali Mupe's 2012 studyConcurrence oligopolistique dans le secteur pétrolier à Uvira: Recherche de l'équilibre, Rwanda operates an experimental gas extraction station at the lake, which supplies about 500,000 cubic meters of gas annually to theBralirwa Brewery.[5]
  • The third major deposit, theCentral Cuvette Basin, is the largest sedimentary basin in the country and among the most extensive in the world. It covers an area between 750,000 and 800,000 km2 and contains sediment layers reaching depths of 900 meters.[5] Confirmed bituminousshale deposits span 15,000 km2 between the cities ofKisangani andUbundu.[5]

The import and export of these products are handled by two primary companies:Cohydro and Dalbit Petroleum. The latter is aKenya-based energy firm that supplies petroleum products toLubumbashi and northeastern parts of the DRC. Within the country, petroleum production is geographically restricted to the coastal basin and is managed by a few major operators.[5] Offshore operations are conducted by the GULF group, which includes Gulfoil Congo SARL and Congo Gulf Oil Company, in collaboration with international partners such as Teikoku (Japan Petroleum Congo SARL), Japeco, COPECO, and UNOCAL. Onshore production is overseen by the FI NAREP group and ZAIREP SOREPZA (ZAIREP SPRL), a consortium comprising PetroFina andShell.[5]

The refining and distribution of petroleum products are centered around SOCIR (Société Congolaise des Industries de Raffinage), the country's sole major refining facility.[5] Located on theAtlantic coast near the mouth of the Congo River, roughly 600 kilometers southwest ofKinshasa, SOCIR was established as ajoint venture equally owned by the Congolese state and the Italian oil companyAzienda generale italiana petroli (AGIP).[5] The refinery had an installed capacity of 750,000 tons per year and produced LPG, super gasoline, kerosene,diesel,Jet A-1 fuel, and fuel oil. It was designed to meet the entirety of domestic demand for diesel and fuel oil, 88% of gasoline needs, and 86% of jet fuel consumption.[5] Despite its strategic importance, SOCIR operated at less than 30% of its full capacity and ceased refining operations in 1995.[5] Since then, the country has depended entirely on imported petroleum products to satisfy domestic consumption.[5] Although SOCIR no longer refines crude oil, it remains a key component of the national petroleum infrastructure, particularly through its partnership with SEP Congo for the storage and distribution of imported fuels.[5] Following the closure of SOCIR, the DRC established three principal supply routes for petroleum imports. The Western Route, via the Atlantic coast, became the most significant channel, consistently accounting for 85–90% of the country's fuel imports. In addition to this dominant route, the Southern Route and the Eastern Route were also utilized, though they contributed far less to the national supply.[5]

Between 1992 and 1997, the Western Route consistently supplied over 80% of the national demand.[5]

YearEast (%)South (%)West (%)
19923790
199431285
199531285
199621385
199761381

(Source: Ministry of Economy,La politique pétrolière de 1998)[5]

The DRC held 990 million cubic metres (35 billion cubic feet) of proven gas reserves as of 2017.[6] There was no production, consumption or importation or exportation of natural gas.Galaxy Moriah Oil is the government contracted supplier of oil for the DROC.[7]

Coal

[edit]

As of July 2005, the DROC is reported to havecoal reserves of 97 million short tons. Domestic coal production and consumption in 2003 totaled 0.11 million short tons and 0.26 million shorts tons, respectively.[8]

Renewable energy (other than hydroelectric)

[edit]

ICTs forclimate change mitigation

One of the UNMillennium Development Goals is to make the benefits of new technologies - especially information and communications technologies (ICTs) – available to both industrialized nations and developing regions. In light of these goals, several projects have been founded by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), and other organisations in order to explore ICTs and climate change.

Climate Change Legislation

DRC has no national climate change policy and strategy which can present the DRC's current and future efforts to effectively address itsclimate change vulnerability and adaptation. It currently relies on environment-related policies and action plans to implement climate change initiatives and activities. Nevertheless, several NGOs and donor agencies have been active in the DRC to develop an administrative structure to address the needs of environmental protection and natural resources management.

The DRC is in a very high level sun belt that makes the installation of photovoltaic systems and the use of thermal solar systems viable throughout the country. Currently there are 836 solar power systems, with a total power of 83 kW, located in Equateur (167), Katanga (159), Nord-Kivu (170), the two Kasaï provinces (170), and Bas-Congo (170). There is also the 148 Caritas network system, with a total power of 6.31 kW7. The potential for further solar development is high.[9]

The DRC has a wide diversity of natural resources, allowing it to consider a significant growth in hydro, wind and solar energy. It has been called "a virtual continent." For the first time in Africa, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has adopted an interactive atlas ofrenewable energy sources.

This Atlas was created by the UNDP, Netherlands Development Organization SNV, and the Congolese Ministry of Water Resources and Electricity. It has 600 interactive maps and informs policymaking on decentralizing energy and encourages further renewable energy investments.[10]

See also

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toEnergy in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

References

[edit]
  1. ^IEA Key energy statistics 2010 Page: Country specific indicator numbers from page 48www.iea.orgArchived 2010-10-11 at theWayback Machine
  2. ^"Democratic Republic of Congo".Lighting Africa. Retrieved2020-01-31.
  3. ^Congo, The Democratic Republic Of The Hydroelectric Power Production and Consumption by Yearwww.indexmundi.com, accessed 8 November 2021
  4. ^Institut Royal Colonial Belge - Bulletin des Séances 1937-III
  5. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrMupe, Akim Akilimali (2012)."Concurrence oligopolistique dans le secteur pétrolier à Uvira: Recherche de l'équilibre" [Oligopolistic competition in the oil sector in Uvira: The search for balance] (in French). Bukavu, South Kivu, Democratic Republic of the Congo:Catholic University of Bukavu. Retrieved16 July 2025.
  6. ^"DR Congo Natural Gas Reserves, Production and Consumption Statistics - Worldometer".
  7. ^Congo, The Democratic Republic Of The Crude Oil Production and Consumption by Yearwww.indexmundi.com, accessed 8 November 2021
  8. ^Congo, The Democratic Republic Of The Coal Production and Consumption by Yearwww.indexmundi.com, accessed 8 November 2021
  9. ^"Scaling-up renewable energy in Africa: Democratic Republic of Congo, June 2012". Archived fromthe original on 2018-03-17. Retrieved2015-09-26.
  10. ^In DRC, an Atlas to boost renewable energies United Nations Development Programme, September 24, 2014Archived January 14, 2018, at theWayback Machine
‹ ThetemplateCulture of the Democratic Republic of the Congo is beingconsidered for merging. ›
History
Geography
Politics
Economy
Society
Culture
Sovereign states
States with limited
recognition
Dependencies and
other territories
Africa
Asia
Europe
European
Union
North America
Oceania
South America
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Energy_in_the_Democratic_Republic_of_the_Congo&oldid=1301148016"
Category:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp