Audio By Carbonatix
Puma Energy has announced that from 2023 it will offer its commercial and industrial customers the chance to install solar on their sites.
The news comes after the Puma’s fourteen solar projects at its retail stations and terminals in Ghana proved to be a huge success.
The fourteen Puma Energy sites in Ghana demonstrate that the concept of solar installation works and Puma will now invest $33 million to offer solar solutions to its commercial and industrial customers in Ghana and across Africa.
In July 2022, Puma Energy’s ESG strategy set out plans to install solar generation at 200 sites across its global network by the end of 2022.
The fourteen sites in Ghana contribute to the target. These projects benefit from Ghana’s high solar energy potential and have a total capacity of 447kWp and associated battery storage of 227 kWh.
Puma Energy also announced that, by 2027, 30% of its income (EBITDA) in Africa will come from clean and transition fuels and the roll out of solar generation partnerships with Puma’s commercial and industrial customers will contribute to that aim.
Christophe Dantcikian, Puma Energy GM in Ghana said, “The rollout of solar generation across our assets in Ghana has been a huge success and proves the technology works from an economic and technical perspective.
“Africa and Ghana in particular, have a great potential for solar power. So, having shown the concept works we are now offering our commercial and industrial customers the chance to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions. Ghana was the first country in Africa to benefit from our programme to add solar power to our sites and we are now excited to be able to share the benefits of our solar expertise with our customers.”
The solar power generation at 11 of the 14 sites is supported by battery storage meaning the sites can run from the power of the sun up to 100% of the time.
In total Puma Energy operates 75 retail sites and four terminals across Ghana. It also supplies fuel at Kotoka Airport and directly employs over 150 people with many more employed directly by local companies that operate the Puma retail sites.
Latest Stories
-
SUSEC–Abesim and Adomako–Watchman roads set for upgrade in Sunyani
21 minutes -
CDD-Ghana calls for national debate on campaign financing
56 minutes -
INTERPOL’s decision on Ofori-Atta: What it means for his U.S. bond hearing and the legal road ahead
1 hour -
Parties can use filing fees to cover delegates’ costs, end vote-buying – Barker-Vormawor
1 hour -
Boxing in Bukom: Five months without the bell
1 hour -
Political parties can end vote-buying by disqualifying offenders – Barker-Vormawor
1 hour -
Ministry of Gender investigates alleged sharing of intimate videos by foreign national
2 hours -
Cocoa must be treated as business, not politics- Nana Aduna II
2 hours -
Barker-Vormawor urges scrutiny of COCOBOD reforms, warns of continued debt burden
2 hours -
Prince Adu-Owusu: Beyond flowers and grand gestures — How do you want to be loved?
3 hours -
Multiple vehicles burnt as fuel tanker explodes on Nsawam-Accra highway
3 hours -
Former COCOBOD administration spent syndicated loans on themselves, not farmers – Inusah Fuseini
3 hours -
Mahama vows to end export of raw mineral ores by 2030, shifts focus to local processing
4 hours -
Mahama meets UN Chief, discusses African security & democracy.
4 hours -
Playback: Newsfile discussed cocoa crisis and election credibility in Ghana
4 hours
